30 New ‘Today I Learned’ Facts That Prove It’s Never Too Late To Learn Something New
We have long heard about the power of learning new things. It keeps us motivated, confident, and curious about the world around us. No wonder science has shown time and again that learning plays an important role in improving the brain's ability to cope with damage.
It can also prevent memory loss, and possibly even prevent us from developing dementia. Researchers at the University of Michigan found that the dementia rate in Americans decreased by a staggering 24% from 2000 to 2012. Scientists believe that more years of education are directly linked with this decline.
And although not everyone has time (or need, for that matter) to take on learning things like chess or language, or memorizing verses from Homer’s Iliad (although this is what high school students do in European countries!), we can keep our mind open for bits of information that get those brain cells tingling! And there’s nothing that does it better than our beloved TIL posts, thanks to Reddit's powerhouse community known as the ‘Today I Learned’ subreddit where 26.6 million members share facts and factoids to fill your idle or bored mind.
Get your cuppa ready ‘cause below is a freshly baked collection full of TIL amusement, and after you’re done, be sure to check out our previous posts with things to learn today here, here and here.
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TIL about Tim Wong who successfully and singlehandedly repopulated the rare California Pipevine Swallowtail butterfly in San Francisco. In the past few years, he’s cultivated more than 200 pipevine plants (their only food source) and gives thousands of caterpillars to his local Botanical Garden.
New Year is just around the corner and that means it's time for New Year's resolutions. Apart from the classic ones, like ditching sugar or (insert your own), we can also think of ways to give some food for the soul and learn something we never knew we could. So we reached out to Helen Marlo, a licensed clinical psychologist and Jungian psychoanalyst who is also a Professor of Clinical Psychology at Notre Dame de Namur University, to talk about power learning and how we can benefit from it if we make it our goal.
TIL when the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) denied permission to Marian Anderson for a concert at Constitution Hall under a "white performers-only", First Eleanor Roosevelt resigned from the DAR and arranged for Anderson to perform before an integrated crowd of more than 75,000 people.
TIL about environmental activist Julia “Butterfly” Hill who lived in a 1500 year old California redwood tree (known as Luna) 180 feet (55 mm) off the ground for 738 days in order to prevent it from being chopped down by Pacific Lumber Company. She successfully saved the tree.
That's brave of her, proving one person can make a difference. 55 metres up a tree would give me the w*****s.
“Having a goal of learning can be wise since learning is a process that one can fulfill in small steps or in various forms,” Helen said and added that “Learning something new can be associated with having a “growth mindset,” a mindset that is focused on the process of learning rather than the outcome.”
It turns out that staying focused on the process of learning has profound outcomes on a personality. “Staying focused on the process of learning allows one to focus on being committed to bringing less concrete but more influential qualities like openness, receptivity, curiosity, effort, and determination which are more often associated with success and mastery.”
TIL that Javier Bardem's performance as Anton Chigurh in 'No Country for Old Men' was named the 'Most Realistic Depiction of a Psychopath' by an independent group of psychologists in the 'Journal of Forensic Sciences'.
TIL: When the Titanic rammed an iceberg, William Murdoch, the officer in charge, was portrayed in the film as shooting a passenger and then committing s**cide. In reality, he was last seen trying to fill as many lifeboats as possible and heroically went down with the ship.
TIL GM recalled 800k cars in 2014 for faulty ignitions. The cars would shut off while being driven which meant drivers lost power steering/brakes, and the airbags wouldn't deploy. They knew about the problem since 2005 but never fixed it because it would be 'too expensive'. 124 people died.
According to Helen, a goal that commits to learning is something completely different from a goal that's concrete, although people more often stick to them. “Having a goal that commits to learning supports one's efforts to stretch themselves and be outside their comfort zone. This is in contrast to other kinds of concrete goals, for example, like losing 20 pounds or giving up caffeine, which does not give one the opportunity to be committed to a growth-oriented process,” the professor explained. And this growth mindset has a much more profound effect on our lives and personalities.
TIL that people with dementia think that stuff like a black doormat isn’t a doormat, but a deep hole in the floor. Due to these visual perception problems, people with dementia avoid stepping the doormat, and this is sometimes used to keep them from leaving their care facilites.
Some facilities also have fake bus stops on their grounds. When a person leaves, they can often be found there waiting for the bus.
I've heard that used in one instance for Alzheimer's patients. They'd let this one patient go to wait for "her bus", then some amount of time later, come out and say something like "how was your trip"? so they'd be very prone to think they had just returned from somewhere and could be easily led back to their room. It came across as very compassionate. Healthcare is best when people actually, ya know, care (not that I have any desire to dis on healthcare workers, mind you).
Load More Replies...I the care facility my grandpas friend was in, the door was decorated like a book shelf. And you had to press a button to be able to use the door handle
Most I've seen just have a code to get out, with it written in a place not immediately visible
Load More Replies...It might work for some people but I've worked on a dementia ward for 11 yrs now and those things (like the doormat or the fake bus stop etc) never worked on any of our patients who had/have the tendency to run away. If one has a very strong urge to go home or go to work or school or whatever, in my experience there's not much that can really stop them and if they try to find an exit but can't find a way out they often get even more desperate and aggressive.
Shortly before her death, my great-grandma was terrified by a conifer behind her window. She thought it will come and take her away. Don't know if it was dementia or some pre-death condition. Anyway, my grandpa cut the tree.
The first time I ever visited a dementia care facility it broke my heart. There was sign next to the door they said “the passcode is 1234 backwards”, and that was enough to keep the residents from figuring out to open the outer door.
Ive worked with dementia for 5 years, they could definitely figure this out
Load More Replies...Trying to step over could cause a lot of (potentially fatal) accidents. The elderly have balance issues anyway. Alzheimer's/Dementia units are sad places.
More bittersweet, IMO. The wonderful people that work there are an inspiration.(in my experience)
Load More Replies...I recall one I had visited/worked in had the exit door painted as a hearth complete with big painted fire in it to keep the patients away from the door.
My granny had dementia. But sometimes she had a good spell. Then she dressed very nicely and walked out the institution with several visitors. Took the bus to her old home and told the new renters to get out of her house immediately! She had a traditional rich country upbringing so she learned to play the piano really well. Her piano was transferred to the institution with her. Once a recital was organised. A guy played for the old folks. Granny left halfway, pretty mad, stating 'this guy can't play, so many mistakes!' After a attempted break in the cops got my mother there because granny wouldn't let them in. She just yelled 'mama' through the letterbox. We headed 'mama comes' and in a minute the door was opened.
It only works until one of the patients puts a white sheet of paper on the doormat, thus creating a stepping stone... ;)
Not related but reflective floor has similar effects on me. Difference is that my mind knows it's a solid ground. But the visual perception convinces my body otherwise, fearing to fall through and into the ceiling/sky. Have to walk on the solid lines in airports like a lava game in public lol
I have also heard that sometimes fake bus stops are set up outside facilities. Usually when patients get out, they want to get home to where ever they last remember living. A convenient bus stop is ideal for them, and they are very easy to find there.
This fact is phrased as an absolute, when in reality dementia affects everyone in different ways. Not all people suffering from dementia will interpret a doormat as a black hole. I also feel I should mention that people suffering from dementia are often infantilized, and making such generalizations (that lack much factual evidence in the first place) does nothing to help the way we view and interact with those with dementia.
We found out my grandmother had dementia when we went to her house to see why she was loosing weight. We figured out she wouldn't go into the kitchen for fear of falling into the giant holes in the floor (they were throw rugs) So she just didn't eat! We took them out and she cooked and ate everything in the fridge in a few hours. My parents moved in with her that day and she lived three more years.
I've worked in care for almost 20 years, while it is true that they can be afraid to step from, say, carpet to wood floor because they can't tell the difference in depth, no one is using black doormats to keep residents from exiting places.
Mine is an actual portal to Hell. I bought it on Etsy on purpose so I can visit when I feel like it.
Probably put the word some in front because do we know every single person has it the same
Not sure that this is true. Before my mother became bed bound she would put on her hat and coat and wait by the front door. When someone came in she would politely ask them to hold the door for her. Escaped 3 times. Different aspects of dementia and Alzheimer's affect people differently
TIL that “Baby, It’s Cold Outside” was written by composer Frank Loesser in 1944 for he and his wife to sing at the end of their housewarming party as a way to tell guests it was time to leave. Afterwards, they were invited to tons of parties with the expectation of the song being the closing act.
TIL: A camel after standing in 109 F (43 C) heat all day decapitated his absent-minded owner after he remembered to untie him.
How does a camel decapitate someone? I'm imagining one big chomp, but I really wanna know.
And this doesn’t end just there. The clinical psychologist explained that “having a goal of learning also helps us to align with a central, lesser known drive in humans to be curious and learn, otherwise known as “the epistemophillic instinct.” It is posited that this drive to be curious and learn is central in humans. It is associated with playing which is also central for learning and growth as humans.”
Meanwhile, failing to nurture this drive may have serious implications. “When we fail to manifest or exercise this drive, which can happen when we become too focused on external achievements and outcomes rather than the process of being curious and learning, we rob our brains and psyche of being in touch with this life-giving, epistemophillic instinct,” Helen said.
TIL When Neil Armstrong first stepped on the moon, inside his pocket was a small piece of fabric from the 1903 Wright Flyer
TIL of the Deep Lake Water Cooling System (DLWC), a natural cooling system that extracts cold water from deep within Lake Ontario, and then transfers it through a system of pipes and exchanges to cool downtown Toronto. Compared to a traditional air conditioning system, it uses up 75% less energy
TIL in 1997 a Danish woman visiting New York City was arrested and strip-searched for leaving her baby in a stroller outside a restaurant while she and the baby's father dined inside, a common practice in Denmark. She later sued the city and was awarded $66,000.
Although a bit extreme of the police, foreign visitors should do their research on the laws of the countries, and regions they are visiting, and pay attention to what the locals do. Don't see babies being left in strollers on the street? Don't assume it's acceptable.
So since we figured out the power of having a goal that commits to the growth mindset, the question remains how exactly we can stimulate the brain. Helen shared a couple of very useful insights. “One of the best ways to stimulate your brain and mind is to start with an honest appraisal of your strengths and weaknesses. Commit to learning something new in an area that aligns with your strengths. This helps set yourself up for success rather than failure.”
For anyone who’s wondering how important it is to step out of their comfort zone when learning something new, the professor assured us that it is indeed helpful if it is a little outside your comfort zone. However, it shouldn’t be too unattainable.
“When you think of starting on this path, consider if you can bring a spirit of play to the learning? Consider if it evokes more curiosity or wonder in you? Committing to learning something that evokes qualities of wonder and play makes the experience more affirming and encourages one to stay with the process,” the professor explained.
TIL Isaac Asimov wrote or edited more than 500 books, 380 short stories and an estimated 90,000 letters and postcards. He was a professor of biochemistry at Boston University. He had a triple bypass in 1983 during which got HIV from a blood transfusion which was kept secret 'til 10 years after death
TIL Jurassic Park was meant to use stop motion instead of CGI, but two artists worked on a CGI T-Rex in secret, and once they finished it, they quietly put a video of it on screen when Kathleen Kennedy visited their office. the video convinced Kennedy, Spielberg, and the rest of the team to use CGI.
except it was/is very well documented that the T-Rex in Jurassic Park is the worlds largest animatronic to date on any production...
TIL The prototype of the Rolls Royce Ghost was so quiet inside that it made test drivers sick. The engineers had to remove some of the noise isolating material, and create seats that vibrated at specific frequencies to introduce some noise into the interior.
There’s an anechoic chamber (silent room, that absorbs all sound waves) in Minnesota that you can’t stay in for longer than 45 minutes. It’s so quiet that you can only hear your own noises, heartbeat, lung function, and you lose the ability to balance. It’s reputed to send you a little bit mad. Having been in one (at an R.A.F. testing facility) for less than ten minutes I can confirm that it’s VERY unnerving.
Another way to stimulate your brain is, according to Helen, to commit to exercising that epistemophilic instinct daily. “Having a commitment to learning something new—whether you can manage this daily or once a week—primes your brain and mind to be committed to discovery and learning. “ Turns out, that fidelity to this commitment is absolutely vital to learning since it encourages further learning and keeps us growing.
To conclude, Helen shared this beautiful quote about learning for us all to reflect on:“'The best thing for being sad,' replied Merlin, beginning to puff and blow, 'is to learn something. That's the only thing that never fails. You may grow old and trembling in your anatomies, you may lie awake at night listening to the disorder of your veins, you may miss your only love, you may see the world about you devastated by evil lunatics, or know your honour trampled in the sewers of baser minds. There is only one thing for it then — to learn. Learn why the world wags and what wags it. That is the only thing which the mind can never exhaust, never alienate, never be tortured by, never fear or distrust, and never dream of regretting. Learning is the only thing for you. Look what a lot of things there are to learn.'” (T.H. White, The Once and Future King)
TIL the nurse,Caroline Hampton, helped popularize surgical gloves. She almost quit her job as a surgical nurse at John Hopkins due to severe hand eczema caused by surgical disinfectant until her boss bought her custom rubber gloves. Other staff members copied this and found they made work easier.
TIL if a camel rejects her new-born or there's a need to adopt an orphaned calf, Mongol herders use a chanting ritual accompanied by fiddle or flute to coax her into accepting the calf. The camel mother may act aggressive initially, so the herders will change the melody depending on her behavior
For the most part, animals reject their offspring for a good reason. I would also accept any child to make them stop whistling at me :/
TIL of Daniel Kish. Blind since the age of 13 months old, he taught himself to navigate by clicking his tongue and listening for echoes, similar to echolocation in bats. Kish and other researchers believe that echolocation produces images similar to sight.
TIL that nature has evolved different species into crabs at least five separate times - a phenomenon known as Carcinisation
Hear that people!? We need to behave or nature will turn us into crabs!!!
TIL Ian Fleming originally wanted Bond to be an extremely dull, uninteresting man to whom things happened. He chose James Bond because it was the dullest name he had ever heard.
In the novels he is quite dull and uninteresting apart from violence. He's also not superhuman in the novels, frequently coming close to death, being severely beaten, etc. He's also much more like connery in the novels - a blatant sexist with little regard for women. As such, he definitely is uninteresting.
TIL that in 2002, two airplanes collided in mid-air killing everyone aboard. Two years later, the air traffic controller was murdered as revenge.
TIL in 1986 a Russian commercial pilot made a bet with the first officer that he could land blind with curtains over the cockpit windows. He lost the bet, crashing and killing 70 people
TIL Andromeda galaxy has already started merging with our Milky Way
TIL a cancer treatment known as Dynamic Phototherapy has the side effect of giving humans a slight level of night vision. Under this treatment, the retina becomes able to process light at wavelengths higher than the visible light domain.
TIL Boris Mikhailov, captain of the USSR hockey team, was offered a $1 million contract to leave Russia in 1980 after the Miracle on Ice. However, he declined as the KGB was standing next to him when the offer was made.
TIL A woman put over a million miles on her Hyundai Elantra and was given a special badge and a brand new car
Cars that usually last this long with high mileage, are cars that are driven mainly on highways, freeways etc. If you were to drive a car for 100 000 miles on the highway, that would roughly equate to 10 000 miles of wear and tear compared to suburban, stop start city driving.
TIL a park ranger sat down in his office on Rinca Island and was attacked by a Komodo dragon hiding under his desk. The cleaner had the left the door open the night before. The smell of blood attracted more dragons outside. The ranger was taken to the hospital and survived but he has nightmares.
"but he has nightmares"... Is that all sentence really weird, or is it just me?
TIL that the name George has the same root word as Geography and Geology, and means "Earth worker" or farmer.
TIL studies show the reason why we "click" with certain people is due to people's brain waves being sync in wavelengths called the alpha–mu band, or what scientists call brain-to-brain coupling, and mirror each other neurologically in terms of what they are focusing on.
I wish it wasn't TIL. Every time I read it as 'til or until!
Load More Replies...I wish it wasn't TIL. Every time I read it as 'til or until!
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