Oddity Central

Oddity Central


Facing Your Fears – Guy Tattoos Spider on His Face to Combat Arachnophobia

Posted: 27 Feb 2014 03:00 AM PST

Now here's a guy who literally 'faced' his fears. To deal with his morbid fear of spiders, Eric Ortiz got a black widow spider tattooed on his face.

You've got to be either really gutsy or really stupid to put something so huge and permanent on your face. I'm not sure which one Ortiz is. The 24-year-old from Deltona, Florida, said: "Everybody fears spiders. That's why I got it. Just to, like, make me know, that that's what I fear, but not to fear it. You know what I'm saying?"

I'm not too sure I know what he's saying. How can putting a spider tattoo on your face make you less scared of spiders? Well, it's his face and if it works for him, who am I to judge? But a lot of people are judging Ortiz for his rash decision. "Everybody looks at it like, 'Damn spider' 'cause if you're going around your house, you know what I'm saying, you see those spiders, you're going to jump, so putting one on my face, I say you know what, I'm going to see what people think."

spider-tattoo

The Ringing Rocks of Pennsylvania – A Famous Geological Oddity

Posted: 27 Feb 2014 02:00 AM PST

If you strike a rock, you'd expect to hear a dull 'thud'. Or maybe a 'chink'. Definitely not a ringing sound. So you'd be surprised to know that ringing rocks actually do exist. Nestled in the midst of the 128-acre Ringing Rocks County Park in Pennsylvania, is a field of unique boulders. Spread out across seven to eight acres, the boulders produce a distinctive metallic 'clang' when struck with a hammer or another piece of rock. Native Americans have known about the rocks for centuries, and passed on their knowledge to the first White settlers in the mid-1700s.

The sound produced by the rocks is so unexpected that it could get you wondering if they are really made of stone. They actually sound hollow and metallic. The strange phenomenon has baffled scientists and geologists for years. Several experiments have been conducted on the ringing rocks, but the exact reason for the unusual sound remains unknown.

Richard Faas, a geologist from Pennsylvania, tested a few of the rocks in his lab in 1965. He discovered that when struck, each individual rock produced low frequency tones that aren't audible to the human ear. The tones from multiple rocks interact with each other and it's the collective sound that we get to hear.

ringing-rocks

Homeless Man Uses His Last Few Coins to Buy Lottery Ticket, Wins $2.79 Million Jackpot

Posted: 27 Feb 2014 01:00 AM PST

Now this is what you call a dream-come-true. No, scratch that. It's more like the 'wildest' dream-come-true. When László Andraschek used his last few coins to purchase a lottery ticket, I'm sure he had no real hope of winning the jackpot – a whopping 600 million forint (US $2.70 million) – but it actually happened. The 55-year-old Hungarian went from being a homeless tramp to a millionaire, overnight.

For seven long years, Andraschek lived in a homeless shelter in the city of Győr. "It all happened to me, I remember it, but I don't miss it," he said about his experience of being homeless. He was also a recovering alcoholic at the time. "I had drunk myself out of the family by the age of 31. I was the last child at home and spent all my wages on drink. I worked on-and-off as an agricultural repairman. I lived the typical life of an alcoholic and I thought it was all right."

It came to a point where Andraschek's siblings were fed up of him and asked their mother to kick him out. This was in 1989; at age 31, Andraschek had become completely destitute. He tried to hang himself, but the rope snapped and he ended up losing a foot. "Even losing a foot didn't make me mend my ways because I would blame everyone around me, anyone but myself." In 1991, he registered himself as homeless.

László Andraschek2

Comments system

Disqus Shortname