Oddity Central

Oddity Central


Woman Has Her Leg Cut Off So She Can Wear High Heels

Posted: 02 Dec 2013 03:00 AM PST

21-year-old New Yorker Mariah Serrano was born with a painfully twisted club foot, and had never worn high heels in her life. She’d attended her high school prom in golden trainers, insanely jealous of her friends who wore heels.

Like many other girls from New York, Mariah dreamed of a job in fashion, but it seemed like her leg-situation was going to get in the way of that too. "When I was told I'd never be able to wear high heels and I should give up my dream career, I was devastated," she said.

So when a specialist told her in 2009 that she had another option – to have her leg amputated, she seriously considered it. "Mum was horrified but I couldn't get the idea out of my head. I had to give it some serious thought."

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Artist Mom Creates Amazing Mosaics Out of Thousands of Play-Doh Dots

Posted: 02 Dec 2013 02:00 AM PST

Who said Play-Doh is just for kids? In an amazing display of pointillism, mother-of-three Lacy Knudson puts together over 10,000 Play-Doh dots to create beautiful mosaics.

It all started when Knudson was putting away her kids' clay one day. She began mushing it into little balls when she realized that these tiny, colorful dots could be put together to create great artwork. And the best part – she could spend time with her children while working.

Knudson has a unique name for her process – Dozayix. It's a combination of playDOh and moSAICS. And of course, a whole lot of fun. Her first piece was called A New World, for which she used 23 pounds of Play-Doh. She split it all into 10,000 half-inch dots (called 'dozaic tiles') and perfectly arranged each dot to build her mosaic.

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The Inspirational Story of a Paralyzed Surgeon who Continues to Operate

Posted: 02 Dec 2013 01:00 AM PST

Dr. Ted Rummel thought his life was pretty much over when he was left paralyzed from the waist-down in 2010. The exceptional surgeon had been diagnosed with a cavernous hemangioma – a blood filled cyst – in the middle of his spinal cord a year earlier. Neurologists told him the cyst couldn't be surgically removed, as the procedure would paralyze him instantly. Instead he was told to rest, wait, and pray the cyst never ruptured.

Unfortunately for Dr. Rummel, the cyst did burst in September 2010, just a week after he performed a rotator cuff surgery on his wife Kathy – his last surgery for the next two years. He suffered a terrible back ache, followed by numbness and weakness in his legs. Within days, "a wave crashed over his lower body and took all feeling and mobility with it." Dr. Rummel was paralyzed for life.

It's sad that something so terrible should have happened to him, after he cured thousands of people in St. Charles County of pain and stiffness in their joints. In his best days, he had practiced over 1,000 operations surgeries per year in O'Fallon, Missouri.

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