“For the first two or three years after I was potty trained, I thought that everyone peed standing up. So there I was, a little girl with impeccable aim.”
-lizzyw4961ae5c5
“Growing up, whenever I would eat bananas my mouth would always hurt and sometimes go numb. Kind of similar to how it feels if you eat too much sour candy. It wasn’t until I was 18 years old that I say to my mom ‘Man, I hate the way bananas make your mouth hurt.’ She then brought me to understand THAT’S NOT SUPPOSED TO HAPPEN. So yeah, turns out I’m allergic to bananas.”
-kels369
“When I was little I was terrified spiders would eat me while I was sleeping on the top bunk, so my parents had this cool contraption that was a ‘spider-trap-setter’. They’d bring it in at bedtime, I’d point it around the room, and click the handle to set a ton of spider traps each night so I could sleep.
Fast forward to my fiancé and I registering for wedding gifts – he scanned a wine bottle opener (with the corkscrew and the arms that go up and down) and I immediately recognized it as a spider-trap-setter. It only then dawned on me that I’d been LIED TO”
-jennyp4b17105ef
“My whole family drank pickle juice out of the jar after all of the pickles were gone. When I did it at a party, people gave me dirty looks and made rude comments. Apparently, what my family did isn’t normal…”
-Hannah Ashby
“My mom and aunt were identical twins. My aunt lived with us from the time I was born until first grade. I never realized until I started Kindergarten that not everyone had two moms that looked exactly the same and one dad. What a shocker.”
-Chris Walters
“We lived right outside NYC when I was young and whenever I’d be watching a movie or TV where they can see stars in the sky at night I thought it was fake because, Duh, you can’t see stars from the Earth!
We moved to North Carolina when I was 9 and it blew me away that you can actually see stars there.”
-Cindy Plante
“When I was a kid I called freckles ferckels- (FER-calls) And I would say it every time and my parents didn’t mind. I said this until I was about 7 when my friends older brother told me (while laughing) it was freckles. I was so embarrassed I turned red and climbed a tree and started crying.
and then I fell out…”
-Kiwi
“When I was a kid, my Mom would make us peanut butter and mayonnaise sandwiches. The two combine as well as toothpaste and orange juice, but we thought this was a “thing” and would actually request it at times. I cringe just thinking about it now.”
-Marnee DeRider
“I grew up in the country and firmly believed that ice cream trucks were myths and that they only existed on TV shows.”
-samanthakylef
“We used to lift up our table and say “hrrrmp” every day before dinner as a family. I though everyone did it…. I found out it was only us a a friends place for dinner…”
-Fjord
“I thought every person who get’s killed in TV actually dies on set. I thought people, who weren’t happy with their lives, would volunteer to die for the movie.
I always wondered, how they could find so many suicidal people who were also good actors.”
-Anemone
“When I was growing up my dad would always yell out ‘the phone’s leaking!’ whenever the landline rang. I did not realise that this was not a common phrase until I yelled it across the room at work one day to a coworker. Everyone was so confused and worried about the phone.”
-k42cfc146d
“I used to gather all the kids together to play a game I made up. We had to pass through the branches of this v shaped tree in our front yard. This was the passage to the afterlife. When you went through you laid down like you were dead and then you woke up in a new world. We would play the rest of the time like we were living in the afterlife. We all had fun and no one thought it strange. Thinking about it now that was a weird game.”
-Betsy Knox
“My parents and I used to play a game where I had to stop, drop and roll every time they say the word ‘time’, so I thought everyone does it until I was 12. I once went to my friend’s house and they asked me what the time was so I stopped, dropped and rolled and hit my head on their bed.”
-RLLMV
No list of so-called “normal” things would be complete without this Poop Knife classic…
“My family poops big. Maybe it’s genetic, maybe it’s our diet, but everyone births giant logs of crap. If anyone has laid a mega-poop, you know that sometimes it won’t flush. Growing up, this was a common enough occurrence that our family had a poop knife. It was an old rusty kitchen knife that hung on a nail in the laundry room, only to be used for that purpose. It was normal to walk through the hallway and have someone call out “hey, can you get me the poop knife”?
I thought it was standard kit. You have your plunger, your toilet brush, and your poop knife.”
-LearnedButt
https://textbacklinkexchanges.com/things-people-assumed-were-normal-growing-up-that-were-anything-but-that-15-photos/
News Pictures Things people assumed were ‘normal’ growing up that were anything but that (15 Photos)
You don’t have to pack away your bikini just because you’re the wrong side of 20. These body-beautiful stars reveal their secrets to staying in shape and prove you can smoulder in a two-piece, whatever your age. Read on and be bikini inspired!
TEENS
Hayden Panettiere
Size: 8
Age: 18
Height: 5ft 1in
Weight: 8st
To achieve her kick-ass figure, Hayden – who plays cheerleader Claire Bennet in Heroes – follows the ‘quartering’ rule. She eats only a quarter of the food on her plate, then waits 20 minutes before deciding whether she needs to eat again.
Hayden says: “I don’t have a model’s body, but I’m not one of those crazy girls who thinks that they’re fat. I’m OK with what I have.”
Nicollette says: “I don’t like diets – I see it, I eat it! I believe in eating healthily with lots of protein, vegetables and carbs to give you energy.”
kim cattrall
Size: 10-12
Age: 52
Height: 5ft 8in
Weight: 9st 4lb
SATC star Kim swears by gym sessions with Russian kettle bells (traditional cast-iron weights) and the South Beach Diet to give her the body she wants. To avoid overeating, Kim has a radical diet trick – squirting lemon juice on her leftovers – so she won’t carry on picking.
Kim says: “I am no super-thin Hollywood actress. I am built for men who like women to look like women.”
https://thechive.files.wordpress.com/2018/12/things-people-assumed-were-normal-growing-up-that-were-anything-but-that-20-photos-4.gif?w=480















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