For real. Everytime I get in the shower I end up having to point the showerhead away and cower from the cold water and I could have just turned it on first?

  • @RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    1021 hours ago

    These are /thathappened.

    There is no way anyone is pulling 350°F+ items out of an oven with their bare hands.

    There is no way someone grew up without a parent both demonstrating and explaining to let the water warm up first. Might as well fill a tub with cold water and sit in it, then say just add hot water until it’s comfortable. Even if the household was abusive or something and kids were told to shower cold while the water warmed up they still would have figured out on their own that running hot water first would get hot water faster.

    • @scutiger@lemmy.world
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      413 hours ago

      Most people wouldn’t, but I know a blacksmith who handles hot metal all day long. He regularly pulls baking sheets out of a hot oven, but he’s got such thick, calloused hands that he can handle that kind of stuff.

      Average Joe who doesn’t understand what oven mitts are? Probably not.

    • There is no way anyone is pulling 350°F+ items out of an oven with their bare hands.

      I used to be able to do that when I was working in a kitchen. If you burn your hands often enough you kinda build up a tolerance/calluses. We used to call it having asbestos hands.

    • @RunawayFixer@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      I’ve seen video of someone pulling stuff out of frying oil with his bare hands. This was made easy for him because all his nerve endings in his hands were dead because he had been putting them into frying oil, but still, I never would have believed anyone to do something that … I don’t know what to call it, callous maybe.

      • @burntbacon@discuss.tchncs.de
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        114 hours ago

        …that seems like it must have been faked. Even if the nerves had been burned off, that’s serious damage. Nerves are in the dermis, and if that gets burned seriously enough to make all the nerve endings dead, you’re going to have a bad time. Just because the pain isn’t being felt also doesn’t prevent further damage.

        • @RunawayFixer@lemmy.world
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          111 hours ago

          I tried looking for it and I found a YouTube video of some Indian street vendor doing it, but iirc my old video had been of some British guy. There’s more than one apparently.

          The loss of sensitivity doesn’t happen all at once, plenty of cooks and serving staff have much higher tolerances than non-cooks/waiters. I’d expect that this is at least partly from damaged nerves, but while they have reduced sensitivity, iirc then the British guy said that he had lost all sensation in his hands.

    • Lka1988
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      220 hours ago

      100%. I say this in jest quite a bit, but I’m absolutely serious this time - Nobody is this stupid.