People’s Sincere Yet Stupid Beliefs

Myths So Dumb, They Could Win a Local Election
Because Grandma Said It, and Google Wasn’t Invited
A Satirical Journalism Feature from Bohiney Magazine
Welcome to the Dumb Parade
People’s Sincere Yet Stupid Beliefs -- Humans are walking contradictions. We’ve split the atom, mapped the genome, and put a robot on Mars. And yet — some of us also believe that gum sticks to your intestines like it’s squatting rent-free. Welcome to the weird, wobbly corner of human cognition, where logic parks sideways and superstition parallel parks in a fire zone. This is not a list of lies or conspiracies — it’s a list of beliefs held with sincerity… and also zero receipts.
These aren’t just dumb ideas. These are ideas defended by aunts, barbers, and that guy at Lowe’s who uses “bro science” as a citation format. So let’s chew into the absurd, the misguided, and the downright adorable.
You Only Use 10% of Your Brain
Let’s get this one out of the way, since it’s the prom queen of pop science myths. If you only used 10% of your brain, you'd probably be a beanbag chair. Neuroscientists have proven again and again that your brain is lit up like a Vegas strip during even basic tasks — like trying to log into your own Netflix account without panicking.
This myth survives because people want it to be true. It gives hope to every middle-aged man who just discovered kombucha and thinks he might still write that jazz-rock-fusion screenplay.
“I only use 10% of my brain!”
“Yes, and 100% of that is thinking about air fryers.”
Cracking Your Knuckles Gives You Arthritis
It doesn’t. The sound is just gas bubbles. But the belief sticks around because it's the perfect parenting tool: terrifying, unverifiable, and easy to shout across a room.
Fun fact: a doctor named Donald Unger cracked the knuckles on one hand for 60 years to test this. No arthritis. Just a warped left hand.
The Great Wall of China is Visible from Space
It’s not. You can see cities, coastlines, and your neighbor's pool, but the Great Wall is basically Earth’s version of a parking stripe. Astronauts confirmed it's a myth — yet it’s printed in textbooks and parroted by 5th grade teachers who also say Columbus discovered America “nicely.”
“You can’t even see your own driveway from a plane without Google Earth, Janice.”
Lightning Never Strikes the Same Place Twice
It does. Repeatedly. Especially in Florida, where lightning seems to have beef with golfers. The Empire State Building gets hit over 20 times a year, usually while someone’s Instagramming their “skyline vibes.”
Lightning is not your ex. It doesn’t move on. It has a type.
Shaving Makes Hair Grow Back Thicker
Nope. It feels rougher because it’s cut flat, not because you summoned follicular vengeance. If shaving made hair thicker, there’d be a line of bald guys at Supercuts just rubbing razors on their heads like a magic lamp.
Bats Are Blind
This myth survives because of the phrase “blind as a bat.” But bats can see quite well. Some even have better night vision than you — especially if you’ve recently stared into a ring light for three hours.
"Blind as a bat" is also the name of three failed Batman spin-offs and one Florida-based dating show.
Goldfish Have a Three-Second Memory
Goldfish have months of memory. In fact, they can be trained to respond to music, recognize their owners, and vote in local school board elections in certain parts of Florida. Okay, not the last one. But give it time.
If your fish forgets you, it's not biology. It's emotional distance.
Going Outside with Wet Hair Gives You a Cold
Nope. Colds are caused by viruses, not breeze. Your wet hair might make you unpopular, but not contagious.
But again, a parenting lie that stuck. And frankly, if cold viruses traveled via wet heads, junior high would’ve been one long mass casualty event.
People in the Past Couldn’t See Colors
Some people genuinely believe ancient folks only saw in black and white until the Renaissance — like the world was filmed on old Kodak reels. This belief seems to emerge from the phrase “a drab existence,” which apparently got translated as “monochrome living.”
Rest assured, the Romans saw purple. And probably committed crimes because of it.
Bulls Hate the Color Red
They don’t. They’re colorblind to red. It’s the movement of the cloth that pisses them off — which makes sense. Wouldn’t you charge someone who keeps waving laundry in your face?
“He’s not mad at red. He’s mad because you look like a flamenco-dancing tax auditor.”
Touching a Baby Bird Makes the Mother Reject It
Birds do not abandon their young because of your filthy human stench. Most birds don’t have a strong sense of smell. If they rejected their young over bad smells, pigeons wouldn’t exist.
This myth just exists to stop kids from poking things. Mission partially accomplished.
Swallowing Gum Means It Stays in Your Stomach for Seven Years
Your intestines aren’t a lost and found. Gum passes through like everything else. If it stayed for seven years, we’d all be pooping minty scrolls by middle school.
That said, it is technically indigestible. So are Hot Cheetos, and no one’s writing ghost stories about those.
Einstein Failed Math
Wrong. He was doing calculus by 15. This myth comforts people who got a 63 on the SAT math section and then became lifestyle coaches.
It’s like saying Shakespeare was illiterate or Taylor Swift can’t rhyme. They can. They just don’t always want to.
Toilets Flush the Opposite Way in Australia
The Coriolis effect doesn’t work on toilets. It’s plumbing design, not geography. But this myth is spread by people who watched one half of a “MythBusters” episode while eating a Vegemite sandwich.
Next you’ll tell me Australian beer fizzes counterclockwise.
Most Body Heat Escapes Through the Head
Only if your head is the only part of you not wearing pants. Heat escapes wherever it’s coldest — that’s physics, not a hat conspiracy.
Parents love this myth. It’s why every kid had to wear a wool hat in May.
Mount Everest is the Tallest Mountain
Only if you measure from sea level. If you count from base to peak, Mauna Kea in Hawaii wins. Everest just wins in branding.
Everest is the Kardashian of mountains. Mauna Kea is the quiet cousin with real credentials and no podcast.
Waking a Sleepwalker is Dangerous
No, it just startles them. You’re not going to unlock a demon or make them speak fluent Latin. In fact, it’s probably more dangerous to let them wander into the kitchen and try to grill a waffle iron.
Hair and Nails Keep Growing After Death
They don’t. The skin dehydrates and shrinks, which gives the illusion of growth. So unless you’re embalming with Rogaine, Grandpa’s not growing sideburns in the coffin.
The Five-Second Rule Protects You From Germs
Bacteria don’t wait politely. They jump on that muffin like it’s Black Friday. If you’re eating off the floor, just admit it — you’re playing life on Hard Mode.
Water Conducts Electricity
Pure water doesn’t. It’s the minerals in tap water that do. So yes, bathwater can electrocute you — but only because it’s a mineral-rich soup of sadness, shampoo, and shattered dreams.
Daddy Longlegs Are the Most Venomous Spiders
They’re not venomous to humans. Also, not all "daddy longlegs" are even spiders. But this myth has legs — long, skinny, and scientifically useless ones.
Crossing Your Eyes Can Make Them Stuck
It’s a bluff. Your eyeballs don’t suddenly unionize. They snap back like they’re paid to. Unless you’re also sneezing, eating glue, and watching TikTok — then all bets are off.
Alcohol Kills Brain Cells
Not quite. It damages pathways and cognition, but it doesn’t send brain cells off to a Viking funeral. If it did, frat parties would be crime scenes.
Congress Once Classified Pizza as a Vegetable
Yes. This actually happened, thanks to the tomato paste loophole in school lunches. So if you're wondering who to thank for your 3rd grader’s diet of triangle-shaped sadness — blame politics.
Conclusion: Why These Myths Live On
These beliefs endure because they’re catchy, visual, and slightly terrifying. They make us feel informed, even when we're spewing nonsense. They’re useful lies — portable, flexible, and perfectly designed to survive one thousand Thanksgiving dinners.
Let’s face it: logic is hard. Fear is fast. And nothing makes people more confident than knowing just enough to be dangerous.
“I believe that!”
“Great. Let’s tattoo it on your forehead and call it education reform.”
What the Funny People Are Saying
“If gum really stayed in your stomach for seven years, I’d be 87% Hubba Bubba.” — Ali Wong
“The Great Wall myth is classic. People can’t find their own hotel room but claim they spotted a wall from the moon.” — Ricky Gervais
“You don’t lose heat through your head — you lose it when you talk politics at Thanksgiving.” — Sarah Silverman
Final Thought
So the next time someone tells you that lightning never strikes twice or that their detox tea rewires their DNA, smile politely. Then slowly moonwalk away. You can’t fix belief with facts. But you can mock it. Respectfully.
That’s what we’re here for.
Auf Wiedersehen.
And remember: if stupidity had a scent, the internet would need Febreze.

BOHNEY NEWS -- A wide-aspect satirical cartoon illustration in the style of Toni Bohiney. The scene is a chaotic 'Belief Museum' tour packed with absurd and exaggerated... -- Alan Nafzger https://bohiney.com/peoples-sincere-yet-stupid-beliefs/
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