1 00:00:00,280 --> 00:00:02,960 Speaker 1: Brought to you by the reinvented two thousand twelve Camray. 2 00:00:03,160 --> 00:00:07,600 Speaker 1: It's ready. Are you welcome to stuff you should know 3 00:00:08,200 --> 00:00:12,720 Speaker 1: from how stuff works dot Com? Hi, and welcome to 4 00:00:12,760 --> 00:00:15,480 Speaker 1: the podcast. I'm Josh Clark, a staff writer here how 5 00:00:15,560 --> 00:00:18,320 Speaker 1: stuff works dot Com with me today is fellow staff 6 00:00:18,360 --> 00:00:21,640 Speaker 1: writer an extraordinary guy, Charles Bryant. How are you, Chuck. 7 00:00:21,760 --> 00:00:24,560 Speaker 1: I'm great, I'm extraordinary. Thanks for having me, Chuck. I 8 00:00:24,560 --> 00:00:27,480 Speaker 1: am so jazz. I've got like all this adrenaline pumping 9 00:00:27,480 --> 00:00:29,120 Speaker 1: through right now. I feel like I lived a car. 10 00:00:29,160 --> 00:00:31,520 Speaker 1: I could throw this table across the room and you 11 00:00:31,640 --> 00:00:33,920 Speaker 1: might Yeah, have you heard of these stories about people 12 00:00:33,960 --> 00:00:37,040 Speaker 1: like picking cars up of all other people? Yeah? I have. 13 00:00:37,200 --> 00:00:38,880 Speaker 1: It's you know, you might think it's an urban legend. 14 00:00:39,040 --> 00:00:41,200 Speaker 1: You know, you hear these stories about people just chunking 15 00:00:41,440 --> 00:00:44,239 Speaker 1: a buick off of their son when they're trapped underneath it. 16 00:00:44,240 --> 00:00:48,000 Speaker 1: But it's actually true. There's plenty of documented cases. Uh. 17 00:00:48,120 --> 00:00:49,680 Speaker 1: When you were researching this, you found a bunch of 18 00:00:49,720 --> 00:00:52,519 Speaker 1: good ones. My favorite was the Granny and Texas. This 19 00:00:52,560 --> 00:00:56,040 Speaker 1: is my favorite to actually. Yeah. Murray Peyton, who her 20 00:00:56,120 --> 00:00:58,640 Speaker 1: nickname is Boots. We call her Bootsy around the office, 21 00:00:58,720 --> 00:01:01,240 Speaker 1: right and I think everyone calls her boot lovingly. Yeah, 22 00:01:01,280 --> 00:01:04,080 Speaker 1: we love Bootsy. So Bootsy was cutting her grass in 23 00:01:04,120 --> 00:01:07,760 Speaker 1: Texas one day on a riding more. Um, I don't 24 00:01:07,760 --> 00:01:09,200 Speaker 1: know if she fell off or what, but somehow the 25 00:01:09,240 --> 00:01:11,000 Speaker 1: Lawmar got away from her and it kind of kept 26 00:01:11,000 --> 00:01:14,000 Speaker 1: on going, and her little granddaughter, Evie, thought it might 27 00:01:14,000 --> 00:01:17,200 Speaker 1: be a good idea to stop the riding more with 28 00:01:17,840 --> 00:01:20,280 Speaker 1: I guess superpower. She jumped in front of it, all 29 00:01:20,319 --> 00:01:23,720 Speaker 1: a super girl. It was the impression I have, and um, 30 00:01:23,760 --> 00:01:26,080 Speaker 1: I imagined. Poor Evie suffered quite a start when she 31 00:01:26,240 --> 00:01:28,800 Speaker 1: found that her superpowers had failed her and she was 32 00:01:28,840 --> 00:01:32,200 Speaker 1: suddenly pinned beneath a running rider motor right. She suffered 33 00:01:32,200 --> 00:01:35,120 Speaker 1: more than that, Josh. She lost four of her little 34 00:01:35,120 --> 00:01:37,560 Speaker 1: toes as a result, and she probably would have lost 35 00:01:37,560 --> 00:01:40,199 Speaker 1: a lot more if it hadn't have been for super 36 00:01:40,200 --> 00:01:43,320 Speaker 1: Granny coming in there. Yeah, yeah, Marie. Yeah, So Bootsy 37 00:01:43,400 --> 00:01:46,759 Speaker 1: flies in there, well not literally, but she she runs 38 00:01:46,760 --> 00:01:49,120 Speaker 1: in there and she picks up this Lawmar and throws 39 00:01:49,120 --> 00:01:51,400 Speaker 1: it off of her granddaughter, you know, saving her life. 40 00:01:51,600 --> 00:01:52,960 Speaker 1: Threw it off of her like it was a piece 41 00:01:52,960 --> 00:01:55,760 Speaker 1: of cardboard, like a piece of cardboard or maybe something 42 00:01:55,800 --> 00:01:58,720 Speaker 1: even lighter. And actually after the I imagine after the 43 00:01:58,760 --> 00:02:02,320 Speaker 1: tremblings have decided and eve these injuries have been attended to. Uh, 44 00:02:02,560 --> 00:02:05,160 Speaker 1: Marie went back over kind of curious and tried to 45 00:02:05,160 --> 00:02:08,080 Speaker 1: pick up the lawnmoard again, couldn't budget. She couldn't even 46 00:02:08,080 --> 00:02:11,680 Speaker 1: pined over. No, I'm sure. And what what we're talking 47 00:02:11,720 --> 00:02:15,040 Speaker 1: about here and what boots he experienced is something called 48 00:02:15,120 --> 00:02:19,119 Speaker 1: hysterical strength, and it's not actually recognized by the medical community. 49 00:02:19,120 --> 00:02:21,320 Speaker 1: Did you know that? Yeah? I did, because you know, 50 00:02:21,360 --> 00:02:23,040 Speaker 1: there's no way you can really follow up and do 51 00:02:23,080 --> 00:02:25,160 Speaker 1: a study on something like this, right, and and and 52 00:02:25,240 --> 00:02:27,560 Speaker 1: for something to be experimented on, it has to be 53 00:02:27,600 --> 00:02:29,480 Speaker 1: you know, it has to be able to be replicated. 54 00:02:29,520 --> 00:02:31,520 Speaker 1: And you you can't just throw a kid beneath the 55 00:02:31,560 --> 00:02:33,320 Speaker 1: car in a lab and see what the parents do. 56 00:02:33,600 --> 00:02:36,360 Speaker 1: You could? You could, It's unethical and you'd lose your 57 00:02:36,360 --> 00:02:40,000 Speaker 1: funding very quickly. Yeah, but so you know, medical science 58 00:02:40,000 --> 00:02:42,760 Speaker 1: hasn't taken many steps to explain it. But these cases 59 00:02:42,760 --> 00:02:45,799 Speaker 1: are widely documented. There's lots of witnesses that kind of thing, 60 00:02:46,040 --> 00:02:48,119 Speaker 1: and it seems to be an extension of the fight 61 00:02:48,200 --> 00:02:51,480 Speaker 1: or flight response. You know much about this? Yeah? I do? Okay, Well, 62 00:02:51,960 --> 00:02:54,320 Speaker 1: I'll tell everybody else. Then you just sit there quietly. 63 00:02:54,639 --> 00:02:57,200 Speaker 1: So basically, let's say you're walking down the street and 64 00:02:57,200 --> 00:02:59,080 Speaker 1: you're eating a hot dog and you come upon a 65 00:02:59,280 --> 00:03:02,000 Speaker 1: lion and he is loose and he's hungry. That happens 66 00:03:02,000 --> 00:03:03,960 Speaker 1: all the time, all right, Well, that this hot dog 67 00:03:04,080 --> 00:03:07,920 Speaker 1: is being digested until your fight or flight response kicks in, 68 00:03:07,960 --> 00:03:12,000 Speaker 1: which is from the sympathetic system. Uh, it takes over 69 00:03:12,080 --> 00:03:14,320 Speaker 1: all of a sudden, adrenalinees released. That hot dog is 70 00:03:14,360 --> 00:03:17,799 Speaker 1: no longer being digested. Instead, all the energy on stuff 71 00:03:17,840 --> 00:03:20,280 Speaker 1: that's that's peripheral, all of a sudden to this danger 72 00:03:20,840 --> 00:03:23,320 Speaker 1: is transferred over to things like increasing your heart rate, 73 00:03:23,760 --> 00:03:26,600 Speaker 1: your respiration, your pupils dilate so you can take in 74 00:03:26,720 --> 00:03:29,960 Speaker 1: more visual information, that kind of thing. And basically you 75 00:03:30,000 --> 00:03:31,840 Speaker 1: go from the dull stare of the dairy cow to 76 00:03:31,880 --> 00:03:34,080 Speaker 1: the eye of the tiger, and seconds flat, you're ready 77 00:03:34,120 --> 00:03:37,320 Speaker 1: to go. The way this connects to hysterical strength, you know, 78 00:03:37,440 --> 00:03:40,960 Speaker 1: like lifting a car is in this fight or flight response, 79 00:03:41,120 --> 00:03:44,680 Speaker 1: your muscles contract, They shorten and tighten um so that 80 00:03:44,800 --> 00:03:47,320 Speaker 1: you can run faster, throw a harder punch, you know 81 00:03:47,440 --> 00:03:50,960 Speaker 1: that kind of thing. Um and your skeletal muscles actually 82 00:03:51,000 --> 00:03:55,360 Speaker 1: contract by receiving electrical impulses from your brain. Yeah, exactly. 83 00:03:55,520 --> 00:04:00,000 Speaker 1: They you know, have you ever been electrocuted twice? Well, 84 00:04:00,040 --> 00:04:02,600 Speaker 1: if you if you get a sudden surge of electricity, 85 00:04:02,800 --> 00:04:04,600 Speaker 1: a lot of times you'll be shot across the room 86 00:04:04,680 --> 00:04:06,839 Speaker 1: or across the street or you know, who knows where 87 00:04:06,840 --> 00:04:08,760 Speaker 1: you could land. Uh. And a lot of people think 88 00:04:08,760 --> 00:04:11,640 Speaker 1: this is probably just like a blast from the electrical box, 89 00:04:12,000 --> 00:04:14,240 Speaker 1: but that's not the case. It's actually your own muscles 90 00:04:14,280 --> 00:04:16,240 Speaker 1: doing all the work. You just get such a surge 91 00:04:16,279 --> 00:04:20,200 Speaker 1: of electrical impulse that you tap into this energy and 92 00:04:20,200 --> 00:04:22,000 Speaker 1: and your muscles you didn't know you had. Yeah, you're 93 00:04:22,040 --> 00:04:26,680 Speaker 1: you're actually throwing yourself, which which illustrates this kind of 94 00:04:26,760 --> 00:04:30,520 Speaker 1: untapped reserve of of muscular strength. Well yeah, and it 95 00:04:30,560 --> 00:04:32,360 Speaker 1: makes you kind of wonder why, you know, you don't 96 00:04:32,360 --> 00:04:34,000 Speaker 1: walk around like that all the time and just be 97 00:04:34,400 --> 00:04:36,719 Speaker 1: you know, a race of you know, superheroes, right or 98 00:04:36,800 --> 00:04:39,119 Speaker 1: people ready to beat up a line at any given moment. 99 00:04:39,240 --> 00:04:41,280 Speaker 1: Right right, Well, I'll tell you why, Chuck. The short 100 00:04:41,279 --> 00:04:43,640 Speaker 1: answer is that it would kill us, uh in fairly 101 00:04:43,720 --> 00:04:47,560 Speaker 1: short order. The whole goal to our body is homeostasis, 102 00:04:47,560 --> 00:04:49,920 Speaker 1: which is like this balance between you know the eye 103 00:04:49,920 --> 00:04:51,880 Speaker 1: of the tiger and the dulstair of the dairy cow. 104 00:04:51,960 --> 00:04:54,720 Speaker 1: That kind of thing. Um and uh. If we don't 105 00:04:54,720 --> 00:04:57,680 Speaker 1: achieve homeostasis, if we're in the state of hyper arousal, 106 00:04:57,920 --> 00:05:02,120 Speaker 1: we get worn down, our hearts, wear down, more susceptible 107 00:05:02,200 --> 00:05:03,840 Speaker 1: the illness. That kind of thing. Well, and you can 108 00:05:03,839 --> 00:05:06,320 Speaker 1: feel that, you can and you can see it actually too. 109 00:05:06,400 --> 00:05:09,120 Speaker 1: You and I both know from being overworked you you 110 00:05:09,200 --> 00:05:11,560 Speaker 1: get worn down and you'll eventually die because you're in 111 00:05:11,640 --> 00:05:14,479 Speaker 1: a state of stress well exactly, Josh, Like you know, 112 00:05:14,520 --> 00:05:17,359 Speaker 1: like a stress induced or a work related heart attack exactly. 113 00:05:17,480 --> 00:05:20,839 Speaker 1: And you can avoid a stress related heart attack or 114 00:05:20,880 --> 00:05:22,960 Speaker 1: work related heart attack by taking some time out of 115 00:05:23,000 --> 00:05:25,800 Speaker 1: your day and reading how can adrenaline help you lift 116 00:05:25,839 --> 00:05:30,200 Speaker 1: a thirty pound car? On how stuff works dot com 117 00:05:30,240 --> 00:05:32,680 Speaker 1: for more on this and thousands of other topics. Does 118 00:05:32,680 --> 00:05:35,599 Speaker 1: it how stuff works dot com. Let us know what 119 00:05:35,680 --> 00:05:38,800 Speaker 1: you think. Send an email to podcast at how stuff 120 00:05:38,800 --> 00:05:44,160 Speaker 1: works dot com. Brought to you by the reinvented two 121 00:05:44,240 --> 00:05:46,760 Speaker 1: thousand twelve Camray. It's ready, are you