Woman’s Potato Contraception Takes Root

Potatoroots

[M]edical staff in a clinic in the central Colombian town of Honda have discovered a potato growing inside a patient’s vagina.

The embarrassed young woman explained that she had been advised by her mother to insert a potato into her vagina as a means of avoiding unwanted pregnancy.

“My mom told me that if I didn’t want to get pregnant, I should put a potato up there, and I believed her”.

After leaving the potato in place for around 2 weeks she began to experience intense pain in her lower abdomen. The potato had germinated, and grown roots inside the lady.

I’ve heard of some odd approaches to contraception, but this has to be one of the more unfortunate ones.

Via Columbia Reports.

The Artistic Masterpieces of a Five Year Old Autistic Girl

5-year-old-painter-autism-iris-grace-15

Autism is a poorly-understood neurological disorder that can impair an individual’s ability to engage in various social interactions.

But little 5-year-old Iris Grace in the UK is an excellent example of the unexpected gifts that autism can also grant – her exceptional focus and attention to detail have helped her create incredibly beautiful paintings.

thula-therapy-cat-autistic-artist-iris-grace-27

5-year-old-painter-autism-iris-grace-20

thula-therapy-cat-autistic-artist-iris-grace-20

5-year-old-painter-autism-iris-grace-10

Personally, I am not generally much of a fan of impressionistic art, but this is particularly good, even regardless of the intriguing source. Intriguing, as well, because it gives a view of the world from a source that is terribly difficult to understand.

And yep, the Maine Coon in the pictures is (naturally) her therapy cat.

Via Bored Panda.

The Rodafonio

rodafoniopublico

From the magical world of inventions comes Rodadonio. A big wheel through the streets carrying in her womb five blessed metal crew, who join her to give movement through music.

Did the music moves the mechanical or mechanical moves music?

rodafoniovertical1

dsc_0653-imp

20140114_181451

Via Factoria Circular. Translation from Spanish by Google Translate.

The Strange Medieval Account of the Succubus and the Pope

Silvester_II._and_the_Devil_Cod._Pal._germ._137_f216v

History and mythology make for strange bedfellows, and few stranger times than the story of Pope Sylvester II (pope from 999-1003 C.E.) and the succubus.

First, though, let’s talk a little about succubi – you know, those sexy female demons so popular in medieval and modern narratives, from movies to television series to books to pen and paper games to video games.

In modern convention, succubi seduce men and drain the life force (sometimes simply blood) during sex, so more or less a sexy energy vampire.

demonfeetThe original succubus, however, were decidedly odder. The infamous 15th century witch hunter manual The Malleus Maleficarum (or in English, “The Witch’s Hammer”) was condemned by the Catholic Church three years after its publication, though it nevertheless became an very important resource in the brutal prosecution of witchcraft in Europe over the next couple of centuries.

The author of the Malleus Maleficarum, a German inquisitor by the name of Heinrich Kramer, concluded that succubi and their male counterparts, incubi – were in fact the same creature. The seeming procreative capabilities of the incubus was simply the act of the demon first taking the form of a beautiful woman to collect the semen of a mortal man, and then, before said semen went bad, to travel quickly to a supplicant woman who wished to become pregnant. Taking then the form of the male incubus, the demon would then impregnate her.

Yes, the succubus was originally conceived of as an erotic hermaphrodite.

Silvester_II

But what about this pope I mentioned above? Ah, yes. That would be Pope Sylvester II, born Gerbert d’Aurillac in the Kingdom of France, he studied magical arts and astrology in the Islamic cities of Cordoba and Seville (remember, at that time the Iberian Peninsula was under Muslim rule), and was the source of a number of fascinating stories, including one where he had a mechanic device in the shape of a head that would answer truly questions put to it in the form of yes/no propositions.

Stranger even than the brazen head, however, is his reputed pact with a succubus by the name of Meridiana. After d’Aurillac had been rejected romantically, he made a pact with her in order to ascend the papal throne.

282Meridiana warned d’Aurillac that if he should ever read a mass in Jerusalem, the Devil himself would come to him. Canceling his pilgrimage to Jerusalem, d’Aurillac thought he had dodged a bullet (or rather, a crossbow bolt). After reading mass in the church in Rome by the name of Santa Croce in Gerusalemme – that is, “The Holy Cross of Jerusalem” – d’Aurillac became deathly sick.

In one version of subsequent events, the Devil mutilated him, granting d’Aurillac’s own gouged out eyes to petty demons for them to play with. Repenting, d’Aurillac cut off his hand and tongue.

Not in the historical record, unfortunately, is whether the succubus Meridiana got a promotion in the Infernal Hierarchy for her exemplary professional work.

Via Wikipedia.

The Shock Bracelet to Break You Of Your Bad Habits

pavlokprotolead

[A] wearable band that can zap you with electricity is now up on Indiegogo, with its designer hoping to raise $50,000 to develop more features and to begin mass production.

In order to train yourself to stay away from bad habits or continue doing good ones, you’ll need to program the Pavlok app [including] possible software tie-ups such as instructing the wristband to zap you if you send a message to an ex, to beep loudly and embarrass you whenever you step into a McD’s with the help of a navigation app, or to remind you to walk more when paired up with an exercise app.

If you didn’t happen to get the sly reference in the name of the project, check out the article on Pavlovian conditioning on Wikipedia.

Pavlok on Indiegogo via engadget.