Simple thing you finally figured out that made you feel stupid

I can top both of you lame-brains. I have one of those kitchen faucets that pulls out and becomes a sprayer. When you turn it on, water runs normally. You push a button on the black rubber piece on top and the spray action starts. I spent 10 years turning the water off and back on again to get it to go back to normal water flow before I discovered, quite by accident, that there are *two buttons *under the black rubber piece. The second button turns the water back to normal flow. :smack:

I think we have a winner! :wink:

How about taking me 20+ years to realize that not everyone takes Tylenol like candy nearly every day for nearly every day headaches? Took an emergency admission to the hospital the other day to really bring the point home.

This morning I realized, as I listened to the radio that I’d been pronouncing phelgamatic incorrectly inside of my head for years, as well.

psst…ouryl read posts #118, and #122 :smiley:

James Dean was the actor that died in a car accident. Jimmy Dean is a country singer and maker of delicious pork sausage.

“The eggs come from real chickens, the cheese comes from real cows, and the
sausage comes from Jimmy Dean.” :eek: :slight_smile:

Corner Case, I have that same damn ceiling fan!

When I was small and the teacher would ask us for words that began with “x”, I would always call out “Xing!” (pronounced “Zing”) and then wonder at the patronizing nod I received. After all, didn’t anyone else notice all the street signs announcing "Ped Xing"s and "Deer Xing"s?

it still irks me that it’s an x, not a cross, dammit!

IANADoctor, of course, but it sounds like a visit to a neurologist wouldn’t be a waste of your time. I used to pop aspirin and Tylenol like candy, too. Two visits to a neuro and he prescribed some lovely stuff that’s nearly eliminated my migraines and the nearly-daily headaches.

A few years ago I was having a discussion with someone in a chat room about music when the topic turned to The Beatles. I spelled the band name “Beetles” and the other guy spelled it “Beatles.” I eventually noticed the discrepancy and it suddenly dawned on me that the band name is spelled Beatles. I swear to God I never knew it up until then. I then realized that it was a fun play on words; Beetles spelled with the word “Beat.”

Also, it was in college when I learned Martin Luther and Martin Luther King were two different people.

:smack: And I just “got” ouryL’s username! (Uh, maybe; is it oral or aural?)

After lo these many decades I had never considered that the name could be thought of as “Beat-leas”. Interesting.

:smack: Beat-les!

I see you had the same reaction to that commercial that I did.

I guess you would call that long pork sausage. :eek: :smiley:

Yeah, well … I’m in the process. My brand spankin new GP is systematically knocking out the possibilities (sinusitus, allergies, etc) and the next things to try after eliminating those are MRA (already did an MRI, brain tumor scan, echocardiogram and cat scan). We’re treating my “episode” like a TIA, but eliminating all the headache/migrane possible causes and treating the headache/migranes before we assume it was a TIA related to the whole stupid APS/hughes syndrome thing. He’s got an allergist and neuro in mind. Thanks for your concern. :slight_smile:

[/hijack]

Oriole?

Wha???

I remember a specific strip in which it was said that Satchel was named that because he was found, as a puppy, in a satchel. Bucky’s Bucky because he’s missing one of his upper eyeteeth. (How that makes him ‘bucky’ I’m not sure, but that’s what it said).

There are two reasons why a fictional construct has a name. One is why the parent (or owner, in this case) gave them the name. The other is why the author picked the name. The real reason, of course, is the reason the author chose to give the name, which is the case here, according to wiki.

Maybe a play on “buckteeth” (being bucktoothed, etc)?

Set the way-back machine to high school in the 1970’s:

Theatre teacher: We are going to be doing a one-act by Henrik Ibsen.

Me: You mean that guy from Laugh-In?

Theatre teacher (witheringly): No, not that guy from Laugh-In.
Once I got to college and learned about Russian playwrights, I had my explanation. (Henry Gibson <> Henrik Ibsen. Hey, they sound similar and my high school teacher didn’t, y’know, educate us!)

If it makes you feel better, when I was studying Ibsen in highschool (he’s Norwegian by the way) my parents made constant Henry Gibson jokes.

I’ve never seen Laugh-In though so they left me just plain bewildered :wink: