I don’t remember wondering that when I was little, but I’ve started to get that more and more when I’m driving on the highway, but for traffic going my way, not opposite ways.
When two cars are sufficiently far from me and one of them changes lanes, it always looks like they’re gonna crash into each other and sometimes I even move my foot to the brake just in case.
Whenever my parents drove me past this place http://www.poconosrus.com/hideout-directions.htm I’d wonder at the foolishness of the crooks who had a huge sign saying “Hideout” in front of their hideout - surely they were bound to get caught.
According to TV commercials Mom and I should have been using feminine napkins at the dinner table. But in our house, girls and boys used the same kind. Were we missing out on something fancy?
Why my parents always slept with the bedroom door shut. Were they scared?
How the post office cashed in a stamp when it was still stuck to our letter?
Why school had to start when it was still dark outside?
…why adults still did nasty things to one another. Adults were the ones telling children not to do naughty things, so surely by the time they were adults, people had grown out of misbehaving?
I told people that my dad was an alcoholic. Well, he drank beer. And beer has alcohol in it, right? So he must be an alcoholic. People who drink alcohol are alcoholics.
Another - I couldn’t understand why Jerry Mathers, Tony Dow, Hugh Beaumont, and Barbara Billingsly all had different names besides Beaver, Wally, Mr Cleaver and Mrs. Cleaver. Also wondered why my mom never wore pearls while cleaning the house or how Beaver’s dad came home wearing a suit. My dad worked construction and came home dirty and smelling pretty ripe. I couldn’t figure out how Mr. Cleaver did the same and came home in a suit. I thought that all men worked in construction. Those guys working in stores and stuff just did that because they liked to. They all still must work in construction somewhere.
I wondered why the Queen Elizabeth’s husband was not called “king”.
I wondered what the long versions of people’s names were. Like, the long version of Jenny is (often) Jennifer and the long version of Katie is (often) Katherine. So what’s the long version of Rachel’s name or Mason’s name or Heather’s name?
I genuinely wondered if people perceived colors differently and how we would have any idea if they did. No amount of explanation on that one satisfied me.
I wondered about languages- how they were so hard to learn when I was pretty sure I was well on my way to learning Spanish. I thought it was letters that got translated, not words- so everything was spelled the same, but pronounced differently, and all you had to do was remember that, for example, J makes an H sound in Spanish.
eta: I also wondered why they advertised coke and pepsi on TV when coke and pepsi weren’t new. I thought commercials were only for informing the public that something new had been invented.
I wondered why the road people couldn’t make up their minds. “Do Not Pass”, followed shortly by “Pass With Care”, then again with “Do Not Pass”…either you shouldn’t pass, or you should!
I could make it out as “same as cash”, but the idea confused me. How do I pay for something with 90 days??
I wondered how TV channels advertised competing products, like Ford one minute and Chevy the next. Or especially political ads. Don’t these channels or networks have any convictions? How can their support change so quickly?
Years ago, my ex returned from a short trip and explained her treacherous journey. She normally took the interstate to this place, but this time she decided to take the scenic route. Along the way, she came upon a ‘DO NOT PASS’ sign. She said she nearly turned around, but the road looked okay, so she went on. She went real slow not knowing what was around each corner, but she made it to her destination. Turns out the road wasn’t in bad shape at all. She didn’t feel there was any need for the sign.
Never seeing a girl with a skirt ride a bicycle, I used to wonder why girls bikes had that low-angle bar on the frame. As someone who’s landed their nuts on that top bar, it seemed to me that somehow boys bikes and girls bikes were mixed up and why didn’t they figure out that mistake?
I wondered about the “DO NOT PASS” signs as well. How are you supposed to get down the road if you can’t pass the sign?
I’m showing my age here, but I also wondered why fallout shelters were in the basements of places. You can’t fall out of a basement, why do you need to shelter from it?
Growing up, I never wondered about that, but there was (and still is) a place in my home county where the divided highway turns into a regular road, and there is a sign that states “highway ends 1000 ft.”. But I didn’t notice this, my dad had to point out the silliness to me since the road obviously didn’t end.
and to hijack, in Melbourne, where I’m living now, there’s a similar sign where the sidewalkis actually about to end which states “sidewalk ends 1034 feet.” I would post it on oddlyspecific if I didn’t have a feeling that that sort of photo is common.
As a child, I was somewhat puzzled by how people could move 3,000 vehicles so fast just by pressing on an accelerator pedal. I also was perplexed by other thermo-mechanical processes and machinery. I had to work hard by comparison to make my light weight bycycle move along. After engineering school and a few years working in automotive related industries, I mostly understand it.
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I genuinely wondered if people perceived colors differently and how we would have any idea if they did. No amount of explanation on that one satisfied me.
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If you’re three, you’re short. If you’re four, you’re a little taller. If you’re really old, like eight, you’re really tall. If you’re ancient, like 14, woah, you’re freakin’ sequoia.
Therefore, the older you were, the taller you were.
So where were all of the really really old people, like older than dad? I came to the only logical conclusion. At a certain age, people must be made to go live in some bizarre land of the giants.