From outdated historical misunderstandings to persistent old wives' tales that refuse to die, this deep dive explores the fascinating origins and realities behind the world’s most common health misconceptions. Learn how many of these widely accepted "facts" actually contrast with modern evidence, how they spread through culture, and what modern medical science and clinical research reveal about the truth behind these myths. Whether you’re interested in medical history, public health, or just want to separate scientific fact from fiction, this video breaks down the history, biology, and compelling research behind the health myths we need to stop believing. Timestamp 0:00 - Cracking Knuckles Causes Arthritis 1:07 - We Only Use 10% of Our Brains 2:02 - Carrots Improve Your Eyesight 3:10 - Breakfast Is the Most Important Meal of the Day 4:22 - Sugar Makes Kids Hyperactive 5:27 - Hair and Nails Keep Growing After Death 6:29 - Cold Weather Makes You Sick 7:33 - You Need 8 Glasses of Water a Day 8:41 - Turkey Makes You Sleepy 9:50 - Ulcers Are Caused by Stress and Spicy Food 10:51 - Shaving Makes Hair Grow Back Thicker 11:54 - You Lose Most Body Heat Through Your Head 12:58 - Double-Jointed with Extra Joints 14:11 - Reading in Dim Light Ruins Your Eyes 15:19 - Swimming After Eating Will Kill You
Comments 11
Sign in to join the conversation
Sign in
great video
:22 weird I started needed glasses after doing that
Trying to debunk that kids get hyperactive with sugar is cap to me. Short term, you'll crash if you're only having sweets. But long term, it creates bad health outcomes like hormone dysregulation, metabolism issues, obesity & weight issues and type 2 diabetes - just to name a few.
Technically breakfast is the most important meal because it's the first time you eat regardless of the time
lolol i never believed the carrot thing simply bcos my sister absolutely HATEDD evetyy vegetable and refused to eat any. I loved veggies, and mostly ate carrots & cucumbers bcos they were always in my fridge. Yet i had to wear glasses and she didnt?????? 😂
The hydration system call thirst, cracked me up.That's so funny
I'm one of those people that wear shorts even in cold weather. I get so tired of older people in Walmart saying you're going to catch pneumonia. 😂 Or similar when it rains on you. I'm always like what's the difference between that and taking a shower?
Regarding the whole "don't swim after eating," I was never told that it had anything to do with drowning, rather that it had to do with making you nauseous.
So if you go outside in the cold with wet hair wet clothes it definitely contributes to it I was just tell people basically the cold will help you to catch a cold just because it does is not the cold by itself is a combination of nasal cilia temperatures keeping viruses alive longer The best way to understand it is the cold will make you catch a cold Now we can't say that for vaccines That's really immune response and not the vaccine for people are still like the shot gave me the illness in reality they don't have the illness but that's for another time
Great video breaking down these myths! However, looking at the deeper cellular biology reveals some fascinating nuance where the "folk wisdom" actually aligns with real science: 1. Carrots & Vitamin A: While carrots won't give you super-vision, up to 45% of the population has a genetic mutation (BCMO1) making them poor converters of plant beta-carotene into active Vitamin A (retinol). Because true retinol is mostly found in liver or eggs, sub-clinical Vitamin A deficiencies are surprisingly common in developed nations, meaning optimizing this nutrient genuinely protects vision from degrading. 2. Reading in the Dark & Myopia: The old myth says reading in dim light permanently breaks your eyes. The real mechanism is mitochondrial: chronic eye strain from close-up work in poor light rapidly depletes cellular energy (ATP). A lack of ATP halts the clearance of free radicals and environmental toxins, causing oxidative stress that triggers scleral remodeling (the eyeball physically elongating). So while dim light itself doesn't cause myopia, systemic ATP exhaustion absolutely makes the eye structurally vulnerable to it. 3. Cold Weather & Sickness: Viruses cause colds, not temperature. However, cold exposure triggers the sympathetic nervous system, constricting local blood vessels and shifting local microbiomes (even dropping bladder or nasal temperatures slightly). This local immune dip doesn't create a virus out of thin air, but it allows opportunistic, resident bacteria already dormant in your body to reproduce, causing secondary infections people mistake for a "cold." 4. Shaving vs. Hair Growth: Shaving doesn't alter hair biology, but the myth persists because physical stimulation does matter. Increasing blood flow through mechanical stretching (like scalp massages) and deep chemical vasodilation (like peppermint oil) are clinically proven to increase follicle thickness.
2:25ish "For anyone getting enough nutrition through a normal diet"... Ba ha ha ha! Getting enough nutrition in that diet of 55 to 70% ultra-high processed food? No, there's ALOT of malnutrition out there!