Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Sawbones: Human Tricks
Episode Date: July 9, 2024Can you touch your tongue with your nose or wiggle your ears? Dr. Sydnee and Justin talk about the science and studies behind weird little tricks some bodies can do, or "stupid human tricks."Â Can you... flare your nostrils? Take our poll: https://shorturl.at/rdzY3Â Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers https://taxpayers.bandcamp.com/
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Sawbones is a show about medical history, and nothing the hosts say should be taken
as medical advice or opinion.
It's for fun.
Can't you just have fun for an hour and not try to diagnose your mystery boil?
We think you've earned it.
Just sit back, relax, and enjoy a moment of distraction from that weird growth.
You're worth it. Alright, this one is about some books.
One, two, one, of misguided medicine.
I'm your co-host Justin McElroy.
And I'm Sydney McElroy.
And all I had to do was say my name and that's all that I did.
That's your whole job.
Yeah, I'm pretty much done now.
I mean, to be fair, in terms of like balance of work and who puts in the most effort, maybe,
I mean, you do more than say your name.
Sorry, I use say my name specifically
because I was referencing the hit musical, Beauty Juice,
because I actually put in the legwork on this episode
in that I mentioned the vague idea of it to you.
That's true, you did. You know what?
In my order, in my outline, I don't have that
and that should be, we'll start with that.
We'll start with that as our.
Thank you.
Thank you very much, I appreciate that.
Justin, what did you mention to me, Justin?
I saw this on TikTok where Alex Breitman,
who played Beelzeuse on Broadway,
and if you've never seen him do it,
I feel like there was a time period where he did
a song about death on like a bajillion
different public venues, but like,
if you've never seen-
Like award shows and stuff.
Yeah, if you've never, and it's today's show,
and all that, you know, obviously the Tony's.
If you've never seen it, I can't even imitate it,
but it's like a deep, raspy voice that sounds.
You can do it, do the Beetlejuice voice.
It's like a vocal, and it's like,
hey, welcome, no, it's not that deep,
but it's like, it's this kind of fry
that he uses to the whole show.
That's Eric on the, I'm doing Eric on the X-hole.
But yeah, but that is the,
and what he was saying in this TikTok was that
people always ask him, you know,
how are you doing that without
destroying your voice?
Destroy your voice, because there's ways of doing it
that some people like learn how to do,
like metal vocalists, like learn over a long period of time
how to make some of those noises
without doing a lot of permanent damage.
But he was saying that it was just something he could do.
That just the way he was built,
he was able to make that noise
without putting the strain on his throat
because of different musculature down there or something.
And this inspired Justin to ask me about,
so I have labeled this episode unusual human talents.
I tried for real world superpowers,
but you wouldn't grant it to me.
I will say that if the things are more
than the normal human can do, they are superhuman, right?
It's hard because, so I put together a collection of,
I guess, superpowers.
Superpowers or fun party tricks in some way.
You know what I mean?
I mean, they really run the gamut here of things that,
I mean, I guess they're beyond the fact
that I can sing the states in alphabetical order.
Charlie can list 100 digits of pi.
These are interesting, but these are intrinsic.
Although I will say that some of the things I mentioned,
you can kind of practice and learn and perfect.
So it's a bit of both.
Yeah.
A bit of both, right?
I also think of them as like dad tricks sometimes.
And this is very specific to me, perhaps.
My dad had a number of things he would do
to entertain young children
that were just like the weird things.
I mean like flipping his eyelid inside out.
I mean, there was a time period
where David Letterman would have called
these stupid human tricks.
Oh yeah, that's true.
They were though.
That was a thing, right?
But I think there's a difference between that to me,
most stupid human tricks,
which are exactly what we're talking about,
a lot of those are things people had learned.
And we're more thinking about what you're born with.
Well, and then that area where we're not really sure,
are you born with it, can you learn it, is it both?
Is it worth studying?
Could be another question, which might come up a lot.
But first of all, the way that,
so I labeled it the way that Beetlejuice sings.
Alex Brightman, not Beetlejuice sings, Alex Brightman,
not Beetlejuice, but as Alex Brightman.
Not the man Beetlejuice.
No.
So, okay.
The real Beetlejuice.
The way that we make sound is obviously
with our vocal cords, right?
So they are basically parts of like the mucosal lining
that are folded in a certain way.
And then they vibrate and make sound.
Okay. Cool.
Now above your actual vocal folds, vocal cords,
you could call them whatever, they're folds,
they're cords, they're whatever you wanna say.
Which actually are where sound comes from
are the false vocal folds,
which are technically called the vestibular folds,
but because they sort of look like the true vocal cords,
but they don't actually make sound,
they are sometimes called the false vocal cords, right?
Same idea.
So if you look, and I didn't watch the video,
but I think he has actually had endoscopy.
He said it was confirmed by his ear, nose, and throat doctor.
Yes, to look and see if this is what is happening.
And so if you look down,
the false vocal cords are above the true vocal cords.
They look very similar, except they do not,
they are not involved in producing sound
when we talk or sing or whatever. Except you can use them.
You can get them involved.
This is like the 90% of your brain, right?
Like, yeah, 50% of your vocal cords are just laying there waiting to be tapped.
Now, I read a lot of different websites about, this is very fascinating,
especially as people who are now participating in,
well, I mean, we have for a very long time,
but at this moment we are actively participating
in a musical.
I don't think about singing nearly as much
as people who professionally sing think about singing
and how to generate different sounds, you know.
And especially if like you're involved in operatic singing,
this is something that you study.
I mean, this is-
It's like athletics, similar.
Like it's that level of like training your body to do something.
Exactly.
And I don't think we think about singing that way a lot, right?
Like we do think about athletics that way,
but we often just think that singing is this thing,
like this talent you just have.
And I mean, obviously that's part of it, right?
Your ear for music and the natural tone of your voice,
there are some things that are just there.
They're just intrinsic to you.
But then there are also things you can practice and develop.
What I would say is that while Alex Breitman may be particularly skilled
at engaging those false vocal chords, which, like you said,
is something that metal singers do, it is something that operatic singers do.
It is also something that you can practice
and train and learn to do.
And now, are you thinking like fold in my,
you know, like squeeze my false vocal cord?
No, obviously it's not a muscle
that you can consciously contract,
but you can practice singing in certain ways.
There are techniques that you can learn to engage those false vocal cords.
I would suggest that probably just his, I mean, this isn't the first show he's ever
done.
He's been doing theater for quite a while.
He does.
He's done a few other skits, I think.
Yeah.
I mean, he's a professional.
I would suggest that he probably has just through all of his vocal training has become
very good at engaging those.
Maybe strengthen those muscles unintentionally, right?
And you can look at, it's interesting,
because I was reading some otolaryngologists
talking about how you can see in vocal cords, not always.
Sometimes the appearance of vocal cords
doesn't mean anything in terms of your singing ability,
but there are like thinner ones
are what a soprano probably has,
whereas a thicker, meatier vocal cord
is what a bass has.
Like there are things that you can, it's a muscle,
you can, it's not, you can exercise, it's not a muscle,
but you can exercise these parts of your body,
well they are muscles, and you can squeeze them more,
but not consciously, I don't know.
Do you understand what I'm saying?
Yeah, absolutely.
You can train yourself to use your false vocal cords,
in a sense.
And that is if you have heard like
Tibetan chants and like throat singing.
Do you know what I'm talking about?
What those like they are engaging their false vocal cords.
When you growl, you are probably engaging
your false vocal cords.
If you make like a growl sound, you're doing that.
So all of us have the ability to do it a little bit.
The more you train, the more time you spend on this,
you can develop that into a skill
like Alex Brightman obviously has.
So that is what Beetlejuice is doing.
Okay, thank you.
That we found, well, that's one of many things.
He's into all sorts of scrapes and hydrinks.
It's really impressive.
It does sound like it would absolutely wreck your voice,
like to do that eight times a week.
Next up, Sid, let's talk about ear wiggling.
Ear wiggling.
So this is one of the ones that, like I said,
when I was thinking about my dad,
my dad can wiggle his ears.
You're right now trying to wiggle your ears, aren't you?
I am wiggling my ears.
I don't have my glasses on.
And you are sitting more than six inches from me.
I'm gonna come over there.
Well I can put them on.
No I can put them on.
Look they're right here.
They're right here.
I can put them on.
Without my glasses my vision is you are wiggling your ears.
Look at that.
You were right there with like 10 to 20 percent of the population.
We should know that.
That can wiggle your ears.
That's such a big difference.
20 is twice as many as 10.
We should have a better idea.
That's a huge lack of specificity.
As I was researching these different sort of human stunts,
I at times would get frustrated because I'm like,
why don't I have a number?
We should know this.
And then at other times I would feel like,
why have we done these studies on this?
Is this where our money is going?
Right, okay, fair enough.
Fair enough, fair enough.
There's still cancer.
Like, why are we, you know what I mean?
Like, so-
Kind of a specious metric, but yes, I understand what you're saying.
So we have done studies on ear wiggling,
so just do with that what you will.
Like, why, how, how many people.
Sometimes you're a scientist
and maybe you just got off a really hard one.
You know, maybe your last experiment was like,
so it took so long.
It was so rigorous and it was peer reviewed
and double blind and so hard.
And you're like, guys, can we just knock out a fun one
for the next month?
Can we just like cut loose and do some fun one?
A light one.
This is like, this is obviously something
that you'd grapple with in medicine and science,
but I think it's like a life struggle.
The, our need for whimsy versus our responsibility
to do stuff that needs done,
but then we crave whimsy?
And how do you meet those needs?
I don't know, right?
I don't know.
Anyway, we did study ear wiggling,
whether you think we should have or not.
So, okay, you have three extrinsic auricular muscles.
Extrinsic?
There are muscles like intrinsic to the ear
and then ones that are sort of around the ear.
There's one like in front of your ear, anterior,
there's one behind your ear,
but you could guess what that's called.
Post, posterior.
Rear?
Posterior.
Posterior.
And then there's one above it.
Wait, sorry, posterior?
No, anterior, posterior, not a rear ear. Posterior ear. And then, stop, and one above it. Wait, sorry, posterior ear? Anterior, posterior, not a rear ear.
Posterior ear.
And then, stop, and then above it.
Yeah.
Superior.
Superior ear.
Anyway, they can move our ears around.
In mammals, a lot of mammals have similar muscles
surrounding their ears.
To help you hear, right?
They can, yeah, and so like a great example of a mammal
whose ears move to help localize sound to respond to sound better
It's sitting right here to my left stalking another great example who is hiding in the corner right over there
Would you tell her to chill?
We got another cat and they're just like it's just been a struggle. It's Sydney. Sure. It's the playdate
Sydney assures me that this orange cat is the terror.
The play date's never ending.
They're having trouble.
We're gonna get, they're gonna get there.
But their cat's ears move around.
Our ears, probably at one time in our ancestry,
benefited from their ability to move around.
So this is a vestigial tail on the god ear.
To an extent, I mean, obviously the muscles in our ears
also provide like structure to our ears
and somewhat the function.
They're primarily structural, but the point is,
they could probably at one point move a lot more
and now they don't really need to, so they don't.
But if you can, you know, can start to feel and use those muscles,
you can move your ears.
Maybe you squeeze out an extra percent of hearing though.
I mean, it might help.
That doesn't make you hear more.
A study in 1949 of 104 men and 70 women
looked to see, they wanted to know how common
is the ability to wiggle your ears.
They also were trying to figure out genetic.
Is it genetic?
So sibling, matches, parental, whatever.
They found that it kind of seemed to have
a dominant inheritance pattern for the most part
where if your parents could,
or you probably had a parent who could, if you could.
But there were some cases of people who could wiggle
their ears and neither of their parents could, so then maybe it is also something
that can pop up sporadically, we don't know.
I thought this was the strangest point.
In this study, men were more likely to be able
to wiggle their ears than women by 54% versus 22%.
So that's like double, more than double.
And they attributed that, this is 1949,
they attributed this to, this is a quote,
a factor of training and on the fact that men are even
in childhood more interested in sports
and have therefore made more efforts
to practice this accomplishment.
This accomplishment of ear wiggling?
Yes.
Because they're involved in sports? Training, training.
God, man.
It's a factor of training.
Men are training to wiggle their ears from a young age
because they're interested in sports
and what greater example of an American sport is there
than ear wiggling?
So, come on ladies, get it together.
Yeah, so that's, there you go.
It is pretty rare if you can wiggle your ears.
Although we do think that it is something
that perhaps you can learn, even though it does seem to,
and then I don't know if it runs in families,
is it just because like if you have a dad like mine
who could wiggle his ears,
are you constantly trying to wiggle your own ears
and engage those muscles?
Maybe.
Which like through biofeedback, if you can isolate.
Awaken them.
Yeah.
Anyway.
All right, Sid, what about tongue stuff?
I probably should.
We've been married almost 20 years now,
where are you at on tongue stuff?
I probably shouldn't have titled this section tongue stuff.
Yeah, but it's done now.
Yeah.
Well, Justin, are you interested to know
what percent of the population can roll their tongue?
Hey, are you interested in know something?
What percentage of the population has attempted
to roll their tongue in the past,
that is listening to this in the past 30 seconds?
It's 100%.
100% of people listening to this
have attempted to wiggle their ears
and have attempted to roll their tongue, guaranteed.
So here's what I want you all to do.
All of you right now try to roll your tongue
and then try to do the clover thing
where you turn your tongue into a clover leaf.
No, no, no, no, no.
You can also try to turn it on its side.
Turn it on its side?
Oh no. All the way.
I'm not doing it because I can't do it.
The clover leaf is the devil's work.
I worry that that one is an evil omen sometimes.
Possible.
How many people can roll their tongue?
I'm going to tell you what the answer is after the billing department.
No kidding.
The medicines, the medicines that escalate my carbs for the mouth.
City pop to me is like a feeling.
City pop is beautiful music.
It's music that makes me emotional.
There's so many different sounds that fall into the city pop category.
It just feels very home to me.
We're just about wrapped on our inaugural season of Primer.
If you didn't know, Primer is a new podcast that explores music from outside the English speaking world.
And Vulture called us one of the best podcasts of the year.
Our first season covered Japanese city pop, and you just heard a few of our past guests
share what the genre means to them.
Learn more about the world of city pop and listen to some cool tunes.
And if you like what we're doing, you can make a one-time contribution and help us reach
our goal to produce a second season about a new genre.
Support Primer over at maximumfun.org slash Primer.
Hi, I'm Jesse Thorne. genre. Support Primer over at MaximumFun.org slash Primer. supposed advice show was a fresh insult. A depraved jumble of erection jokes, ghost humor,
and frankly, this is for the best, very little actionable advice. But now, as they enter
their twilight years, I'm as surprised as anyone to admit that it's gotten kind of
good. Justin, Travis, and Griffin's witticisms are more refined, like a humor column in a
fancy magazine.
And they hardly ever say bazinga anymore.
So after you've completely finished listening to every single one of all of our other shows,
why not join the McElroy brothers every week for My Brother, My Brother and Me.
All right, Sid, how many?
60%.
That's not as exciting as it is.
No, that's like just enough for it to not be interesting.
It's not.
Okay, I will say-
It would be more interesting if it was not.
Can I say this?
I would argue that 40% of people can't do that.
That's actually, I'm going to be a little glass half full.
Here's what I'll tell you.
There have been multiple studies on tongue rolling.
The clover thing seems to be more rare.
So if you've been sitting there doing the thing,
like where you can turn into the clover,
or if you can turn your tongue all the way,
like perpendicular.
Yeah, either one of those.
Which apparently some people can do.
I've never seen anyone do that.
Yeah, if you can do the clover thing,
drive straight to jail.
No, don't, there's nothing wrong with you.
Turn yourself in. There's nothing wrong with you. Turn yourself in.
There's nothing wrong with you.
Except for the wickedness in your heart
that makes your tongue do that.
It's just how you can isolate muscle fibers.
Do you have four paired intrinsic muscles?
Were you about to say how you were made?
And you were afraid I was about to say by Satan,
and so you bailed.
There are four paired intrinsic muscles in your tongue.
You don't need to know the names.
Does anyone care? Nobody cares about the names. The point is there's a bunch intrinsic muscles in your tongue. You don't need to know the names. Does anyone care?
Nobody cares about the names.
The point is there's a bunch of muscles in your tongue
and they change the shape of your tongue,
which is useful for like talking and eating and swallowing
and the other stuff.
But you can also, because your tongue has muscles in it,
multiple muscles that make it form different shapes,
you have the ability
to curl the edges up and roll it into a tube sometimes.
Not everyone does.
Good.
It is widely thought that this is a genetic trait.
It has been called into question before.
Really?
Whether the tongue rolling thing is something you can learn.
The clover thing we feel fairly confident is genetic
and is actually probably a recessive trait
because it seems to be more rare.
Whereas tongue rolling, as I've said, is like 60%.
And they've repeated this study multiple times
and they all hit around 60% in the repeated studies.
Same for men and women.
It's weird that we've done so many studies on this.
Why are we so interested in this?
They've done twin studies to see if it's genetic.
And what's weird about that is there's like a 20% discordance,
meaning one twin can and the other can't, identical twins.
That is weird.
What sense does that make?
So does that mean it's not actually genetic?
No, because they think it's probably
incomplete penetrance.
And what that means- Is that the epigenetic markers aren't making a complete connection. not actually genetic, no, because they think it's probably incomplete penetrance.
And what that means.
So the epigenetic markers aren't making a complete
connection with the RNA fibers.
This is where genetics gets so weird,
is that in science at some point in your life,
whether or not you are a science person now,
whether or not you are in a scientific field,
at some point somebody told you about Mendel,
somebody told you about peas,
somebody showed you a Punnett square, right?
Like we've all, we all were introduced to this.
That is so just like the very basics.
There's so much more.
And I'm not saying I'm the expert,
because I'm not a geneticist.
I think you're the expert.
I'm not, but what it means is just because
the DNA is the same, just because the DNA is the same
Just because the instructions the blueprints are the same doesn't necessarily and that kind of makes sense if you gave Justin
Instructions on building something out of wood and me instructions on building something out of wood and we the exact same instructions
I guarantee you our product would look very different
We have different approaches different art styles wait you're also more skilled, but the point is
There's more to there's more to genetics than just upon its squares We have different approaches, different art styles. Wait, you're also more skilled, but the point is,
there's more to genetics than just pundit squares. A 1980 study, man, this is my,
I love that people are doing this.
Humans, I just, humans will just human.
We can't help it.
It was looking to see if there was an interaction
between ear wiggling and tongue rolling.
Meaning if you could do one, are you more like, why?
Why would there be?
Why would there be?
Why wouldn't there be?
What would we do with this information?
There's a question for you.
If we, like whatever the answer is.
You never know, hon.
Well, I know, I mean, I understand the idea of.
Have you heard about the pencils in space?
Have you heard about this?
Have you heard about the pens that can write upside down?
But the thing is,
they did find that in men,
this is another where like,
as they split down gender lines,
in men, they're more likely if they have one
of these abilities to have the other,
but in women there was no connection.
What, what could that?
This makes me think that one or both can be learned,
because I also think that this is like,
okay, you know those birds of paradise that do the little dances
to attract a mate?
We love that.
I think it's kind of like that.
I think you're like, I need to attract a mate.
Check this out.
Ear wiggling.
Not enough for you.
Tongue rolling.
Not enough.
Watch me do both.
Now I'm gonna pretend my arm is broken and flip it around.
Look at this.
I wanna do the Billy the Boneless Boy dance.
I will grant you that your point makes sense
if you segue into your next one that you have here,
which is licking your elbow.
Now that I could see as a seduction technique.
Like I could absolutely see that you could use that
to lure in potential partners.
Does it make you feel better to know,
cause this made me feel better.
I do not have a percentage to tell you
of how many people can lick their elbow.
Okay.
We have not to my knowledge,
now there's a lot of studies out there.
We have not to my knowledge done a study
specifically looking at how many people
can lick their elbow.
It is pretty rare.
It is thought like the statement is often made
that you cannot do it, that it is impossible to do.
That isn't true of course.
We should not speak in absolutes, especially again
with humans, because if you say we can't do it,
someone out there is gonna break their arm,
or their tongue, I guess, in an attempt to do it.
If you have a hypermobility syndrome,
you may well be able to do this,
because your joints extend further than the average joints,
and your tongue may extend further than the average tongue.
And so the combination,
but generally this is thought to be very rare,
nigh impossible.
What I thought was fascinating is,
as I was looking into like,
is there somewhere out there where I can find a number,
I found a whole WikiHow article.
On how to lick your elbow.
On how to lick your elbow.
On how to say a crossover.
Fantastic.
I just thought it was fantastic that like,
they're like, here's one technique where they're,
and they're like, do some stretches first.
And then they told you like,
hold your right arm out with your palm flat,
pull back at your shoulder as far as you can,
wrap your arm around your chin,
bring your arm up to your mouth,
pull your arm backwards, crane your neck forwards. backwards crane your neck forwards like I mean like I could have
Yeah, I want a whole thing
What I think if somebody was stick your tongue out as far as it will go and then they have a second method where you
Lie down and do it
And this person is um, I don't know the the position they're in in the face they're making, I don't know if they're angry.
Pretend you're a villain in an old movie
and you're covering your face with your cape.
And don't struggle.
And I mean, there are just,
there is diagram after diagram.
I really, I would advise you check out the WikiHow page
on how to lick your elbow.
And then they, and like the first question
from the community Q&A is why do people wanna know how to do this?
Fair.
Now, this next one here, Sid,
I didn't know this was special
because I've always been able to stick out my tongue
and touch my nose.
No, you can't.
Yeah, I can.
Watch.
Oh, oh.
What's up now?
You can probably, at home, listeners at home,
you can probably guess what Justin has just done.
I stuck out my tongue and then I touched my nose.
And then he took his finger and he touched his nose
and he was very clever.
Oh my gosh, and everybody loved it.
He was very clever, yeah.
Everybody's cracking up.
Talk about dad tricks, man.
There's a name for this one.
If you can stick your tongue out
and touch the tip of your nose with your tongue,
not your finger, it is called Gorland's sign.
There's a whole name for it.
And that is because while generally speaking,
only 10% of the population can do this.
So this one's really rare.
If you can do this one,
this is way rarer than like rolling your tongue.
But if you have Ehlers-Danlos syndrome,
which is a connective tissue disorder,
half of people with this can do it,
which is why this thing has a name
because Robert Gorland, who's a pathologist
who also studied a lot of otolaryngology
and dental and oral problems, medical issues,
described it because if somebody was able to do this,
then there was a much greater likelihood they may.
This is not diagnostic.
There are certainly people who can do this
who do not have Ehlers-Danlos.
But is a sign of maybe.
And there are people with Ehlers-Danlos
who cannot do this.
But if you can lick your own nose, that's very rare.
Good to know. Yeah. if you can lick your own nose, that's very rare.
Good to know. Yeah.
What about the rocks patented move here, raising eyebrow?
Now you called me into the bedroom to attempt this
and I raised my right eyebrow, which honestly,
I haven't been able to do this for a very long time.
I was in like my 30s before I figured out how to do this
as a data point. this for a very long time. I was in like my 30s before I figured out how to do this.
This is a data point.
So I was looking up how many,
like the trick that people like to do, I guess,
is to make their eyebrows dance,
which I can understand what they're referencing.
I can't say I've seen a lot of people just do that,
like for fun.
Like, you know, make your eyebrows up and down.
My dad can do both independently of one another.
That is more rare. So most people can raise one eyebrow or another,
but raising both independently of each other
seems to be a more rare talent.
And this is something that has been-
Stretching the limits of the term, talent.
Talent.
And we don't know exactly, so right now, like try it at home, try to raise just one eyebrow.
Realizing I couldn't raise the other, it actually kind of wigged me out of the world.
It's making me very stressed.
I know, it's very stressed.
Because I can't make it equal, and so I don't wanna think about it.
But if we, we don't know exactly.
Oh wait, am I doing it?
You've got quite lucky to me about that.
We gotta make this a video box.
I know, we need a picture of this.
Okay, we don't know exactly why.
It might be genetic, that we can do one or the other.
It also may be, and this has been studied,
do we have dominance of one side in our facial muscles
the way that we have dominance in our hands?
So like right handedness, left handedness,
do you have right facedness and left facedness?
And those muscles are stronger on that side of your face.
Is that why most people who can raise an eyebrow
can only ever raise the one?
Now again, this is something,
so your frontalis muscle, which is the big muscle,
band of muscle that goes across your forehead.
Yeah, and it tends when you're stressed.
It does, it can get really tense and tight,
and sometimes it's a cause of tension headaches,
for instance. It is what it can get really tense and tight and sometimes it's a cause of tension headaches, for instance.
It is what causes your eyebrows to raise
and you can, there are methods of biofeedback
that we already know about and study
as a way of like trying to voluntarily relax that muscle
to help ease tension headaches.
The way that that works is like,
you have to learn what that feels like
for the muscle to contract.
And so sometimes they can use like
a little electric stimulation.
So you can start to feel what it feels like
for your frontalis muscle to contract.
And then if you know what it feels like when it contracts,
you can start to practice voluntarily relaxing it.
So I feel like because of that,
you could definitely,
if you wanted to put in the time and effort,
train yourself to raise both of your eyebrows.
I feel like that's possible.
Like this is a-
You believe in yourself?
This could be something that with enough time
and effort you could learn.
Is that what you wanna do with your life minutes?
I don't know.
That's not a question I can answer.
Right.
But it's possible.
But it is. And right now, I guarantee you,
you're trying to raise both eyebrows
and you're gonna ask everybody in your life,
especially in your family.
How interesting is that?
Yeah, double jointedness, Sydney.
Double jointedness.
It seems to have been a playground legend,
but I don't know if it is in the real world.
Well, I think most people know that, like,
when we say double jointed, it's kind of a misnomer.
Right.
You don't have two joints where most people have one.
It's basically more flexibility, right?
Yeah, hypermobility would be the term we would use,
but yes, you're more flexible.
And there's a wide range of what that means.
And let me just say, I am talking about,
probably more like,
benign would be the right word, benign hypermobility.
Okay, got it.
Okay, I wanna be very clear that this is differentiated
from hypermobility that is present
in hypermobility syndromes.
Most well-known, I think, is Ehlers-Danlos syndrome,
which is a rare genetic disorder,
in which case you may well have hypermobility
in lots of joints.
That can be part of it.
They're different types of it.
Yes, but it's not necessarily a,
beneficial is probably a strong word,
but it is a hypermobility that impacts your life negatively.
Exactly, it can have some sort of negative interference,
like it can interfere with your daily functioning, right?
Because, you know, and that often when we use the word
disorder, we're meaning that it impacts your life
in some way that you have to adapt to,
or that you may need, you know,
some other sort of medication or equipment
or something to help you function.
I am talking about hypermobility just on its own,
which again, about, there was a study done in 2004 that said about 20%
of adults probably have some hypermobility,
and that's a long, like that's a big range,
what they mean by some joint hypermobility.
The vast majority of people with hypermobility,
and I would put myself in this category,
never experience any negative effects from it.
So like, my thumb's been really far back.
It's weird.
I know it looks weird.
And it was something that I didn't know how weird it was.
My dad's due too, so genetics.
But I didn't know how weird it was
until I saw other people reacting to my weird thumb
and freaking out.
So like, but that's like really,
I'm not particularly flexible in other ways,
but that was, that is something for me
that has never impacted my life in a negative way.
There are people who,
because they have hypermobility in other joints,
like shoulders or hips or knees,
may experience a dislocation or some pain
as a result of that.
But for the majority of people
with just plain old, benign hypermobility, isolated,
it's not really a problem for them.
Now why?
There's a lot of different reasons.
Because hypermobility is a big giant bucket
and there's lots of different flavors of it.
Sometimes it's a different in collagen
and the connective tissue
in the way that it's shaped and formed.
Sometimes it has to do with the shapes
of the ends of our bones.
So like I think the best example is
if you think of a ball and socket joint
and a ball and socket joint is where the end of one bone
is rounded like a ball and the end of the other bone
is like cupped and they fit together, a ball and a socket.
You get it?
Yep.
If that cup is deeper or wider or the ball is smaller or larger,
or it's more shallow,
you can see how it would change
how far that joint can flex and move and bend and rotate.
And so then you get like kind of isolated hypermobility.
Like if you've seen anybody who can like clasp
their hands together behind their back
and then take them all the way up over their head.
Somebody on Perfect Match was doing that the other night.
That like their shoulder joints are doing something
that the average shoulder joint usually can't do.
And then the other thing are things like muscle tone
can affect your hypermobility and proprioception.
Your ability to sense where you are in space can,
if your proprioception is off,
you can hyper extend joints in ways
they're not necessarily supposed to quote unquote go, right?
So it's a wide range.
And for me, it's just my, especially my left thumb.
I'm not even gonna try this last one again, Sydney,
because you made such terrible fun of me
when I attempted it earlier.
Okay, this one really blew my mind,
and I have dug around on the internet,
and so this is gonna be our interactive part,
as interactive as a podcast can be,
because I don't know when you're gonna listen to this,
but I'm gonna need some feedback.
Can we make a poll?
What?
Can we make a poll? Probably? Can we make a poll?
Probably a way to make a poll.
There's gotta be a way for us to make a poll.
I need to know this, Justin.
I'll tell you what, I'll make a poll
and I'll put it in the comments of the post.
Will you do that?
Yes.
Because this is, okay, this is not real science
because in real science we need like a random sample
and we blind it and there's a bunch of stuff we gotta do.
So this is just for funsies.
We're just doing this for funsies.
Okay, can you flare your nostrils?
And I don't mean like move your whole upper lip.
Like that's what, when I asked Justin
if he could flare his nostrils, you were,
you wanna do it for me, you were like scrunching
up your whole face.
You don't have your glasses on,
I'm not gonna do that for you.
So you can laugh at me again.
I can just, I mean, you can, Justin,
can you verify that I am just flaring my nostrils?
You are.
Yeah.
It's incredible.
They just like flare open and close.
So I'm using one of my nasalis muscles,
or well, my nasalis muscle that has two parts.
It's one muscle has two parts.
And it sits on the sides of your nose
and gives it its shape and structure
by compressing all that cartilage.
So like the tip of your nose is all squishy
and made of cartilage, right?
If you go up like just above,
like on the sides of the bridge of your nose,
this is all, there's muscles in here.
The main function of these muscles
is really just to give it that structure
and compress that cartilage and give it that shape
because your nose doesn't move a bunch.
You don't need to pick things up with your nose or whatever.
But some of us can use that muscle to flare our nostrils.
Now I have found this stat that only 30% of people
can flare their nostrils.
I assumed everybody could do this,
but obviously here we have our sample of two, it's 50-50.
Now that's not a good sample, there's two people.
No, it's not.
But I am now, and I cannot find a source for this.
I have scoured the internet for a source
for this 30% of people can flare their nostrils statistic,
and I have found it quoted many places, but not cited.
So I don't know where it comes from.
Why do we think only 30% of people
can flare their nostrils?
Somebody must have said this at some point,
but is this true and can we?
Now I will say, I was actually looking to see
if we can wiggle our noses.
Like can anybody do what Samantha on Bewitched could do?
That's what I really wanted to know.
Or your nose scoots back and forth.
That is not something that you just don't,
the muscles don't do that.
The way she's doing it and if you look,
like I was watching all these clips of Bewitched,
she's actually sort of moving her entire upper lip
and that part of her face.
She does do it really fast, which is impressive.
I can't do it that fast,
but that's what makes it look like the nose is wiggling.
There's a video of Jessica Chastain doing this
because she wanted to learn how to do it
because of bewitched and she can do it too.
So I guess it is something you can probably teach yourself
how to do to wiggle your nose back,
to wiggle your upper lip back and forth so quickly
that it makes it look like your nose is wiggling.
But flaring your nostrils, this is what I need to know.
Okay.
Can you flare your nostrils?
There'll be, Rachel's gonna put a poll in the post.
Okay.
Go to McElroy.family and find the post about this episode.
This is gonna be a purely anecdotal.
We don't, this is not a scientific number.
I don't want to, I don't want to put more
misinformation out there if this 30% is also fake because I can't verify it. But may we can get
somewhere with this data. May we get somewhere. Can you flare your nostrils? And if you're not sure, have someone
look at you while you're doing it. Justin didn't know. Hey, while you're heading over to McElroyd
family, maybe you should grab yourself a ticket to come see Sawbones.
That's our podcast that you're listening to right now.
That you're listening to now.
This is this one.
We are going to be performing with my brother, my brother and me, a bunch of stinkers if
you ask me, July 18th in Detroit at the Fisher Theater, July 20th Cleveland Temple Live.
You can get tickets over at McRoy.family.
Just look for the tours or anywhere
that fine tickets are sold, I guess.
Get tickets to those, please come out.
It will be fun.
And afterwards you get a free
My Brother, My Brother, Me show
after you buy tickets to our show.
This is the way I'm pitching it.
It'll be a lot of fun.
We haven't done a live show in a while
and I've missed it.
So I'm looking forward to it.
Thanks to taxpayers for their song,
Medicines is the intro and outro of our program.
And thanks to you so much for listening.
We really appreciate you.
That's gonna do it for us.
Until next time, my name is Justin McElroy.
I'm Sydney McElroy.
And as always, don't drill a hole in your head. All right!
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