This Paranormal Life - #239 Do SUPERHUMANS Walk Among Us?

Episode Date: November 16, 2021

In 2003 scientists in Australia uncovered an ancient mystery - 20,000 year old footprints belonging to a human that was running faster than world record holder Usain Bolt. It turns out this discovery ...only scratched the surface of evidence throughout history for a race of Superhumans. From bodybuilding babies to Ozzy Osbourne, it's time for Kit and Rory to investigate.Support us on Patreon.com/ThisParanormalLife to get access to bonus episodes!Buy Official TPL MerchFollow us on Twitter, Instagram, and YouTubeJoin our Secret Society Facebook CommunityAdvertise on This Paranormal Life via Gumball.fmEdited by Kami TomanResearch by Amy GrisdaleIntro music by www.purple-planet.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 We know about photographic memory, but what about virtual reality memory? Are other fruits evil or is it just pumpkins? Answers to these questions and more on this episode of This Paranormal Life! Hey and welcome to This Paranormal Life. This is the weekly comedy podcast in which every Tuesday me, Kit Greer-Malvena and Rory Powers, who's sitting across from me every week we dive into a new tale of the paranormal and try to decide whether it's truly paranormal or not how are you doing today rory i'm not sensing a lot of energy from your corner of the room right now you know i like to be i like to be up front with the audience i like you know helps build a relationship
Starting point is 00:00:39 i'm hungover guys i'm hanging out my ass right now. Which is weird because it's Monday morning. Yeah, that's not a good sign, is it? I went out last night with a Canadian. Turns out they're wild. They like to do shots. Everyone focuses on the Canadians being nice thing too much and not narrowly enough on how much they like to do shots. Apparently, it's quite a lot.
Starting point is 00:01:07 So, yeah, i uh you know but i'm a professional which means i show up i do the job i get it done and it's at an exceptional quality you're in your underwear yeah that's far from profession it's hot in the studio today it's boiling it's winter it's officially winter sweating my ass off um also if we could just keep it if we could just keep it down this week just keep the levels like a little low because my head is like there's a nail coming through like an hour later recording because you insisted on ordering in mickey d's first thing to the studio well i gotta get those hangover nuggets it's the only cure for a poison this bad. So as I said, it's not going to affect the show at all. We're here. We're getting it done.
Starting point is 00:01:51 Keep it down. Keep it quiet, though. And also quite fast, because I'm going to be sick. It's a bad attitude to start this week's recording with, but let's dive right in to today's investigation. We got this. We got this. We begin today in New South Wales, Australia. It's 2003 and a young Aboriginal woman named Mary Pappin Jr. was walking in the outback when she spotted something strange. She was coming up to a stretch of dry clay when she spied what appeared to be a set of footprints. Looking closer, it was immediately obvious that these were not fresh tracks. In fact, they were so old they'd hardened into stone. Mary knew she had stumbled onto
Starting point is 00:02:32 something remarkable and passed on the news of her discovery onto a biological archaeologist named Steve Webb. He was beyond excited to see them. It turned out these footprints were a good 20,000 years old and in immaculate condition. Wow. I guess the nature of the soil here and maybe the sheer heat that's possible in this area of Australia just means it's kind of baking the clay into, like you bake pottery, you know, to last forever. Yeah. That's why you don't commit crimes in the Australian outback,
Starting point is 00:03:08 because you're fingerprinting yourself as you're committing the crime. You're documenting your own footsteps. Literally. The whole country is a giant ink pad. I swear. Like I say, Steve was excited to see them. All right, what we've got here are some fossilized footprints. And you know, these are even better than skeletal remains because they tell us a lot about the people's behavior. All right, I didn't know our award-winning Australian accents were going to make a comeback in this episode. Not saying I picked this story on account of what accent i
Starting point is 00:03:45 would get to do but when you see how little evidence is coming down the line it's going to become pretty evident why i chose this case there were all sorts of tracks roughly 700 in total there were prints accompanied by the indentations of a spear one set had only deep impressions made by a right foot, indicating the guy had only one leg and was hopping along at speed. Wow. He could tell which footprints were left by men and which were by women. He could even deduce whether the women were carrying children and when they moved the baby from hip to hip.
Starting point is 00:04:20 How does this guy know so much about feet? Maybe keep an eye on this guy. Keep your eye on this guy i don't know why he knows all this stuff i said he was a biological archaeologist i think this is his and a pervert area it sounds like wow okay just go out and say it you think he's a freaking pedo for this well those are rory's words not. There's a lot of great intelligent men throughout history who were just into feet. It's not weird. It's not bad.
Starting point is 00:04:49 We're everywhere. I mean, they're everywhere. But there was one ancient person's footprints who really caught Steve's attention. Crikey. Look at those ones. Look how far apart they are. This guy's weird. I'm telling you, this is not sitting right with me.
Starting point is 00:05:11 How far apart they are? Sure enough, there was one set of prints left by a man clearly sprinting at full pelt. Oh, I see. Steve took every kind of measurement he could think of and couldn't wait to get back to the lab for analysis. The results made for fascinating reading. The man in question, nicknamed T-8 for the study, which is, I think, bad, because isn't the name of the villain in the Terminator movies,
Starting point is 00:05:41 like T-2 or something? Yeah, the T-1000 and the T2, yeah. So don't call them something. Don't call this ancient man T8. That's worrying. I'm starting to think it's a time-traveling robot. Well, T8, it turned out, had been running at 23 miles per hour. Is that fast? I don't know how fast humans run. That is just short of Usain Bolt's world record. Whoa! Steve was majorly impressed. This is unbelievable.
Starting point is 00:06:12 T8 was running in ankle-deep mud. I've worked out that if he was on a trek, he'd have left modern athletes in the dust. Wow. Bearing in mind, because depending where people are listening, they might live in a kilometers per hour area or miles per hour area. The speed limit in London is 20 miles per hour for cars in central London. And this guy was running through mud at 23 miles per hour.
Starting point is 00:06:37 That's illegal. That's beyond the swamp speed limit. 20 is plenty, sir. This is, you know, this is maybe someone tapping into that primitive caveman energy you know you think humans are pretty impressive now with our high jumps and our javelin throwing and our shock put the cavemen of old could probably bench press a bus they had to be strong to survive so yeah running through the mud at 60 miles per hour, like a hairy caveman flash,
Starting point is 00:07:07 that was probably just another day of the week. I love this approach, Roy. I think you're going to really enjoy this case. Even more impressively, T8 was apparently accelerating as he was running. Steve's investigation revealed that everyone that left their footprints in the region was in excellent health, tall, and extremely athletic. Hearing this, you might be thinking this is evidence of a race
Starting point is 00:07:31 of early superhumans. And you're not the only one. Anthropologist Peter McAllister said the same in his book, Manthropology, the science of the inadequate modern male. He actually made a few pretty bold statements. The book opens with the following sentence. Quote, if you're reading this, then you are the worst man in history. No ifs, no buts, the worst man, period. As a class, we are in fact the sorriest cohort of masculine homo sapiens to ever walk the planet. Does he mean like i feel like he's focusing on strength alone because i'm pretty sure hitler was pretty bad in terms of the
Starting point is 00:08:12 worst men in history stalin you're kind of only proving the rule because hitler lived very recently compared to 20 000 years ago so maybe though i mean i guess it's pretty accurate the worst people are alive now. Yeah. The people who've killed the most people, even if you want to measure it that way. He said, any Neanderthal woman would have beaten
Starting point is 00:08:33 former bodybuilder and current California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in an arm wrestling match. Wow. McAllister points out that- That's hard, actually. I mean, I'm not into feet, but arm wrestling- Are these giant ladies, they're gone now? They're not around anymore? Are they still here? This was 20,000 years ago. Yeah, but they're strong, right? And they can live for many, many years, like now to today times.
Starting point is 00:09:00 Sure, there's strong women in the world. Yeah. Like, probably a handful that are comparative to these Neanderthal women. I mean, you shouldn't find it hot. Like, Neanderthals are a different species. That's basically bestiality. You're talking about having sex with a monkey. Borderline. And these giant monkey ladies, they exist now in our world? No.
Starting point is 00:09:25 You're going to love gor gorillas by the way they're alive now and they're strong and they're big like you know what you're saying is wrong and you're still you know they're monkey women and these monkey ladies they're single yes no i mean some of them i guess they don't they don't understand the concept of marriage. So McAllister points out that Neanderthal women had 10% more muscle bulk than modern European men. So if they trained to capacity, they could have reached 90% of Schwarzenegger's bulk at his peak in the 70s. I mean, this is amazing. Absolutely nuts. I guess it's like, you know, we're talking about a time where every part of your day was doing something physical. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:08 You know, there wasn't really, I don't think, a lot of ways to entertain yourself. Your life was survival. You were doing standing backflips and cartwheels for mild entertainment in the evenings. That's all it was. Yeah. Squats to entertain yourself. yeah squats to entertain yourself uh and then the daytime was just i don't know fighting tigers and deers and eating meat and just living a grisly outdoor lifestyle so yeah if you spend your whole life doing things like that you're going to be pretty jacked and even thinking about neanderthals
Starting point is 00:10:39 i think most people know that humans and neanderthals live side by side at some point. Not going to lie. We did bang. Apparently humans today are about 2% Neanderthal because Rory's ancient ancestors couldn't stay away. My great, great, great grandfather f***ed a monkey. And now humans have iPhones. So you're welcome. I'm the missing link.
Starting point is 00:11:05 Now we all have monkey half human. We all have tail bones. Thanks to that. Wow, that's nuts. I think the popular conception is maybe that we like killed the Neanderthals. They didn't survive. We survived because we maybe hunted them down or something. We do love killing things.
Starting point is 00:11:22 But I don't know if that's entirely true. Like even a Neanderthal woman had 10% more muscle than the biggest human man. I mean, that's just the story of the human race. The only reason we've been able to survive is because we're just a little bit smarter than the animals. And even that's debatable at times. Yeah, because I've seen grown men fall into fish tanks and get eaten. So you're not actually that much smarter.
Starting point is 00:11:49 You know, we think we're so much smarter than monkeys. But last time I checked, I have to pay to drink water. So who's really smart? McAllister also makes a pretty thought-provoking point about T8's footprints. Fossilized tracks like that are so rare. What are the chances that these footprints were from the fastest guy ever? What if those footprints represent the average running speed? Could this be evidence of superhuman abilities, Rory? Right, because what are the odds that that one just happens to be the fastest? Usain Bolt. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:26 Wow, this is intense. And to be clear, we got a little sidetracked there talking about Neanderthals and all that kind of thing. But these footprints were from humans, not Neanderthals. Got it, got it. Some sort of breed of superhumans. I'm glad you could be telling me anything right now and I don't have to believe in it. Did he throw the word biologically and anatomically in a sentence? Right now I'm a magical combination of dumb, ignorant, and hungover, which means I'm willing to believe anything you say today.
Starting point is 00:12:58 So before we continue, it's worth asking, what is a superhuman? Wikipedia calls it humans or human-like life forms with enhanced qualities and abilities that exceed those naturally found in humans. But if you notice, they say humans or human-like life forms. To me, that suggests there might be humans 2.0 walking around out there right now. And there have been hundreds of examples of potential superhuman abilities throughout history, not just T8 and his mates. Roman soldiers used to run one and a half marathons a day, carrying half their own body weight on their backs. What? Ancient Greek Athens employed 30,000 military rowers, every single one of which could beat the oarsmen of today in a race.
Starting point is 00:13:46 How did they? Even I'm not sure. I need to research that one for references. I'm just going to say it. I'm going to say it's true. Australian Aboriginals weren't just record-breaking runners like T8, but they could throw spears 110 meters. That's 12 meters further than the current world record for javelin. Oh my God. That's someone who knows if they don't hit something with a spear, they ain't eating tonight. That's how you get those extra 12 meters.
Starting point is 00:14:17 That's right. This is insane. Look, I mean, is this the reason why all the carvings and statues of people from the olden days are all jacked as hell? All the dudes have like 12 packs rippling biceps. I mean, God damn, it's kind of pressure, right? Like in our society today, we sadly live in a kind of world where we talk about getting like summer body ready, getting like beach body ready. To be fair, the pressure was even worse back then.
Starting point is 00:14:45 ready getting like beach body ready to be fair the pressure was even worse back then it's like oh yeah by the way when you die we're gonna carve into marble what you look like naked like do i at least get a leaf for my gonads nah absolutely we're gonna carve in every centimeter every vein every stretch mark and it's gonna withstand time by the way this is gonna be in a museum for hundreds of years people are gonna be taking photos of your ding-a-ling from all over the world so that's what you really gotta worry about is getting marble ready yeah marble body ready so all right we've worked out that thousands of years ago there were some potential superhuman abilities floating around but i think we need some more modern evidence.
Starting point is 00:15:25 I didn't actually know this show, but researcher Amy references a series from the 70s called Taxi. Apparently it had Danny DeVito in it, but crucially had an actress named Mary Lou Henner. And she had something called hyperthymesia. It's the ability to recall every single detail of your life. Whoa! Only a handful of people on earth
Starting point is 00:15:45 have it. Somewhere in the region of 25 or so. She describes her ability as seeing... Little videos moving simultaneously. When somebody gives me a date or a year or something, I see all these little movie montages, basically on a time continuum. And I'm scrolling through them and flashing through them. Pretty cool. Wow. That's very vivid. Fair play to her for being able to describe this sensation so accurately. Yeah. I thought you might like that. It would kind of be easy for someone like that to say, uh, I'm born this way. I can't, I can't tell you what it's like. Yeah. Yeah. If it's just a feeling. Like I couldn't explain to someone
Starting point is 00:16:26 what deja vu feels like, but she did a pretty decent job. She basically is, she can basically just scroll back through the iPhone photos of her life and they're all documented there. That's crazy. Is it only, so she can only,
Starting point is 00:16:40 it's different to photographic memory because she can only remember aspects of her own life, not just random stuff. I don't think it's just about her own life per se. She probably can remember details about other people's lives and things in pop culture and stuff like that. My brain is a f***ing potato. I can't remember what I did yesterday, let alone every event that's taken place in my life since I was conscious. That blows me away. I'm not like ragging on you at all,
Starting point is 00:17:14 but I know recently you went through a spell of just getting trains in the wrong direction. Oh yeah. Oh yeah. In an area you've lived in for quite some time now too. That was a worrying week. I'm not going to lie. That was a worrying week. I think we, we had just gotten back from a trip and, uh, the week that I'd gotten back, I got four wrong trains in wrong directions. They were just my daily commute, by the way, I do them all the time. Uh, missed my stop several times, uh uh was late for every meeting i had that week sometimes by an hour uh it was i thought my brain was like crumbling to ash inside my own head that's uh mostly been resolved now i'm back on track don't worry about me guys all good yeah i feel like my brain is one of those, you know, you know, one of those like supercomputers from like 1955.
Starting point is 00:18:08 That's like the size of like my brain is the same size as everyone else's. But like looking back, those things were like the power of like a calculator. Yeah, a Casio wristwatch. Yeah, it's like you have this insane, bulging, complex brain, but it's so old. All it can do is play chess. And not well anymore. Yeah, the game has moved on a lot since the computer was designed. But you know, I think we're going to need something a little more tantalizing than photographic or just video memory.
Starting point is 00:18:38 Let me tell you about Liam Hoekstra. He made headlines in 2009 as the world's strongest toddler. I mean, he doesn't look like a particularly bulky child. All right, we're a minute into this video, and the child has yet to do anything I would describe as remarkable. The child did one chin-up, which is good for a toddler, I'll say. Now he's just walking. He's just walking in a straight line, and the parent is making it look like that's incredibly impressive.
Starting point is 00:19:27 Now he's doing sit-ups. Very poorly, by the way. The form is all over the place. But compare him to the other toddler. Right, okay. There's a toddler in the background struggling to do these sit-ups, and Buff Baby Jr. is knocking them out of the park. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:42 Okay, he's rattling off a few sit-ups now pretty easily. It's hard to tell if the other kid just doesn't want to do this. He looks capable of doing it. I thought he was going to be like curling dumbbells and doing steroids and snorting creatine. Got to be honest. Wish I'd watched that video before, uh,
Starting point is 00:20:02 before presenting that as evidence of the show. Um, wasn't great. did he did he did a few sit-ups and one chin up but i will say for a three-year-old uh it's pretty good i think they i think they've said he has uh he has some kind of situation where he has above average muscle growth right a three-year-old being able to do what really it should take a seven-year-old or something to be able to do. And even if the three-year-old can do what the seven-year-old can, it's not that impressive because it turns out seven-year-olds aren't that strong either.
Starting point is 00:20:35 Still unnaturally strong. Another unlikely superhuman comes in the form of Black Sabbath frontman, Ozzy Osbourne. What? The age-old question is, how is he still alive after all the partying, drinking, and drug-taking he's done? It turns out he has a superhuman ability to party. I hate this. He had his genome sequenced in 2010 and it contained a number of gene variants that were never seen before. They affect how the body absorbs speed and other drugs. This is not where I thought this episode was going at all.
Starting point is 00:21:11 I thought it was going to be maybe talking about, you know, these old humans and how the genes have somehow passed on. And maybe there was like a secret government project or there are world record holders today that continue to break records with their unusual abilities. No, it's breaking drug taking records. Yeah. That's not, that doesn't, that doesn't, that's not paranormal. I don't think, but it's superhuman, which is paranormal. I guess. Yes. It's superhuman. You know, in our heads, we think it's being able to fricking fly or lift a truck over your head.
Starting point is 00:21:45 The reality is sometimes it means you can just do a lot of cocaine without having a heart attack. The pedantic among our listeners will say these are just medical conditions. But isn't that just a fancy word made up by scientists to put people in boxes? Did Spider-Man have a medical condition? No, he had superpowers. I think he did. I think that was he was bitten by the spider. So another such example of a modern superhuman Rory is former MLB relief pitcher, Antonio Alfonseca.
Starting point is 00:22:12 Is it any coincidence that such a great pitcher Rory was born with a sixth finger on his pitching hand? I remember this guy. I remember this guy. I swear I've watched him play before. Not live, but on TV. Yeah, it doesn't seem like it was a long time ago. Yeah, yeah. He was born with a rare genetic condition, which results in an extra finger or extra toe. Pretty hard to say if it's actually influenced his career in a positive way. I just think it's pretty interesting it definitely is you know i uh people might not know this i played for ireland's national little league baseball team um and we competed internationally oh we know because it's this it's the background to the whole dublin gorilla man story it was also yes uh cryptid involved in one of our uh one of our games uh i was also, yes, crypted involved in one of our games. I was also the pitcher.
Starting point is 00:23:05 I pitched for many years and on the cadets team after that. Now, I don't know if having that extra finger would necessarily help. It must have been on his throwing hand. He probably put a spin on it. Yeah. Yeah, it's really hard to say. I mean, it did some good for him, which is great. I mean, and also good for him being able to, you know, find a sport or an opportunity where possibly having that extra finger can really work for you.
Starting point is 00:23:31 Over the most recent Tokyo Olympics, I heard an interesting story. And one of the commentators was like, yep, one of these divers has a rare condition where if his skin isn't the right temperature, he like breaks out in a crazy like skin condition. Whoa. Yeah. His like skin can't regulate its own temperature and so he even though he grew up like learning to swim and stuff he quickly realized he couldn't swim the doctor was like you won't be able to swim um if you stay in the water any longer than like 10 minutes a day you'll uh you'll get this terrible skin condition so he was like cool i'll just become a diver. You just dive in and get out again. Straight out. And he's fine. And he's had this like crazy long Olympic career.
Starting point is 00:24:10 That's incredible. So weird. Wow. The next person you might also have heard of, Elizabeth Taylor, famous actress, icon, and mutant. Oh God. She had a rare condition called distichia where she had two sets of eyelashes and she was famous for her beautiful violet eyes i told you i was hung over at the start of this podcast and i was hoping there was gonna be an easy ride and you're telling me this is easy i'm handing you a double yes and a plate you're telling me elizabeth taylor is a mutant because she has two sets of eyelids and you think that's a superhuman ability all right i'm sensing a lot of hostility about this i'm gonna move on people have looked for superhumans in the past they have tried to even create superhumans in
Starting point is 00:25:03 the past supposedly in world war ii there were secret experiments conducted by the Nazis to create what they called Herrenfolk, a race of masters. There's a book called Hitler's Monsters that details the Nazi party's obsession with occult forces, mad scientists, fantastical weapons, and a superhuman Nazi master race. They famously developed super strong meth to make their soldiers into unstoppable machines. There were also rumored to be regiments they called the Nazi werewolves. These were supposedly ultra fierce fighters that terrorized allied groups and German citizens indiscriminately. Also, they took a lot of meth. meth was really the key factor in a lot of the super soldiers mentioned the super strong meth i i was hoping that the investigation into superhumans
Starting point is 00:25:54 wouldn't reference super meth then there was hitler's elite squad called the freaking aryan angel men supposed to be the most perfect example of human form they took so much meth they went blind their hearts didn't stop which is pretty messed up i guess you know if you if you can't find a way to actually give men superhuman strength the next best thing you can do is give them something that will make them believe they have superhuman strength right this is kind of like um convicts who take pcp aka angel dust right and can suddenly break out of handcuffs in police custody and like lift cars and stuff kind of super strength in a way uh it's definitely possible that this kind of information was
Starting point is 00:26:46 propaganda created by the allied forces designed to stoke fear in the final months of the war but it's hard to say in 1945 there was a u.s intelligence report that stated the werewolf organization is not a myth it is one of the greatest threats to security in both the american and allied zones of occupation oh my god which is exactly what you write the morning after you encountered the nazi werewolves this should have been the whole episode the nazi werewolves yeah maybe i shouldn't have led with ozzy osbourne taking a lot of speed Or showing me a three minute video of a baby doing sit-ups. Why bury this part so deep in the episode? But Rory, with all this talk of superhumans, you know, I didn't want to like big up these superhumans and make our listeners at home feel
Starting point is 00:27:38 inadequate about their normal human abilities. And I wanted to offer them an olive branch and say, you too can become superhuman right now. Here we go. Here we go. This is what everyone's been sticking around for. So here's just a couple of examples of superhuman abilities that you can acquire in this lifetime. This is usually the kind of shit we'd have locked away on a bonus episode but because of the let's face it poor selection of evidence in this week's case wow we're gonna give you this one as a freebie yeah okay said as the guy who didn't research this case this was my plan all along power number one controlling your body temperature. The method, breathe deeply in an ice bath. By doing a combination of cold exposure and deep breathing, you can learn to have greater
Starting point is 00:28:33 control over your own body temperature. We've talked about him before, Dutch fitness expert Wim Hof has mastered the art and can warm himself up at will, along with the ability to repress or supercharge his immune system. He made it to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro in just 28 hours, going topless the whole way, when it normally takes a week of climbers wearing high-tech cold clothing. Wow. I guess that's similar to coal walkers, you know, people who are able to walk on hot embers. But by breathing and focusing, they can kind of switch that part of their brain off that's receptive to the heat. It's a similar kind of thing.
Starting point is 00:29:11 Body control, temperature control. Mind over matter, man. Power number two, hold your breath real long. Is that a power? I think so. I guess how long we hold in a year? We still don't know the limits of the human ability to hold their breath underwater. It just takes practice.
Starting point is 00:29:31 And at the moment, the record is 22 minutes. That's insane. And that's at a depth of 200 meters under the water. Holy shit. That's more than twice the height of the Statue of Liberty. Oh my, who said that? I mean, that is borderline Aquaman levels of human ability. Let's finish with this one. This might be my favorite one. Part number three, sonar ability. The method, clicking with your tongue with your eyes closed. Humans can echolocate, just like bats, and researcher
Starting point is 00:30:06 Amy's favorite, toothed whales. The most famous master of seeing with sound is Daniel Kish, an American man who lost his sight in childhood. He makes clicking sounds and listens hard for the resounding echo, allowing him to create a mental picture of his environment. This is basically Daredevil. Right, right, right. I think this is the entire premise of Daredevil, right? He gains the, he loses his sight, but gains the supernatural ability, the literal superpower to echolocate perfectly. His senses have been heightened. Yes. They call me the real life Batman. My claim to fame is that I click. call me the real life batman my claim to fame is that i click wow and now he's riding the bike using the clicking sounds to figure out where the obstacles are on the road
Starting point is 00:30:52 i mean that's mental isn't it that's amazing he's just he's cycling down like a perfectly large road uh echolocating his way down it. Hey, fair play to that guy. That is incredible. And here's another example of a guy doing a similar technique called Ben Underwood. So how on earth does Ben do this? He's sinking three pointers. He's rollerblading.
Starting point is 00:31:21 He's standing up doing tricks on a f***ing BMX. He's playing Nintendo doing tricks on a f***ing BMX He's playing Nintendo DS What? How? How? I agree He is I agree. Somewhere in there, it's a little genius going on. He is.
Starting point is 00:31:49 Ain't nothing wrong with me. Ben, you got to explain how you were just playing Nintendo 3DS. That's the one I don't quite get. I don't know how you're bouncing the sound off the walls of the Mushroom Kingdom. That's f***ing nuts, though. Yeah. You know, I am conscious that it is a giant misconception isn't it that oh you lose one sense and your others get heightened and and i've heard people say that's just not true it's not how it works and it's and i think that's part of why we don't expect people
Starting point is 00:32:19 who are visually impaired to do this um so but arguably that just makes it even more interesting from the perspective of to find out if superhumans are really real, have they developed unique techniques or are they built different? Yeah. Yeah. That's a really good point. And then I guess when, when it comes down to whether or not it's paranormal, that's where we got to make our decision between paranormal and subnormal. I have arguably painted a messy, distracting picture. Yeah. And I probably could have focused more on the couple of really interesting and persuasive cases.
Starting point is 00:32:55 The Nazi werewolves, for one. I think we really glossed over that. It went straight from buff baby, a quick dip into Nazi werewolves, and then you told me about a guy who's allergic to water who trains as a diver. It's because there's video of the world's strongest toddler and there isn't video of Nazi werewolves. Much to my chagrin. This is going to be a hard one to kind of like wrangle together for a conclusion. I agree. Thoughts? Have superhumans existed and or do they exist and walk among us?
Starting point is 00:33:26 Yeah, they do. We just learned. Someone who can hold their breath underwater for 22 minutes, that's a superhuman. By definition, you are not a normal human. You have abilities higher than that of an average human. I would say I would consider that to be super. I would consider that to be super. But I guess it's whether or not that comes from a place in a world in science or a world of the paranormal.
Starting point is 00:33:52 Superhumans are real. That's a yes. Are they paranormal? I'm going to say no. I agree. I'm happy to go with a no today because the evidence I showed you for the evidence of superhumans was a baby doing one pull-up. Right, yeah. So fair enough.
Starting point is 00:34:13 That's not, that's, we all agree that's not paranormal. Goddamn, double no. I feel like we got to, I need to, I feel like we've lost our way. We need to like get back in touch with. You can't say that after you've done a case. We need to get back in touch. Where you hadn't even watched after you've done a case we need to get back where you hadn't even watched the evidence hear me out here we need to get back in touch with uh what necessitates a yes and what necessitates a no okay because even as i say no i'm thinking to myself we gave atlantis a double yes uh well that's true just because it literally existed that's yeah which there's less evidence
Starting point is 00:34:46 of by the way than uh superhuman abilities that question at the end of that podcast was is atlantis real yeah and we said yes okay okay we didn't say it was made of fairy dust and mermaid people okay we were like it was real so we've had a couple of those before if you want to say are superhumans real absolutely i'll give that a double yes right now okay and you don't deserve it that's the problem what do you mean you got the double yes out of you granted it took an hour and a half i'm bitter i'm bitter that that case got a double yes because i said elizabeth taylor had double eyelashes is she you said she's got double eyelashes is she a mutant not even superhuman it's a mutation you took a whole different approach uh yeah you know what if we want to say hey are
Starting point is 00:35:35 superhumans real i'll throw my yes in the ring for that you heard it here first superhumans are real double yes baby i'll take it i'll take it all day long i mean am i a superhuman for doing that many shots last night and podcasting yeah no i guess it's like it's how many shots was it it was well three you know so not that many definitely not i had a cocktail i had a beer as well so it's a couple other drinks it's like technically binge drinking but it's a couple other drinks. It's like technically binge drinking, but it's like not that impressive. Well, I didn't drink a lot of water either. Is that superhuman?
Starting point is 00:36:09 I was super dehydrated last night and I woke up with them with a super headache and super diarrhea. Okay. That's more than enough information. More than too much. Is it, is it, it is abnormal that I've managed to podcast feeling this ill so i guess yeah it is
Starting point is 00:36:26 a double yes and i'll join the ranks along with these incredible people the super baby the soup i'll join the super baby this is my team super baby oh watch it okay uh hope you enjoyed this investigation into all things super humans thank you to amy grisdale for researching this one and to cammy toman for editing it if you thought this week's episode was a bit too nuts for you a bit too haphazard you didn't enjoy babies doing pull-ups as evidence i'm so sorry and make sure to tune in again next week if you thought it was brilliant tune in again next week if you thought it was brilliant boy do i have a product for you over on patreon.com forward slash this paranormal life for the last four years we've been uploading a bonus episode a month there's now 45 or so full length episodes of this paranormal life and they tend to cover much wilder topics oh. Do you remember in the story when we talked about that woman who can remember everything
Starting point is 00:37:29 that's happened in our life? We can't remember everything that's happened in our life because once a month we offload all that trauma into a bonus episode and upload it onto the internet. It's Pandora's box, guys. And you're going to want to open it up and have a little peek. So make sure to head on over to patreon.com forward slash thisparanormallife check out the rewards, support
Starting point is 00:37:50 the show, and get tons of bonus content in return. The links are, of course, in the description of this episode. So again, hope you enjoyed this week's episode. We will, of course, be back on Tuesday with a brand new Paranormal Tale. Oh yeah. see you then
Starting point is 00:38:05 bye bye

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