When i was a child, i believed autopilot really worked like in the movie Airplane, that it was an inflatable dummy.

  • HandwovenConsensus@lemm.ee
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    11 days ago

    My parents didn’t specifically tell me if Santa Clause was real or make-believe. They wanted me to come to my own conclusion, I guess. My dad is a rationalist person, and my mom’s from a culture that doesn’t traditionally celebrate Christmas.

    So what I believed was that the appearance of presents on Christmas was an unsolved mystery, and Santa Clause was just a hypothesis to explain it.

    I suspected the real explanation probably involved the tree working as an antenna for some kind of cosmic energy that triggered the appearance of presents. Perhaps in ancient and more superstitious times they discovered this phenomenon by accident and continued to put up the tree ever since.

    • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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      11 days ago

      When I was a kid my dad would often pull up the NORAD Santa tracker on Christmas Eve, and that combined with seeing the film War Games at way too young of an age had me believing in Santa for much longer than I should have because “why else would the federal government devote so much money to tracking him?” I think it was specifically seeing the exact same animation of him being welcomed into a country by a pair of fighter jets for the third year in a row that finally killed that line of reasoning (because obviously the NORAD Santa tracker site is shot with television cameras or something)

      Kid logic is wild

  • BananaPeal@sh.itjust.works
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    12 days ago

    That encountering quick sand in real life was a real possibility every day.

    Bonus: My kid doesn’t believe that Santa is magical, he just has really advanced technology.

    • erusuoyera@sh.itjust.works
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      12 days ago

      Clarke’s third law. “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” Quicksand thing is fucking stupid though.

  • db0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    12 days ago

    That male orgasm was painful. I got this idea from seeing their o-face somewhere and assuming it indicated pain.

    • Arfman@aussie.zone
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      12 days ago

      This is why everytime we wanna do it we really mean it because it’s a huge sacrifice /s /jk

  • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    12 days ago

    I grew up with a family that didn’t have a lot of luxuries when I was young. We had three channels on TV, so we didn’t spend a lot of time watching TV. So I didn’t get to watch a lot of pop culture content for about the first 7 or 8 years of my life.

    So one of the first memories I have as a kid is in hearing music on the radio, record player, cassette player or any sound system … I understood that it was previously recorded and performed by other people somewhere else.

    What I thought was that all the sounds were generated by human voices. Guitars? Pianos? Trumpets? Brass sounds? Violins? even Drums or percussion. I thought all of it was people just making sounds with their voices.

    I’m Indigenous Canadian so my parents didn’t have musical instruments, a couple of uncles played the guitar and fiddle … but by the time I was young, they no longer played these instruments and had them. I never knew or understood musical instruments really until I was about 8, 9 or ten. Up until then, I just thought all music was just people with amazing and usualy human voices.

      • AquaTofana@lemmy.world
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        11 days ago

        This is always my answer to this question. I thought radio stations must have been the busiest places with all those bands coming and going!

  • j4k3@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    The semaphore homunculus lived in the stop lights at intersections.

    In my Superman onesie (w/ cape), I could fly, but was never brave enough to launch from a high enough step on the stairs. I knew I was flying, but…

  • teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
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    11 days ago

    I remember knowing that knives will cut you and make you bleed, and that when people were shot in movies they would bleed, therefore bullets must be shaped like little blades.

  • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
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    11 days ago

    I used to think those coins in the fountain at the mall were just money people wanted to get rid of. One day, little me tried getting away with a skirt full of coins and got in trouble.

    I mean, to be fair, a coin on the ground is fair game, and they don’t make these “unspoken rules” clear enough, so I couldn’t imagine a coin in a fountain not being free to just pick up.

  • pixelscript@lemm.ee
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    11 days ago

    I thought the glyph for “heated seat” in cars depicted a raised fist with the pinkie finger extended rather than a chair with heat waves eminating from it.

    The Tea at the Treedome episode of SpongeBob SquarePants further convinced me I was seeing it correctly, and I since knew it as “the fancy button”. In some regard, I wasn’t entirely wrong.

    “When in doubt, pinkie out!”

  • No1@aussie.zone
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    11 days ago

    Not me, but I have heard that kids used to think ‘olden times’ were black & white, because all old films were before the introduction of colour. Like, it’s only in the last 80? years that people see in colour…

    It makes me giggle when modern movies use b&w to depict pre 21st century, or even ‘flashbacks’ are b&w

    • schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
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      11 days ago

      Honestly I have to remind myself of this myself. Yes, these are images of events in (say) 1938. No, things weren’t actually black and white in 1938, people saw colors the same way, with the same sharpness, they do in 2024, it’s just photographic technology that has improved since then.

  • LovableSidekick@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    I believed a kid who told me that every 4th of July, former US presidents who were still alive - which I somehow imagined was a large group - stood in a circle around the statue of liberty and held hands singing, “He’s got the whole world in his hands.”