Common Myths Everyone Still Believes

 Hey, did you know that a bunch of the things you’ve believed your whole life… are completely wrong? Yeah, we’ve all heard them — those random “facts” that sound so convincing you never even questioned them. Well, today we’re busting some of the most popular myths people still think are true — and I promise at least one of these will mess with your brain a little.

First up: the classic idea that drinking Vitamin C cures the common cold. Sorry, but that’s not true. Vitamin C doesn’t actually cure anything. What it can do is slightly shorten how long you’re sick. But if you think those fizzy tablets are a magic shield against the flu, think again. They’re basically just expensive lemonade.

Next, the famous 10-percent-of-your-brain myth. If that were true, imagine the wasted potential — 90 percent of your head just chilling there doing nothing. In reality, brain-scan studies show we use almost all parts of our brain throughout the day. Different regions light up for different tasks — talking, walking, remembering your ex at 2 a.m. — but they all work. So no, you don’t have some secret superpower locked away. You’re already using it.

Number three: shaving makes hair grow back thicker. That’s false — the razor just cuts the hair bluntly, so when it grows it looks darker and rougher. The hair itself isn’t thicker; you’re just seeing the flat tip. So, unless your razor has miracle fertilizer, don’t blame it.

Here’s a classic misunderstanding: humans did not evolve from monkeys. We share a common ancestor with modern monkeys — like distant cousins on the same family tree. Over millions of years, we took different evolutionary paths. So, you can stop feeling guilty every time you look at a chimp. We didn’t “come from” them — we just have the same great-great-great-grand-ancestor somewhere back there.

Goldfish are not as dumb as memes make them look. Scientists have trained goldfish to recognize shapes, colors, and even their feeders for months. Three-second memory? More like three-month memory. You owe that fish an apology.

This one’s literally shocking: lightning absolutely does strike the same place twice. Tall buildings like the Empire State Building get hit dozens of times every year. So, if you see lightning and think you’re safe because it already struck nearby… yeah, good luck with that.

Okay, the spider thing — totally fake. No, spiders aren’t crawling into your mouth while you sleep. Someone made that up in the 1990s to prove how easily misinformation spreads online. And look — it worked. The internet hasn’t changed much since then.

And nope, astronauts can’t see the Great Wall of China from space with the naked eye. It’s long, sure, but it’s also narrow and blends in with the landscape. What they can see are cities at night — glowing like constellations — but the Wall? You’d need a zoom lens.

So yeah — a lot of the stuff we “know” just isn’t true. Next time someone drops a random fun fact, maybe fact-check it first. 



Comments

Viewed in recent months

The Shoes That Bloomed and the Green Gifts

The Fall of a Digital Empire: What the Chen Zhi Case Reveals About the Dark Side of Tech Wealth

Why Some Countries Still Have Kings: Understanding Modern Monarchies

The 10 Most Beautiful Islands in the World, 2025

The Light Within Us: How Wave–Particle Duality Reflects the Entanglement of Body and Mind

Drinking Culture: A Personal Choice or a Social Construct?

Is Reality Just a Measurement?

The Paradox of Voice: Why Birds Speak and Mammals Stay Silent

There’s a tiny island on Earth where nature did something incredible.

If California were its own country - it would be a global powerhouse, blending natural beauty, innovation, and culture like nowhere else on Earth