Wanna Get Disoriented and Nauseated – IOTW Report

Wanna Get Disoriented and Nauseated

That’s what this clip did to me.

VIA WHATFINGER.COM

27 Comments on Wanna Get Disoriented and Nauseated

  1. “Wanna Get Disoriented and Nauseated”

    No because I don’t want to ever know what it’s like to be duped into sleeping with a tranny from Barcelona.

    ๐Ÿฅด๐Ÿคข๐Ÿคฎ

    15
  2. I can understand the draw- to be completely light and bask in the majesty of God’s beauty.

    But I’m terrified of heights- and the real danger of gravity ending my life.
    So no thanks. I’ll wait until heaven for my sky diving.

    6
  3. Best comment on the video from the site:

    “Supposedly much faster most craft outside the Jeffery Thomas Smith energy feild ozone less gravitational pull or faste harness the gravitational electromagnetic waves and use a power energy source locomotive power source increase metal on equipment machine Gravity gr relativity r.”

    I just love someone who really understands science and can put it in layman’s terms. Heh.

    4
  4. Last time I did that was on a very dark, moonless night up close to the stars.

    My buddies and I didn’t have any tennis balls, at least none we’d admit to. But I do seem to recall a huge load of gear strapped on.

    Was always fun and exhilarating, even when we got down into small arms range.

    “Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of of earth, and danced the skies…”, wait a minute. Wrong Branch.

    TWD

    5
  5. That’s the cool thing about gravity – It doesn’t care how much you weigh. Everything falls at the same speed that high up due to the low air density. Terminal velocity is roughly the same for all objects, regardless of size and shape since there is very little air drag resistance. A feather will fall at the same rate as a bowling ball in a vacuum.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=74MUjUj7bp8
    .

    4
  6. No, I do not. That’s why at least 80% of the time i avoid watching tv news – especially about the toilet bowl swirl going on in Washington DC.

    Also – After spending six months on a USN surface ship, a destroyer, and experiencing several intense ocean storms — submarine duty was the clear better choice. Rarely any rocking, rolling, pitching to and fro a few hundred feet below the water surface.

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