Sunday, October 2, 2011

Korean Woman Face Disordered After Injecting Cooking Oil Into Face!

A Korean woman who was addicted to plastic surgery injected cooking oil into her own face when her supply of silicone from doctor ran out. Her face was disordered and became grotesquely large. And now, people call her “standing fan” due to her large face and small body.
 

The picture below is Hang Mioku before her face disordered; she looks good actually.

Hang Mioku, now 48, had her first plastic surgery procedure when she was 28; hooked from the beginning she moved to Japan where she had further operations – mostly to her face.

Following operation after operation, her face was eventually left enlarged and disfigured, but she would still look at herself in the mirror and think she was beautiful.

Eventually the surgeons she visited refused to carry out any more work on her and one suggested that her obsession could be a sign of a psychological disorder.

When she returned home to Korea the surgery meant Hang’s features had changed so much that her own parents didn’t recognise her.

After realising that the girl with the grossly swollen face was indeed their daughter her horrified parents took her to a doctor. Once again the possibility that Hang had a mental disorder was raised and she started treatment.


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Monkey can dance better than you?

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Girls Before and After Make Up

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First Face Transplant Patient In US


The 46-year-old mother of two Connie Culp is the first face transplant patient in the United States. The “disfigure” photo (L) is Connie after an injury to her face; the other photo (R) is after she underwent the first face transplant surgery at the Cleveland Clinic in December 2008.

This is an old photo of Connie Culp before the injury to her face.

Her face was shot by her husband Thomas G. “Tom” Culp in a failed murder-suicide in September 2004 outside a bar in Hopedale, Ohio. Both of them survived and Tom was convicted of aggravated attempted murder with a 7-year prison sentence.
 

After the incident, Connie Culp forgave her husband at the sentencing and said she will be waiting when he gets out of prison. However, on an Oprah show on September 22, 2009, Connie Culp said that she has changed her mind and no longer plans to wait for her former husband after a question from her daughter, she asked, “Mom, what kind of example would you be setting for me if you went back to the man who shot your face off?”

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The spinning girl mystery....

The Right Brain vs Left Brain test ... do you see the dancer turning clockwise or anti-clockwise?

spinningwoman - Spinning woman illusion/test

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In Search of the Mongolian Death Worm....

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In Search of the Mongolian Death Worm

1 - Mongolian Death Worm


Takeshi Yamada

Trudging gingerly across the arid sands of the Gobi desert, Czech explorer Ivan Mackerle is careful not to put a foot wrong, for he knows it may be his last. He scours the land and shifting valleys for tell-tale signs of disturbance in the sands below, always ready for the unexpected lurch of an alien being said to kill in one strike with a sharp spout of acidic venom to the face. A creature so secretive that no photographic evidence yet exists, but the locals know it’s there, always waiting in silence for its prey, waiting to strike – the Mongolian Death Worm.


Reported to be between two and five feet long, the deep-red coloured worm is said to resemble the intestines of a cow and sprays a yellow acidic saliva substance at its victims, who if they’re unlucky enough to be within touching distance also receive an electric shock powerful enough to kill a camel… or them.

2 - Mongolian Death Worm


via Zwitter

Given the latin name Allghoi khorkhoi, the Mongolian Death Worm was first referred to by American paleontologist Professor Roy Chapman Andrews (apparently the inspiration for the Indiana Jones character) in his book On the Trail of Ancient Man, in 1926 but he didn’t appear to be entirely convinced about the whole idea. Even though locals were desperate to relay events of when the dreaded worm struck, Andrews writes: “None of those present ever had seen the creature, but they all firmly believed in its existence and described it minutely.” But it wasn’t to stop other inquisitive adventurers taking up the investigative mantle when Andrews was no longer interested, or able to pursue the matter.

3 - Mongolian Death Worm
View: 600x371


Pieter Dirkx

Only a few years ago, in 2005, a group of English scientists and cryptozoologists spent a month in the hostile Gobi desert searching for the fabled creature, and although they spoke to a number of Mongolians in the area, all of whom regaled wondrous stories of the worm, no one could verify they had seen the creature first-hand. Even still, after four weeks the team had gathered enough verbal evidence to be convinced that the worm really does exist. Lead researcher, Richard Freeman, said: “Every eyewitness account and story we have heard describes exactly the same thing: a red-brown worm-like snake, approximately two feet long and two inches thick with no discernable head or back (tail).”


4 - Mongolian Death Worm

Intrepid explorer, Ivan Mackerle

Today, it is Ivan Mackerle, a self-made cryptozoologist who travels the world in search of scientific evidence that proves creatures like the Loch Ness monster and Mongolian Death Worm exist. As a boy he read the stories of the Russian paleontologist Yefremov, who wrote about a worm, which resembled a bloody intestine, that could grow to the length of a small man and mysteriously kill people at great distance, possibly with poison or electricity.

Mackerle says: “I thought it was only science fiction. But when I was in university, we had a Mongolian student in our class. I asked him, ‘Do you know what this is, the Allghoi khorkhoi?’ I was waiting for him to start laughing, to say that’s nothing. But he leaned in, like he had a secret, and said, ‘I know it. It is a very strange creature.’”
So Does the Mongolian Death Worm really exist, and what if it does?

This insistence by locals that worm is a reality will continue to fuel inquisitive minds and as long as open-mindedness remains a fair virtue, we’re prepared to wait a little longer for empirical proof of its existence.

Just remember, if you do decide to go Death Worm hunting in the Gobi desert, don’t wear yellow, seemingly that’s the color that sends our wrinkly friend into one its trademark electrifying, spitting freak outs. Don’t say we didn’t warm you.