People Admit The Dumbest Things They Believed as Kids

When you’re young, you learn how things work and accept what you think as truth, until you grow up and realize you were wrong or confused all along. A Reddit thread digs into this by asking, “What’s the dumbest thing you believed as a kid?” These are some of the best of the nearly 4-thousand comments.

  • "My mum told me we used to be apes. I believed her because she told me, but I didn’t understand why there were no photos of me when I used to be an ape."
  • "That songs played on the radio were being played live each time they came on. Smashing Pumpkins song at 2 a.m.? I assumed they got out of bed to play it. My parents never corrected me on that theory."
  • "I thought 'shoplifting' was like weightlifting, only instead of weights, people were lifting the entire store building. I pictured big, burly, bald men that liked to go around heaving store buildings overhead, grunting and red-faced, like the weightlifters I'd seen on TV. I was afraid someone would try to do it while we were out shopping."
  • "Don't drink and drive meant all drinks. My dad was super confused when I told him he wasn't allowed to have any soda until we got home."
  • "I thought Jennifer Lopez was named Jenny Ferlopez."
  • "I would watch the TV in horror if a character on screen was smoking while drinking alcohol. I had a vague notion that alcohol was flammable, and I was afraid they would explode."
  • "Cats are girls, and dogs are boys."
  • "That if it was raining where I was, it was raining everywhere in the world."
  • "That the high pitched noise on hot summer days was electricity running through the power lines. It was really grasshoppers."
  • "Still waiting for that watermelon in my stomach to come out."
  • “My dad was ‘checking for poison’ by always taking the first few swigs of my cokes.”
  • “That a guitarist had to use a pick when playing an electric guitar because the strings would electrocute you.”
  • “That Johnny Paycheck turned into Johnny Cash.”
  • "When I was about 6 or so, I asked my dad what the button on the top of the clock by my bed was for. He said it was for the alarm. From then on, I was afraid to push it because I thought it would call the fire department."

Source: Reddit


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