• Skye
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    263 days ago

    My take away from this graph is that the older you get, the less damage you take from punching walls (except at 50 where the spell temporarily weakens)

  • @[email protected]
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    443 days ago

    I’m curious what is going on with the spike at 50. Maybe related to lots of alcohol at big birthday celebrations?

    • @Deestan
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      743 days ago

      At 50 your hands finally heal from that injury at 45, so you can start punching walls at full strength again.

    • @Warl0k3
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      153 days ago

      I think it’s a small numbers problem. I’d love to see the data they’re basing this from.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 days ago

        The source is at the bottom of the picture. I would just assume its a US study, because its a study about idiots.

        The Y axis seems to be absolute numbers with the highest around 75 total. So yeah, small numbers.

    • SaltyIceteaMaker
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      93 days ago

      This seems to be a pretty small sample size, so i assume it’s just fluctuations that happened by pure chance

  • 2ugly2live
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    123 days ago

    So you have to turn six before you can take hand damage. Got it.

  • @JASN_DE
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    193 days ago

    That sounds like a very US problem.

          • Redjard
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            92 days ago

            In Europe you learn to respect walls at a very young age.
            You don’t deliberately kick a table leg with your toes either, you just know with certainty it will only give you pain.

            Drywalls have some cushioning to them, they first compress then flex.
            Brick is completely solid, it hurts even at very low speeds when hit with bone. Just knocking on it is painful.

            Go outside, pick a nice flat pavement stone, put two sheets of paper over it. Now use your knuckles and knock around on it for a bit, then see what your instincts tell you when you think about punching that.

            • Redjard
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              32 days ago

              My guess for the injury rates is you expect drywall, thus your body allows you the speed and force you can take on drywall, but then you hit something harder like a metal strut.
              If you already expected something of similar hardness you could never use that much force.

  • @RoidingOldMan
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    83 days ago

    And that’s just the people who got injured.

  • nifty
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    93 days ago

    The old dudes would still punch walls if their hands healed like they did when they were young

  • @harmsy
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    32 days ago

    I was never a wall puncher. I would give that wall a palm strike instead.

    • @tburkhol
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      133 days ago

      I’m not sure that one 69-year-old wall puncher really counts as ‘going up,’ but bones that old get pretty brittle.