Comments
Whatsallthefussabou1 t1_ixo3c07 wrote
What did we learn today?
VIM731 t1_ixo42k3 wrote
Omg that's nothing. I took a 16 penny nail out of the nail gun right through the webbing between my thumb and index finger. Stitched it up on the jobsite with chalkline, got yelled at because I cut some of the chalkline. Had to buy a new one on my way to the job the next day.
SquirrelKing2022 t1_ixo5986 wrote
This happened to me last week with a frying pan!
Jthundercleese t1_ixo631e wrote
Done the exact same thing
yungjoseph1 t1_ixo6rwy wrote
Its ribbed for her pleasureš¤£š¤£
stew9703 t1_ixo9ce6 wrote
Wow, that sound real cool, you're a real tough gritty person who isn't totally so self important that they are comparing wound damage to a guy who has 11 perfectly parallel lines on his finger.
1 single hole wound vs 11 parallel lines.
RIP bozo, 2/10 vs 8/10 perfect wound.
VIM731 t1_ixo9ndz wrote
Totally dude I mean who complains about a shitty little screw thread burn right??
stew9703 t1_ixoats6 wrote
Nobody it seems like, just look at this guy. Didn't complain at all literally just posted that he has neat parallel lines in his finger. Unlike one of the commenters who bitched that he got injured at work with one little hole in a non critical area and had the nerve to use non medical company work supplies to make it feel a lil better.
VIM731 t1_ixobk0w wrote
What kind of asshole... š¤¦
WeAllCreateOurOwnHel t1_ixobn36 wrote
Congratulations, you can now safely commit all the crime(s) you've ever wanted and get absolutely away with it on just this one finger alone.
Kinda feels like a superpower....
hankthenoodle t1_ixogzdj wrote
I feel like they could still match it regardless
flannelmaster9 t1_ixohgpj wrote
I've had thread scars on my finger for years from thread rod. Similar story lol
DivesPater OP t1_ixoiqqc wrote
You, u/flannelmaster9 and I are not very quick on the uptake, are we?
DivesPater OP t1_ixoit2u wrote
>According to the law ofĀ conservation of energy, no energy is destroyed due to friction, though it may be lost to the system of concern. Energy is transformed from other forms into thermal energy. A sliding hockey puck comes to rest because friction converts its kinetic energy into heat which raises the thermal energy of the puck and the ice surface. Since heat quickly dissipates, many early philosophers, includingĀ Aristotle, wrongly concluded that moving objects lose energy without a driving force.
flannelmaster9 t1_ixoja28 wrote
I work with my hands and tools everyday so they're constantly getting scratched/cut. So there's always a new wound.
Last night me.and the knife were watching Netflix and she asked how long I've had my thread scar on my left index finger, and I had to think.about it. Spring of 18 I believe lol
Whatsallthefussabou1 t1_ixojvbq wrote
I took my warm hands out of roasty warm gloves as a small child and plunged them into the snow, I quickly learned cold things can feel like it burns also.
What actually happens is the frozen water forms ice crystals, which damage the skin cells. the blood vessels constrict, reducing blood flow and delivery of oxygen to the area also know as Raynaud's phenomenon, it can feel painful when warming the area back up and the blood flow returns to normal again however it causes swellings that can also look like a burn some times. š¤·š»āāļø Itās amazing how the body reacts to things isnāt it?
Burritobandit1 t1_ixomhcd wrote
>Last night me.and the knife were watching Netflix
Probably explains the constant wounds
flannelmaster9 t1_ixomm9a wrote
Wife/knife, potatoes/tomatoes lol
Spiritual-Guava-6418 t1_ixowby3 wrote
Welcome to the club.
Yesimadude05 t1_ixp1uee wrote
That looks painful!
RibbedGoliath t1_ixp37qg wrote
Happens to the best of us. The great part is, we all do it again still not thinking
AnonymousPerson4 t1_ixpgdeg wrote
Be glad it's on that side; on the back it messes with the creases on your finger more, but here it just makes your fingerprint ridges shallower once it heals. (I am going off of the anecdotal source of burning the fingerprint sides of all fingers at least three times each and two burns on the backs).
Dumpster_Sauce t1_ixpmmdc wrote
Look at the bright side: I one time touched a running chainsaw blade because I was wondering what it felt like
Hungry-Positive-8640 t1_ixqaudv wrote
I cant tell you how many times I've done that...
DivesPater OP t1_ixqcjkj wrote
It didn't look hot...
Hungry-Positive-8640 t1_ixqiesc wrote
ikr it gets me every time.
throwaway193741 t1_ixrgebs wrote
I'm disappointed you aren't OP. That would've been a sick self-burn.
thedoucher t1_ixs8hdg wrote
I am further referring to my wife as my knife from now on. I've heard the term old battle ax but knife is a new one
flannelmaster9 t1_ixs8lb3 wrote
There are many affectionate names for significant ofthers
[deleted] t1_ixo393z wrote
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