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  • Hey there, welcome to Life Noggin!

  • I love stunts.

  • The best part is feeling alive and feeling the wind in your hair.

  • That's why I got this wig.

  • The worst part is when your animator leaves you hanging.

  • Luckily, anything bad that happens to my body can be fixed!

  • See.

  • Just propped back up!

  • No bones broken!

  • You fleshy skeletons, on the other hand, you actually have to fear for your safety.

  • When fully grown, your body contains 206 bones, wow, you humans got a lot of bones, interconnected

  • by tendons and ligaments.

  • This skeleton keeps you moving and protects your organs, but any part can be damaged in

  • the right circumstances.

  • Some bones are long and others short, but each and every skeletal bone has a hard exterior

  • of connective tissue, filled with tiny canals for your blood and soft spongy tissue, which

  • houses even more bone-forming cells.

  • When a bone fractures, whether it's a small crack or a clean break, your immune system

  • rushes to the rescue.

  • As your blood begins to clot, it forms a callus and cells on either side will then thread

  • together and seal tight, slowly turning into bone.

  • The whole process can take over a year, depending on the size, severity and location.

  • And if you're not careful, you could snap it again.

  • For a brief time, when the fracture is receiving all the attention, this area will be stronger

  • than the rest, over time, the bone's strength will be balanced and any spot just as likely

  • to break.

  • Still, snapping it in the same place would be pretty darn unlucky.

  • Even among kids, who are most prone to fractures, there's only a five percent chance of breaking

  • your forearm a second time in the exact same place.

  • If given the time to heal, you could theoretically break the same spot over and over again, as

  • long as you have good blood supply, strong muscles and a solid immune system.

  • In fact, Evel Knievel, pioneer stuntman and personal hero of mine, won the Guiness World

  • record for fracturing 433 bones in his entire career.

  • But it isn't just daredevils that experience multiple breaks.

  • Stress or hairline fractures are some of the most common injuries, mainly impacting bones

  • in your lower legs, like the tibia.

  • Obviously, though, not every bone or person heals the same.

  • The collarbone is the most likely bone to break, whereas the thighbone is the strongest

  • and can take many more months to fully recover.

  • Yet even with the best treatment, some bones just won't heal.

  • These cases are called "nonunionfractures and they can cause long-term pain and even

  • loss of function.

  • To give your bones the best chance of recovering, doctors say humans should exercise regularly

  • and eat a proper diet, rich in calcium and Vitamin D from a young age.

  • Especially if you're a born stunt performer like me!

  • Wooooo!!

  • So have you ever broken a bone?

  • Maybe multiple?

  • If you have any broken bone stories you're comfortable with sharing, let me know in the

  • comment section below!

  • Curious to know what would happen if you had no bones?

  • Yeah, you're gonna wanna check out this video.

  • obviously your bones are a pretty important part of your body, but why?

  • There are 206 of them in the average adult and babies are actually born with even more,

  • around 300 or so.

  • As always, my name is Blocko, this has been Life Noggin, don't forget to keep on thinking!

Hey there, welcome to Life Noggin!

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