
"It Happened In Front Of Hundreds Of People": 16 Incredibly Rare And Strange Ways People Met Their End
Note: This post contains graphic descriptions of deaths.
From personal stories to more well-documented public cases, people had plenty more to share:
1. "Years ago, I asked a neighbor who was a tree inspector about his job, and he told me about a woman who was killed by a falling tree branch in the park. The weird part was that the woman's mother had died the same way 30 years earlier. She had a surviving sibling who I can only imagine never walks under trees if they can help it."
2. "You really shouldn't put sharp knives in the dishwasher since it dulls the blades. And if you do, don't put them point up. People die as a result."
— libwitch
In 2003, a 31-year-old woman was accidentally stabbed to death by knives after she slipped and fell into her dishwasher.
3. "The hockey player who was killed by an ice skate across the neck. Perhaps not quite as shocking as [others], but still shocking and sad, especially considering it happened in front of hundreds of people."
— rnd13001
In 2023, Adam Johnson, an American professional ice hockey forward, passed away after the skate blade of another player cut his neck during an on-ice collision.
4. "When my grandfather was 9, his 2-year-old sister grabbed a wooden skewer off the dinner table and ran out the front door and down the street. He was told to go after her, and of course, she ran faster when she saw there was a chase. Tragically, she fell, and the skewer pierced through her eye, and she died instantly. My poor grandfather always blamed himself even though no one else did 😢."
— Peig77
5. "Two strange, rare deaths that I know first hand. One, a girl in my town died from 'Long Scarf Syndrome.' She was riding her dirt bike in winter, and it got caught in the back wheels. Very sad."
"Second, my neighbor's brother died on a golf course in front of said neighbor. The kid hit a bad shot and threw his club against a stone bench. It split in two, and the shaft came back, piercing him through the heart. Doctors said he might have lived if he hadn't panicked and pulled it out of his chest. The kid bled to death as doctors playing golf ran to him, yelling, 'Don't pull it out!!' He was only 17."
— molly1722
6. "A woman that I knew from childhood was killed when she fell out of a hayride, and the tractor rolled over her. It was so tragic. She was a young, brilliant doctor. It still makes me teary to think about it. I'll never get over what a freak accident it was."
— SLAP40
7. "I remember in my town growing up, there was a 13-year-old boy who was climbing a tree that got struck by lightning and died on a sunny day that didn't even have a cloud in the sky. Apparently, a storm popped up suddenly and vanished just as suddenly, and in those few minutes, a bolt of lightning came out of the sky and hit the tree that he just happened to be climbing. Killed him instantly."
10. According to legend, "The 10th-century Byzantine encyclopedia, the Suda, chronicles a folkloric story of lawgiver Draco's death in the Aeginetan theatre: in a traditional ancient Greek show of approval, his supporters 'threw so many hats and shirts and cloaks on his head that he suffocated, and was buried in that same theatre.'"
— IanGecko
11. "Drowning in an elevator. In 2020, a couple in Tel Aviv lived in a building that had an elevator going down to the parking garage. Due to very heavy rainfall, the elevator flooded while they were in it."
12. "It doesn't happen often (in fact, I think it's really freaking rare), but there have been grown adults who have been killed by chickens. With roosters specifically, many of them have a big spur on each leg. This is, like, a pretty damn big-ass horn with a sharp tip. And some of those roosters can get pretty aggressive. Like, they might just decide to jump up at you and try to stab you in the face."
13.
— TiddlyWiddlyWankyWoo
In 2021, the body of a missing man was discovered inside the leg of a dinosaur statue in a Barcelona suburb. Police believe he became trapped while attempting to recover his cellphone.
14. "My dad's friend's dad was 80-something years old when he decided he wanted to have his ingrown toenails removed. Doctors advised against it as there's a high chance of infection, and at his age, it wouldn't be worth it. Decided to get the surgery anyway, got an infection, and died. All because of ingrown toenails."
— [deleted]
15. "A guy went to Yellowstone with his dog; they pulled up by one of the hot springs, which are about 200 degrees Fahrenheit. The dog immediately ran for the spring and jumped in. The guy ran after to save his dog. People were screaming at him not to jump in, but he did anyway. He had third-degree burns all over his body. His last words were something to the effect of, 'Well, I probably shouldn't have done that.'"
And lastly:
16. "The Dancing Plague in Strasbourg of 1518. It's a wild historical story. People just started breaking out in dance and literally danced to their deaths."
— thethingsaidforlogen
In 1518, hundreds of Strasbourg residents were suddenly seized by an uncontrollable urge to dance, moving nonstop for days, seemingly against their will. This strange phenomenon, known as the dancing plague, lasted about two months, with some succumbing to exhaustion and even death. Theories about its cause range from demonic possession to ergot poisoning — a hallucinogenic mold found in rye bread — but the most widely discussed explanation is a possible mass psychogenic illness triggered by the extreme stress of ongoing famines and outbreaks of smallpox and syphilis.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
43 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Indonesia arrests 285 in drug crackdown and seizes over half a ton of narcotics
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Indonesian authorities said Monday they arrested 285 people suspected of drug trafficking, including 29 women and seven foreigners, and seized over half a ton of various narcotics during a two-monthlong nationwide crackdown. Indonesia is a major hub for drug trafficking in Southeast Asia despite having strict drug laws, with convicted smugglers sometimes executed by firing squad. The head of the National Narcotic Agency, Marthinus Hukom, said the crackdown, launched between April and June across 20 provinces, also uncovered money laundering schemes by two drug syndicates and confiscated assets worth more than 26 billion rupiah (about $1.5 million). Thirty-six of the suspects, including 21 women, were paraded in front of reporters, along with confiscated drugs, in their orange prison uniforms and hands handcuffed. Hukom said the women arrested were mostly housewives. 'I call on Indonesian women to be more vigilant in establishing friendships both in the real world and in cyberspace,' he said during a joint press conference with officials from the security affairs ministry and the customs office who took part in the operation. One of the agency's deputies, Budi Wibowo, said authorities seized 683,885 grams (0.68 ton) of crystal meth, marijuana, ecstasy, THC, hashish and amphetamines, adding this helped stop them falling into the hands of 'more than 1.3 million people.' The seven foreign nationals were an American, two Kazakhs, two Malaysians, an Indian and an Australian, Wibowo said. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime says Indonesia is a major drug-smuggling hub in part because international drug syndicates target its young population. In a separate operation, authorities in the province of Riau Island, exposed in May two cases of drug smuggling in its waters and seized 2.7 tons of crystal methamphetamine and 1.2 tons of ketamine, Hukom said Monday. In 2023, authorities uncovered more than 52,000 of drug cases and confiscated 6.2 tons of crystal meth, 1.1 tons of marijuana and other types of synthetic narcotics, said Mochammad Hasan of the ministry of security affairs during the press conference. Hasan said the number increased in 2024 with more than 56,000 cases and confiscated 7.5 tons of crystal meth and 3.3 tons of marijuana, with a combine value worth 7.5 trillion rupiah ($454.6 million). Authorities have arrested a total of 27,357 drug suspects by November 2024, he said. Early this month, three British nationals accused of smuggling nearly a kilogram (over two pounds) of cocaine into Indonesia were charged in a court on the tourist island of Bali. They face the death penalty under the country's strict drug laws. About 530 people, including 96 foreigners, are on death row in Indonesia, mostly for drug-related crimes, the Ministry of Immigration and Corrections' data showed. Indonesia's last executions, of an Indonesian and three foreigners, were carried out in July 2016.


San Francisco Chronicle
5 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Olympic sprint finalist Knighton at sports court for appeals in doping contamination case
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) — United States sprinter Erriyon Knighton went to court Monday to defend his claim he was contaminated in a positive doping test case that risks a ban from the next world championships. A two-time Olympic finalist in the 200 meters aged just 21, Knighton was cleared to run at the Paris Summer Games last year only after an American tribunal ruled he was not at fault for the positive test for trenbolone, a steroid used in livestock farming. The World Anti-Doping Agency and track and field's Athletics Integrity Unit have challenged that ruling in combined appeals to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. CAS has scheduled the appeal hearing for two days and said a verdict is likely within several weeks. The U.S. track and field national championships start July 31 in Eugene, Oregon. They are trials to pick the U.S. team for the 2025 worlds that open Sept. 13 in Tokyo. Knighton's attorney Howard Jacobs suggested last year Knighton could be 'collateral damage' in an ongoing feud between WADA and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, fueled by how a case of alleged contamination of Chinese Olympic swimmers was handled by the global watchdog. USADA prosecuted Knighton's original case after he tested positive in March last year and accepted the 'no-fault' ruling based on the explanation the contamination was by oxtail from a bakery in central Florida. The USADA investigation included obtaining the meat and testing it, plus interviews with the manager of the bakery, Knighton, his girlfriend and his mother. They backed up the athlete's claim of contamination. In the Chinese case, an explanation of contamination with a banned heart medication in a hotel kitchen in 2021 was accepted without evidence backing the theory. WADA lawyers and officials decided the agency was unlikely to win any appeals brought to CAS without being able to gather independent evidence in China during the COVID-19 pandemic. Knighton is the sixth-fastest 200 runner in track history with a personal best time of 19.49 seconds set in 2022. Usain Bolt's world record is 19.19. He placed fourth in the 200 at past two Olympic Games, and took one silver medal and one bronze from the past two editions of worlds.


USA Today
5 hours ago
- USA Today
LA isn't burning. ICE has terrorized many into an ominous silence.
The threat of ICE raids on commencement ceremonies was credible enough that our Los Angeles school district devised plans to protect students from being kidnapped as they received their diplomas. Apparently, according to Attorney General Pam Bondi and President Donald Trump, 'California is burning.' Here in Los Angeles, however, we know too well the smell of a serious conflagration ‒ and also the stench of political gas when politicians try to justify corrupt assertions of authoritarian power. We are protesting now not because we are lawless, but because what is happening is a racially selective application of immigration laws that should have been reformed years ago. We are protesting because we still believe in decency, human dignity and respect for hard work and family. Some protesting among us have succumbed to anger, while others have opportunistically caused mayhem the way some revelers do when the Lakers or the Dodgers win a championship. Meanwhile the president and his ministers of cruelty, hysteria and lies are opportunistically causing far more mayhem, disrupting businesses and communities and devastating families and insulting our brave troops by gratuitously deploying them to our streets, pitting them against American civilians, trying to use the selfless members of our military as an authoritarian flex. Rogue opportunists don't represent all LA protesters California is not burning. LA is not burning. Some cars and other objects have been set ablaze by a few individuals who are willing to go to jail for their outrage, nihilism, pyromania or whatever. Their conduct doesn't represent me or most of the rest of us. They certainly do not represent my students now living with terror and dread, watching masked Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in armored vehicles occupying the parking lots of their supermarkets, scrolling the rumors that scream across social media about the next ICE raid at another Home Depot or factory or a school graduation. The threat of ICE raids on this spring's commencement ceremonies was credible enough that our Los Angeles school district officials devised plans to protect parents, grandparents, and other friends and family members and the students themselves from being kidnapped as they receive their diplomas. My students didn't talk much about it during their last days of the school year. They were trying to be happy about the impending summer vacation. They are exhausted. They spent more than a year of their childhood isolated from peers by the COVID-19 pandemic, many of them trapped in chaotic circumstances, watching the parents who are now treated as expendable when they were essential workers compelled to risk their health and their family's health to keep things going for the rest of us. Some watched those parents get sick and in some cases die or infect grandparents or aunts and uncles who died. My students saw those sacrifices of their parents rewarded with vicious slights and condemnations, heard them called criminals for their very presence in this country. Those adults now must wonder if it is safe to go to work anymore, if there is any other way to provide food and shelter. This summer, end-of-the-school-year silence was ominous We can only guess what is happening to many of our students and their families, though. Not only because of their silent stoicism but because, actually, most stopped attending classes ‒ more of them than usual, even for the last week of school. I don't know what that means but I can imagine. One girl told me almost no one showed up recently at her usually crowded church. With fear and apprehension come small doses of relief. When a graduation goes unmolested by federal agents. When a kid reaches out by email to say they and their family are all right ‒ and asked that I round their grade up to a B. The end of a school year usually brings a silence that is a break from the constant cacophony. This year, that end-of-the-day at the end-of-the-school-year silence was ominous. This year, that silence reminds me of the cruelties. Not just the ICE raids and not just the threats to people who wish to exercise their First Amendment rights, but also the threats to Pell Grants and other forms of student financial aid that could derail the hopes and dreams of my students and undermine the hard work that my colleagues and I commit ourselves to every day. As a parent myself, I know how difficult it is to go through adolescence with a child. It can be frustrating and terrifying, and the feelings of powerlessness can overwhelm. I cannot imagine what it is like to experience that and wonder if you're going to suddenly be seized by armed men and not know if you will ever see your child again. So when I see the silent stoicism of my students, I don't know what to make of it. Is it fatalism or denial disguised as optimism or something else that I don't understand? Whatever it is, my colleagues and I will continue to indulge it and keep things as optimistic as the kids want it, understanding that there could be some we won't ever see again and others returning to school without parents at home. We will try to prepare ourselves to pick up the pieces left by the brutality that is being unleashed on some of the most vulnerable people in our city. Larry Strauss, a high school English teacher in South Los Angeles since 1992, is the author of 'Students First and Other Lies: Straight Talk From a Veteran Teacher' and "A Lasting Impact in the Classroom and Beyond," a book for new and struggling teachers.