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53 sats \ 4 replies \ @DarthCoin 19h
he talk about a bear. The situation with a bear is different than with a dog.
My first encounter with a bear was terrifying, but I survived. I just lay down with face on the ground and cover my head, than fake death.
I was smelled, licked, scratched but ... in the end he let me alive and walk away.
I was 15 years old, alone in the woods, hiking.
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0 sats \ 3 replies \ @Fenix 13h
How many lives do you have left now?
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33 sats \ 1 reply \ @Lux OP 13h
#277365
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @Fenix 13h
This video fed that dormant knowledge even more. The sentence you shared made me remember one of those pieces of knowledge I acquired that saved my life.
I'll try to be brief:
I was new and learning to drive, traveling on a highway with a very experienced truck driver from the company where I worked. I asked him a typical rookie question: "What do I do if the car loses its brakes on a highway like this and I'm going very fast?" He told me: Pull the handbrake or turn the engine off and on again. I said, if I do that I'll ruin the engine, and he replied, "better to ruin the engine than to die."
Weeks later I was in the car on a slope and, when I got in the car in a hurry, I switched on the electricals and forgot to start the engine—rookie mistake. I released the brakes and the car quickly picked up speed and I couldn't press the brake because the car was off. Then I remembered what he had told me and I started the engine (at the time I thought it was already running), which allowed me to brake. I nearly crashed into the cars ahead.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @DarthCoin 13h
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33 sats \ 1 reply \ @Fenix 13h
I hope I won't have to try that approach. I've never had problems with big dogs because I'm not afraid of them, except dobermans — I fear dobermans.
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @Lux OP 13h
no wonder ;)
#893890
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