Horrific History Podcast show

Horrific History Podcast

Summary: Join us as we peel back the skin of history and exploring the morbid, the macabre, the horrible and sometimes flat-out gross things in the historical record which you might not have heard of before! While attempts are made to try to keep our episodes family-friendly, be forewarned that we often discuss subject matter which may not be suitable for younger listeners. If this is a concern to you, we recommend saving it for when young ears are out of listening range! New episodes are released bi-weekly on Tuesdays! Horrific History Podcast is a program of Kron, an educational 501(c)3 nonprofit headquartered in Ellensburg, WA.

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  • Artist: Horrific History with Eric Slyter and Jordan Watney
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Podcasts:

 Resurrection: Season 3 Teaser | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 16:41

After a long absence we’re happy to report the Horrific History Podcast isn’t dead yet! We’re not just a footnote in the history of podcasts you used to be able to download but left you “starvening” for more; a new season is getting ready to rise one more time! You can look forward to a lot of brand new exciting content this upcoming season, after we pick up where Season 2 dropped into our unexpected hiatus. A listener mail episode, podcast interview cross-overs about which Eric will only vague-cast the teasing details and a Patron-suggested episode will bring us into Season 3 with a lot of fun squeamish delight. So enjoy a snack while you listen to this new Horrific History Podcast teaser episode for Season 3 through one of your favorite podcast services (iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn and more). Just remember, no squeam allowed! Watch you podcatcher for our upcoming release when we’ll get back on track and discuss religious relics! If you’d like to hear the commercial-free version of this episode and receive other great perks, become a patron of our podcast on Patreon!Become a Patron! Click here if you’d like a chance to win a FREE copy of Dead but Dreaming’s Mockingbird EP! Commercial break music by Dead but Dreaming. Slideshow Image by Sarah Richter from Pixabay Blog Image by cyanidekiss from Pixabay

 The Waking Nightmare: Episodes from the Crypt | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:26:08

  While trying to work on our upcoming new episode (with a special guest), Eric and Jordan discovered that our technology is having some issues (Jordan blames poltergeists, because that makes about as much sense to her as computers)! Since we need a bit more time to fix our problems so we can have a two-way conversation with our interviewee, we’re resurrecting another one of our Season 1 episodes (now with a new intro) from the Horrific History Podcast Crypt for your squeamish delight!   The Waking Nightmare: Sleep Paralysis Have you ever had the experience of waking up but being unable to move? Did you feel the sensation of “the intruder” in your room restraining you? At least 40% of the population has had this experience and people from different times and places have had different explanations for it. Eric Slyter and Curtis Bender, your co-hosts, explore folklore and the paranormal as they dig into the history of sleep paralysis through the ages.   Discover how these “waking hallucinations” have taken the form of witches, demons, vampires, fairies, ghost children and more (as well as which new theme only appeared after the space race)! Nightmares such as these have been connected (usually erroneously) to all sorts of things in the waking hours, from the Salem witch trials to UFOs and alien abductions! It all depends upon which dream interpretation (or doctor!) you choose! But, if you see in your life the expected result after such an encounter in your waking dreams, would it be a case of causation or correlation?   When people from all parts of the world from all across time have similar experiences but see or interpret it differently depending upon their cultural background and time in history, could it be that it’s all the same thing? If you’re religious you’re likely to experience demons or possession. If you like horror movies, sci-fi or conspiracy theories it might be aliens or monsters. And, those with exposure to fantasy or fairy folklore may see goblins or similar fanciful creatures. Depending upon the dream, it wouldn’t be at all uncommon to even have an erotic angle (though we’re not sure if that is more or less traumatic if you’re dreaming of aliens, demons or monsters). Hopefully, you would take to it like Tina Belcher from Bob’s Burgers and her dreams of zombies.   Gastric distress, raccoon scrotums, and house spirits, this episode has it all! Whether you’re interested in things that go bump in the night or how cultural influences can impact your dreams, you’ll find it in this brand new Horrific History Podcast episode! And if this edition inspires a dream, we hope you’ll tell us about it!   So sit back and enjoy this episode through one of your favorite podcast services (iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn and more)!   If you’d like to hear the commercial-free version of this episode and receive other great perks, become a patron of our podcast on Patreon! Become a Patron!  

 Of Monsters & Men: Halloween Special | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 32:37

  What makes a man a man? Join all three of Horrific History’s co-hosts for this new special Halloween episode as we go back in history to look at one of the times scholars and religious leaders asked this very question! When unexpected visitors come knocking and ask for a fright, Curtis regales us with his cryptid and folklore knowledge with historical impact from the middle ages. A creature from legend, reported to fight knights, bears, wolves and dragons captured the imagination of scholars who asked themselves, “What does it mean to be human?” Going through the centuries, a recurring theme shows up in artwork and literature- even in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight! Emulating this creature caused disaster for French royalty and nobles at a very special masquerade, called the Ball of Savages, when their celebration went up in flames and at least one guest was barbequed. The woodwose stay safely confined to legend until the late 16th Century, when in 1547 a boy with congenital hypertrichosis is given as a gift for King Henry II’s coronation; his name was Petrus Gonsalvus.   From Europe to the Americas, how are the ideas of woodwoses and Sasquatch related, if at all? How do our myths and legends, or even our moral questions and quandaries, have to change and adapt once confronted with reality? What’s more scary, truth or fiction? So sit back and enjoy this episode through one of your favorite podcast services (iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn and more) while traveling to your next Halloween costume party; just remember, no squeam allowed. Join us again in two weeks when we release our next episode, trick or treat!   Some of our favorite resources: * Academia * The Portalist * NY Folklore Society * Barbara Tuchman; A Distant Mirror, 1978, Alfred A Knopf Ltd, p504   Slideshow Photo Credit: This file has been provided by the British Library from its digital collections. It is also made available on a British Library website. Catalogue entry: Harley 4380 This work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the

 Guns, Ghosts & Serial Killers: Live from Central City Comic Con | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:00:55

Have you ever wondered about the awful, bloody and sometimes downright scary history of a town you’re passing through? Take a trip with our co-hosts and join us for our first live interview recorded at Central City Comic Con in this Horrific History Podcast episode as we explore the macabre history of Ellensburg, Washington with a local expert, Museum Director Sadie Thayer of the Kittitas County Historical Museum!   Shootings, hangings and serial killers, this episode has a lot of local history along with some local lore or ghost stories which just don’t stand up to scrutiny. So sit back, relax and beware of strangers as you listen to this new episode through one of your favorite podcast services (iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn and more); just remember, no squeam allowed! Join us again in two weeks when we release our next episode!   If you’re passing through Ellensburg, Washington and would like to sign up for one of their walking tours, you can sign up here!   Slideshow Photo Credit: © Steven Pavlov / http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Senapa / CC BY-SA 3.0

 Squeam with us LIVE! | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2:38

Would you like to squeam live? Check out this special announcement about our first-ever live podcast recording with a special guest interview and find out how you can be there!   If you’d like to hear the commercial-free version of our episodes and receive other great perks, become a patron of our podcast on Patreon! Become a Patron!   Click here if you’d like a chance to win a FREE copy of Dead but Dreaming’s Mockingbird EP!     Commercial break music by Dead but Dreaming. Slideshow photo credit: Toolstotal Microphone – Credit to https://toolstotal.com/ via photopin (license) Blog photo credit: Skakerman Headset & mic via photopin (license)

 Birds, Bees and Bitter Apples: Ancient Birth Control | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:33:58

How have people through history thought of and approached reproduction and family planning? Would you trust their birth control methods or consider it another case of the fallacy of ancient wisdom? Join our co-hosts, Eric Slyter and Jordan Watney, as they explore the history of documented birth control methods in ancient Egypt and the evolution of reproductive theory from antiquity to modern history. How do the solutions they devised fit into the context of the culture and their understanding of how conception worked; were their ideas a result of causation or correlation? Why was crocodile dung so significant in ancient Egypt? What does modern science indicate about how effective their methods likely were?   Join us as we examine how people’s overall ideas on how reproduction worked changed as technology developed and in what ways that impacted cultural and social approaches to reproduction and birth control. Before the advent of modern understanding, how was contraception approached in ancient Egypt according to the Kahun medical papyrus and what role- if any- did the deity Seth play in their approach? How did they believe their vaginal suppositories and fumigation techniques worked? And, as technology became more sophisticated, in what way did that lead to the theory of preformationism? How did they mix up sperm and gonorrheal puss?   From a homunculus to the anti-masturbation craze, crocodile poo to bitter apples, this episode has a lot of early methods of birth control which may make you feel the “terror of the womb”. Before you get to the end of the episode, you might decide some of these methods involve too much of a good thing and you’re glad for more regulation. So sit down and watch out for wandering wombs while you listen to this new Horrific History Podcast episode through one of your favorite podcast services (iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn and more). Just remember, no squeam allowed! Join us again in two weeks when we’ll discuss religious relics!   If you’d like to hear the commercial-free version of this episode and receive other great perks, become a patron of our podcast on Patreon! Become a Patron!   Click here if you’d like a chance to win a FREE copy of Dead but Dreaming’s Mockingbird EP!   Some of our favorite resources from this week’s episode: * Wiley * Atlas Obscura

 Twelve Thousand Downloads (of Death): Special Episode | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 56:06

Horrific History Podcast has hit (and exceeded) a new milestone, so we’re bringing you a special episode with a guest host you’ll remember from Season 1: Curtis Bender! We hope you’ll enjoy this special recording for our 10,000-12,000 download milestones! So join us for this change of pace and hear about how the destruction of an old hospital gave Curtis rat problems, how the air quality is impacting him at work, and how all of that ties into this brand new special episode.   Listen now to learn how the 1952 Great London Smog fits the theme of our milestones and has ties that goes back seven centuries? What medieval regulations were enacted to try to tamp down on the choking miasma while bathhouses went down the drain? Discover what commercial industries, combined with a population boom, helped to exacerbate the problem. How did circumstances ultimately coalesce to create a public health disaster which would bring about change?   So sit down next to the fire with a nice cup of London Fog while you enjoy this special episode through one of your favorite podcast services (iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn and more). Come back again in two weeks to join us as we get back to our usual schedule and release our new episode on awful birth control in history.  Just remember, no squeam allowed.         If you’d like to hear the commercial-free version of this episode and receive other great perks, become a patron of our podcast on Patreon! Become a Patron!   Some of our favorite resources from this week’s episode: * Telegraph * University of California, Davis * Mainly Norfolk * Taylor and Francis * The Culture Trip     Commercial break music by Dead but Dreaming. Slideshow photo credit: Smog over London, as seen from Primrose Hill, 2011 | ©Luton Anderson/Flickr Blog post photo credit: The Great Smog of 1952 | ©N T Stobbs/Geograph.org  

 Forbidden Shmershmidden: Forbidden Places | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:59:05

Do you like to push boundaries? Would you go to, and stay in, an area which was legally designated as “off-limits”? If the location was reputed to be haunted, would that spook you out of staying the night? Our co-hosts, Eric Slyter and Jordan Watney, explore areas forbidden to the general public in this brand new Horrific History Podcast episode. What mysterious circumstances caused the destruction and abandonment of the Bhangarh Fort? What Italian island has been reputably haunted by its history with wars, plague and insane asylums? Are the existing rumors and stories about the locations fanciful superstition priming our perception, or is there something more to explain the reported phenomenon which make many visitors squeam?   Join us as we dig through the records of history, looking for celestial events and natural disasters for explanations for curses and ghost stories from an Indian city and fortification. Could natural events which brought famine & disease be conflated with supernatural influence? Will we have a bone to pick with legends about Poveglia Island when we try to verify accounts of cannibalism and torture, or can we verify their accuracy?   Holy men and evil wizards, wars and disease, mass graves and medical experiments… this episode has a lot of facts and legends to keep you entertained. So sit down in front of the campfire and make some s’mores while we tell you ghost stories and the real events which inspired them. Just remember, no squeam allowed! Join us again in two weeks when we’ll explore the horrible history of birth control.   (Jordan sincerely apologizes to all those she may have offended with her “total inability to ever, in a single instance, pronounce “Bhangarh” or any associated names/locations correctly” during this podcast recording. It seems all her diligent practice on proper pronunciation only cemented the incorrect habits!)   If you’d like to hear the commercial-free version of this episode and receive other great perks, become a patron of our podcast on Patreon! Become a Patron!   Click here if you’d like a chance to win a FREE copy of Dead but Dreaming’s Mockingbird EP!   Some of our favorite resources from this week’s episode: * Holidify * Trip Advisor * TopYaps *

 Harbingers of Doom: Episodes from the Crypt | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:48:47

While working on our upcoming new episode, Eric and Jordan discovered that there are three noteworthy celestial events coming up! Since they need a bit more time to finish the summer tour of one of our other programs which goes to libraries all across the Pacific Northwest for Summer Reading programs, we decided to raise another one of our Season 1 episodes (now with a new intro) from the Horrific History Podcast Crypt for your squeamish delight! Harbingers of Doom: Celestial Events and Superstitions   What kind of superstitions or myths do you think of when you look up at the stars? Every culture has them; there have been stories developed all over the world to explain star constellations or natural phenomena like solar and lunar eclipses, comets, meteors and more. When the sun provides warmth to help the crops grow and night skies are used to measure the passage of time, it’s not surprising that any unexpected or unusual phenomenon is assigned meaning when the science isn’t sophisticated enough to distinguish between causation and correlation. Horrific History co-hosts, Eric Slyter and Curtis Bender, explore beliefs related to celestial events from across the globe.  Hindu serpent demons, China’s dragons (or dogs) and modern conspiracy theorists watching for alien spaceships, we have a lot of “bad omens” for your enjoyment.   Lunacy and humours, werewolves and witches, this episode brings you from past paranormal superstition to modern “remote viewing” and “Flat Earth Theory” pseudoscience! From the “Tears of St. Lawrence” to angels being cast from heaven, we’ve also included many spiritual explanations for the natural workings of the heavens; we even have some signs from the aboriginal afterlife! Hear about doomsday cults, castrations, suicides and plagues all associated with cosmic events and the illusory correlations humans have assigned to them (sometimes, like with the Battle of Hastings, even after the event has long passed)! Of course, this episode wouldn’t be complete without the tale of the woman who survived being hit by a meteorite! Just remember, no squeam allowed.   So put on your eclipse glasses and pull out your Aztec sun stone to keep time as you listen to this Horrific History Podcast episode through one of your favorite podcast services (iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn and more); we’ll provide you with your own little collection of cosmic harbingers of doom to keep you entertained while you look out into space, the final squeam-teir. Come back again in two weeks to hear our Labor Day and horrible in history episode.   If you’d like to hear the commercial-free version of this episode and receive other great perks, become a patron of our podcast on Patreon! Become a Patron!

 For a Healthy Glow: Episodes from the Crypt | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:37:01

While working on our upcoming “Forbidden Places” episode, Eric and Jordan discovered that one of our intended subjects no longer qualifies as an area off-limits to the public! So, while they scour the planet for other inaccessible locations we thought we’d raise one of our Season 1 episodes (now with a new intro) from the Horrific History Podcast Crypt for your squeamish delight!   For a Healthy Glow: Radiation Poisoning (Episodes from the Crypt) A finger, hand, limb or life…. What would you give up for the advancement of science? Would you give up as much as the Radium Martyrs of All Nations? Horrific History Podcast’s co-hosts, Eric Slyter and Curtis Bender discuss radiation poisoning in history, beginning with late Renaissance alchemy research in 1603 and continuing on to address more modern history including the Manhattan Project, Kyshtym Disaster, Chernobyl, and touching on current-day Fukushima.   From capturing the “golden light of the sun” to “seeing one’s death” through x-ray experimentation, this episode discusses all the horrifying things that came with the development of radiation research including blindness, loss of appendages, and even slow painful demises! You’ll hear about radium condoms, miracle “cures” and other products like “liquid sunshine,” as well as the legal case of the “Radium Girls” who had been so exposed to radium over the course of their factory work that parts of them glowed (even as as their living bodies decomposed)! Cancer, amputations and assassinations, you’ll hear all the disgusting gory details, right down to the glowing snot! Just remember, no squeam allowed!   Join us as we delve into this Horrific History episode through one of your favorite podcast services (iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn and more), and come back again in two weeks to learn about various rites of passage!   Some of our favorite resources from this week’s episode: * Bologna stone * Chemistry World * Schweizerbart Science Publishers * MAX IV Laboratory * US National Library of Medicine: National Institutes of Health * Profile of Dr. Kells * University of Vermont Libraries: Dana Medical Library * Smithsonian Magazine * New Yorker * CNN  

 It’s a Trap…?: Booby-traps in History | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 2:04:46

Have you ever wondered about the use of booby-traps in history or the source of inspiration for common Hollywood tropes? Join Horrific History co-hosts, Eric Slyter and Jordan Watney, as they examine the historical evidence for the use of booby-traps in historical records from across the globe. What kind of danger was waiting for archeologists in the Valley of the Golden Mummies? Was the cinnabar in the Red Queen’s tomb really a trap left for whomever might disturb her sarcophagus? Is there a historical basis for the collapsing temples often found in adventure movies, and would the resulting danger be caused by an intentional trap or merely correlated with the building practices?   As we search through burial sites for signs of traps, we find too much of a good thing from ancient Egypt and questions about whether any ill effects from examining a site is caused by an intentional trap or merely correlated to ritual practices of the period. In the Mayan city of Palenque, we find a burial chamber with a royal sarcophagus and two other bodies. We find a collapsing temple filled with sand in Cambodia before discussing the use of booby-traps in guerrilla warfare tactics during the Vietnam War, and the difference between venom and poison. Finally, we’ll discuss a Chinese tomb believed to contain mercury lakes and crossbows traps to protect its contents from grave robbers before looking at the modern cases which may dissuade you from using homemade booby-traps for your own home defense.   Hematite and cinnabar powders; deadly snakes, toads, trees and poo-covered punji stakes, this episode has a lot of traps (or not) for speculation. Learn about what case can be made for booby-traps in history and why using them today might not be in anyone’s best interest. So sit down with a nice cinnabar cinnamon roll and iron supplement while you listen to this latest Horrific History episode through one of your favorite podcast services (iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn and more). Just remember, no squeam allowed! Join us again in two weeks when we’ll explore forbidden zones!   If you’d like to hear the commercial-free version of this episode and receive other great perks, become a patron of our podcast on Patreon! Become a Patron!   Click here if you’d like a chance to win a FREE copy of Dead but Dreaming’s Mockingbird EP!   Some of our favorite resources from this week’s episode: * Mexico News Network * Ancient Origins,

 H2-OhNo! Part 2: Raw Water | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:51:07

For what purpose would you willingly use raw water? Drinking? Cooking? Bathing? Join Horrific History co-hosts, Eric Slyter and Jordan Watney, as they look at more instances of raw water usage, both in the past and modern history (including some history humanity is making right now). Learn how John Snow, one of the founders in the field of epidemiology during a period when Miasma theory was prevalent, found Patient Zero in 1854 after cesspools contaminated raw water supplies with cholera. How did raw water help bring an industry to the point of economic collapse around 1925? In what ways have history and modern natural disasters impacted the current safety of raw water in Puerto Rico?   As this journey through the history of raw water comes to the present, and with a better understanding of the progression of water safety, a brief examination is made of some current events relate to raw water contamination. Discover how wells dug by the United Nations to prevent exposure to surface water bacteria created debilitating new problems for residents when they consumed too much of a good thing which was naturally occurring in their drinking water, and what treatments are in development for those issues. Learn how the lack of access to safe and fresh water has made many experts declare Gaza Strip to be uninhabitable and a ticking time bomb for the region.     Cholera and typhoid, cesspools and oysters, this episode has lots of raw information for you! Learn about the ways the search for clean water continues to play into modern stories of humanity (history in the making), and how our history informs what outcomes we can expect. So sit down with a glass of raw water and oysters on the half-shell while you listen to this latest Horrific History episode through one of your favorite podcast services (iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn and more). Just remember, no squeam allowed! Join us next time when we’ll examine booby traps in history!   If you’d like to hear the commercial-free version of this episode and receive other great perks, become a patron of our podcast on Patreon! Become a Patron!   Click here if you’d like a chance to win a FREE copy of Dead but Dreaming’s Mockingbird EP!   Some of our favorite resources from this week’s episode: * UCLA Dept. of Epidemiology, 2 * Atlas Obscura, 2 * The Guardian, 2 *

 H2-OhWait… | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 5:41

What happened? This isn’t the regularly scheduled Horrific History Podcast episode! Both your co-hosts are currently dedicating their energy to recovering from a seasonal bug that took over our offices and are getting ready for public outreach this weekend. Find out where can you go, this Saturday or Sunday, to meet all three of Horrific History’s co-hosts (Eric, Curtis & Jordan) as they offer Knights of Veritas programming at an event in Washington state! Hear about all the fun activities and services they’ll be offering throughout the weekend.   Next week, assuming Eric and Jordan have recovered, we’ll release Part 2 of H2-OhNo! Until then, no squeam allowed.   Slideshow photo credit: wuestenigel Cold Medecine on a White Background via photopin (license) Blog post photo credit: marcoverch Elektronisches Thermometer via photopin (license)

 H2-OhNo! Part 1: Raw Water | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:43:11

Just how pure is your raw water source? Do you trust it? Would you drink it? Join your Horrific History co-hosts, Eric Slyter and Jordan Watney, as they take several trips in the Horrific History time and space machine to look at cases in history when trusted water supplies turned deadly and how some earlier societies handled water quality concerns. Learn how waterborne diseases can help determine the outcome of a war, encourage societies to develop regulations on industry and even kill already starving settlers in a new (to them) land. We’ll also take a brief look at how people have viewed and measured water quality through history (hint: up until recent history water quality was assessed only by human senses), and natural contaminants which can be harmful (or deadly) when you’re drinking water to achieve that healthy glow.   How did scientists prove that typhoid helped determine the outcome of the Peloponnesian War between the Spartans and the Athenians around 430 BCE, and what conditions allowed it to help wipe out an estimated 1/3 of the population in Athens? Is it true that people in the middle ages only drank beer instead of water because the quality was so bad? What made the water so toxic to the salt of the earth colonists of Jamestown and what did they have in common with the city of Athens?   Cities under siege, medieval public works and salty sewer water, this episode has lots of raw water for you (and some myth busting)! Learn about the ways humanity’s history is tied to the search for clean water, and many of the painful lessons we had to learn along the way. So sit down with a glass of nice clear water as you listen to this latest Horrific History episode through one of your favorite podcast services (iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn and more). Just remember, no squeam allowed! Join us again in two weeks for Part 2 when we’ll explore some more of the events (with natural causes) from more modern history which led humans to develop ways of processing and filtering drinking water and ways in which we are still failing as a species!   If you’d like to hear the commercial-free version of this episode and receive other great perks, become a patron of our podcast on Patreon! Become a Patron!   Some of our favorite resources from this week’s episode: * Science or Not * Logically Fallacious * The Logic of Science * Indian Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences * Intellectual Takeout *

 Time to Float | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 10:14

Would you drink raw water? Listen to your co-hosts, Eric Slyter and Jordan Watney, give you a special preview of our upcoming raw water episode. While our nonprofit had to briefly pull our volunteers from the podcast to do a week of programming for Knights of Veritas and this delayed our scheduled release, we’re on-track to release our new episode next week. Hear some things you can look forward to learning more about in the new episode, what ate up their time and how you have an opportunity to be included in an upcoming episode! Come back next week for raw water but in the meantime, you can listen to Eric Slyter do his Pennywise the Dancing Clown impersonation… just remember, no squeam allowed!   If you want to prepare yourself for our raw water episode, we recommend listening to our Season 1 episodes: For a Healthy Glow & Too Much of a Good Thing. Don’t get caught floating in the sewers while you wait, and we’ll catch you next week!   If you’d like to hear more behind-the-scenes audio content, Patreon-exclusive episodes and receive other great perks, become a patron of our podcast on Patreon! Become a Patron!   Blog post photo credit: pavlinajane Winter puddle via photopin (license) Slideshow photo credit: Curtis Gregory Perry Puddles via photopin (license)

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