The image posted looks sorta similar, but is not a white button mushroom.
This mushroom is almost certainly the reason why it’s drilled in so hard that you shouldn’t eat random mushrooms in the woods unless you are absolutely sure it’s safe.
Destroying Angel mushrooms look like puffball mushrooms when they’re initially fruiting, and then grow to look like button mushrooms before they reach full maturity. If you eat one of these you’ll get severe abdominal pain and vomit for around 24 hours and then show signs of recovery. However, by that point it’s almost certainly too late, and organ failure and death is soon to follow
No. They did less damage to themselves, but they were eating something that they knew was very obviously not food for a social media “challenge”. Trusting the wrong source and attempting to eat food is very slightly smarter.
They mostly weren’t eating them, just making staged videos of themselves doing something dumb the way teenagers have ever since they got access to cameras. The problem is that biting into one and spitting it out again can be enough to kill you as laundry detergent can corrode your tongue and throat in seconds and it’s very easy to inhale liquid throat. The media reported it as teens eating tide pods, which made staging fake eating tide pod videos using a real tide pod as a prop seem like a fun idea for even more teenagers. If the media had been a little more responsible, then they could have got the message across that something more dangerous than it seemed was dangerous instead of telling people something obviously dangerous that hadn’t happened was dangerous.
I appreciate the context, but I just want to point out that you’re blaming “the media” for people putting laundry detergent in their mouth. I did dumb teenage things, yet even I feel qualified to say how knowingly stupid that is, especially for the payoff of… online validation?
The average person can be surprisingly dumb. The average teenager can be ludicrously much dumber. Dumb teenagers can be even dumber still. If the warning on the packet says do not eat but not do not put in mouth and warnings on packets generally tell you not to do things everyone knows would be dangerous, it doesn’t take much dumbness to come to the conclusion that it’s fine as long as you don’t swallow any.
They can save people if caught in time. First things first, eat charcoal, crush and mix with water and drink. Not briquettes either actual charcoal it soaks up toxins and you excrete them instead of absorbing.
But the hospitals have liver protective substances, including milk thistle root extract they give.
This mushroom is almost certainly the reason why it’s drilled in so hard that you shouldn’t eat random mushrooms in the woods unless you are absolutely sure it’s safe.
Destroying Angel mushrooms look like puffball mushrooms when they’re initially fruiting, and then grow to look like button mushrooms before they reach full maturity. If you eat one of these you’ll get severe abdominal pain and vomit for around 24 hours and then show signs of recovery. However, by that point it’s almost certainly too late, and organ failure and death is soon to follow
So in a fucked up way, those TikTok kids swallowing Tide pods a few years ago are smarter than Gemini recommending “yummy button mushrooms”?
No. They did less damage to themselves, but they were eating something that they knew was very obviously not food for a social media “challenge”. Trusting the wrong source and attempting to eat food is very slightly smarter.
They mostly weren’t eating them, just making staged videos of themselves doing something dumb the way teenagers have ever since they got access to cameras. The problem is that biting into one and spitting it out again can be enough to kill you as laundry detergent can corrode your tongue and throat in seconds and it’s very easy to inhale liquid throat. The media reported it as teens eating tide pods, which made staging fake eating tide pod videos using a real tide pod as a prop seem like a fun idea for even more teenagers. If the media had been a little more responsible, then they could have got the message across that something more dangerous than it seemed was dangerous instead of telling people something obviously dangerous that hadn’t happened was dangerous.
I appreciate the context, but I just want to point out that you’re blaming “the media” for people putting laundry detergent in their mouth. I did dumb teenage things, yet even I feel qualified to say how knowingly stupid that is, especially for the payoff of… online validation?
The average person can be surprisingly dumb. The average teenager can be ludicrously much dumber. Dumb teenagers can be even dumber still. If the warning on the packet says do not eat but not do not put in mouth and warnings on packets generally tell you not to do things everyone knows would be dangerous, it doesn’t take much dumbness to come to the conclusion that it’s fine as long as you don’t swallow any.
Damn that’s a badass name tho… 🤘💀🤘
They are in the anamita genus, most of them are toxic
They can save people if caught in time. First things first, eat charcoal, crush and mix with water and drink. Not briquettes either actual charcoal it soaks up toxins and you excrete them instead of absorbing.
But the hospitals have liver protective substances, including milk thistle root extract they give.