I'm assuming that was just a bit of fecal humor.now we know where the expression "shitting bricks" came from
I have a nephew who developed an "allergic reaction" to water about 2 years ago. He's almost 18 now so IDK how it happened, but pretty similar to this, but not temp related. He would break out in hives and get itchy after showers and wouldn't go swimming for awhile. I think he takes a pill now because he's been in our pool a few times this summer already (and doesn't stink so presumably continues to shower!)It is possible to be "allergic" to cold water. My wife works at a summer camp for kids. The story she told me, as was told to her yesterday: her camp recently had a kid who admittedly told everyone she was allergic to cold water... but when all the other kids went swimming, she wanted to swim anyway... so she did. When she got out of the water, she was covered up in hives.
My first reaction was that this story couldn't possibly be true. My reasoning: allergic reactions are usually the onset of inflammation due to some external stimulus, and exposure to cold is an effective strategy to control inflammation. So I threw the BS challenge flag.
Turns out cold water "allergies" is a real thing - although technically it isn't a true allergy. Who knew?
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Cold Urticaria: What It Is, Symptoms, Causes & Treatment
Cold urticaria causes an allergic reaction to cold temperatures. Exposure to cold air, water, food or drink may trigger a rash or more serious symptoms.my.clevelandclinic.org
In a breakthrough for antimatter research, the BASE collaboration at CERN has kept an antiproton—the antimatter counterpart of a proton—oscillating smoothly between two different quantum states for almost a minute while trapped. The achievement, reported in a paper published today in the journal Nature, marks the first demonstration of an antimatter quantum bit, or qubit, and paves the way for substantially improved comparisons between the behavior of matter and antimatter.