This kills the person.
I think taking the heart out is the part that kills them, unless perhaps you reverse origami it while it’s still attached
It always looks so sad…
nooo do not skissor teh crub
This heart could be easily entangled. So I don’t understand this thread’s OP nor this Meme.
And I am too afraid to ask.
I don’t think most people see heart as something you can uncurl.
As for the crab it’s a meme older than some users here
Caaaaaaaaaaaaaarrrrrllll!!
In case anyone is like me and only knows this from years ago, the creator filmcow is still around and has been making tons of great content all these years (check out vulo lives). I think he’s even crowdfunding a new ending to the llamas with hats series at the moment which I’m pretty psyched for.
What kind of person? Lizard man with a 2-chambered heart?
Dude your mom with a two chambered heart
Your Mom knows how to tell a joke.
What would this shit look like if it was still pumping…
C’mon Cronenberg, get on it!
Moooooom, NCD is leaking again!
Thought it was going to turn into Saddam there for a second.
Missed opportunity
That’s step f.
Now you’ve called it
Maybe it’s a part of Saddam? Heart, foreskin, who knows.
It has
Why does it look like a foreskin?
The foreskin is the heart of the penis
Unless you’re very talented, that somebody else’s cock stuck up your back
It’s dicks all the way down
Who knew the heart is a penis? Blessed be
🎵 Last Christmas, I gave her my heart 🎵
Cause it is a tube. All Floppy Tubus do.
What happened to your foreskin?
Callback to our primordial tube-hearted fish origin
Make sure to unfold and wring out your heart after each breakup, to keep the creases from setting in too much.
Author of this resarch: my ex girlfriend
Naaaaah let’s not
Origami origami ᵒʳⁱᵍᵃᵐⁱ
I wonder if a heart could still beat/function when it’s unrolled in this way 🤔
No. It needs to squeeze against itself to move blood to and from chambers.
Could it not just sorta flex the tube? Like couldn’t one part of the tube pull on or press off of the next?
As someone who flexes the tube very often, I would guess that the heart would start pumping unwanted fluids
No. This diagram doesn’t show how they got the heart to unravel like that. There’s a layer or wrapping around the heart and internal connective tissues that holds the heart in its traditional state. I’d imagine if the got the muscles of a unrolled heart to contract it would just fold or bind at points. But definitely wouldn’t pump anything.
I was wondering something similar. Maybe this is an innovative approach to heart surgery.
Yes, in the way that Mengele was innovative in the medical field.
… I see I’m not the only person with intrusive thoughts.
It depends on how fresh
the killit is.
That’s not the shape of my heart 🎶
Thanks, I hate it
Look up embryological development of the heart to see why
That’s even better. Two blood vessels that fuse and twist.
Why did they name the left and right atrium backwards? That seems unnecessarily confusing.
It’s only backwards because you’re looking at it from the outside from the front. When it’s in you, the left is on your left.
I just realized I’m stupid, thank you
welcome to the club bro
A true inflection point no doubt
I just learned about this last night. Are we a hive mind?
deleted by creator
For a total eclipse of the heart you would need a moon shaped like a big hambone.
Interesting, but this isn’t an entire heart, is it? Only half? Or isn’t a human heart? Human hearts have separate left and right pairs of chambers which pump oxygenated and de-oxygenated blood separately. Or am I mistaken?
Isn’t that why there are 2 loops at the bottom? One for the left and one for the right?
Considering this picture of a whole heart you are probably correct
I just assumed that they dissected through the heart to unfold it. In humans the heart is ‘compact’ and there’s no real way to unfold it without cutting through cardiac muscle but, the heart embryologically develops from a tube that folds over itself so you can theoretically ‘unfold’ it.
There are two “halves” but they’re nowhere near symmetric. The two parts nested inside one another in (a) are the “halves”.