Five very lucky people that death couldn't take away.
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1. People who have survived seven train derailments and plane crashes
Frankie Selleck, the Croatian music teacher, is a combination of bad luck and bad luck. He has been derailed by a train, crashed by a plane, and crashed into three burning cars and two buses. But in the end he managed to survive. What's more, after the seven accidents, Frankie began to get lucky. He bought his first lottery ticket and immediately won a million dollars. But he decided to give the money to his family and friends. Because for him, his health and his wife are all that makes him happy. But, I have to say, this is his seventh wife.
2. People who survived two nuclear explosions
It is well known that during World War II, the U. S. military dropped two deadly atomic bombs on Japan. But surprisingly, a Japanese man named Yamaguchi survived both explosions on the ground. In fact, on August 6,1945, he was on a business trip to Hiroshima, where he was struck by a nuclear explosion, and from a distance of three kilometers he saw a huge flash of light. He suffered blast and severe burns, a ruptured eardrum and temporary blindness.
After receiving treatment, he returned to Nagasaki, where he had no idea the United States had dropped a second atomic bomb. Although hundreds of thousands of people died in the blasts, neither of the explosions caused him to die. He was the only one who survived two nuclear explosions. Although he did suffer from radiation-related illnesses later in life, he lived to the age of 93.
3. The man who survived the hippopotamus
Paul was a safari guide when he was 20 years old. In March 1996, he was a tour guide on the Zambezi River in Zimbabwe. But the biggest disaster of his life happened on that day, when he was hit by a 4.5 metre long, by a hippopotamus about a metre and a half high. The hippo knocked one of his friends out of the canoe, but he was moving fast as he tried to save his friend. As he turned to seize his friend, all of a sudden he felt everything black, sticky, and sticky, with a foul smell. The area above his waist is said to be in the hippo's mouth, and he wiggles his body until the animal opens its mouth enough for him to escape. After several entanglements, the hippopotamus later devoured Paul from his legs. The hippopotamus finally let him go after Paul hit him with his hand and grabbed his teeth. Paul went through eight hours of surgery at the hospital. Doctors estimated he had 40 stab wounds, and he eventually lost an arm of his own.
4. People who survive being swept away by a tornado
Suter, a 19 year old college student from the United States, visited his grandmother on vacation in March 2006 and lived in a trailer. Unexpectedly, however, a tornado broke out here, with a speed of about 240 kilometers per hour, sending him and his trailer into the air, possibly as high as 40 meters. The thin air made it impossible for him to breathe and eventually pass out. When he woke up, he was 400 meters away on the lawn. And not only did he survive, he suffered only minor cuts and bruises.
5. Scientists who survive being shot in the head by charged particles
The Russian scientist Anatoli Bugorski accidentally hit a charged particle on his head while he was checking for equipment failure at the Large Hadron Collider, but the safety mechanism began to fail and he suffered a head injury, but in the end he survived. He claimed that the flash he saw in that moment was brighter than a thousand suns, but he felt no pain. Over the next few days, however, his face swelled almost beyond recognition. The beam had burned through his face, exposing him to enough radiation to kill him, but he survived, and he even completed his doctorate.




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