Assalamualaikum dan salam sejahtera...
Tonight, I want to share about our human being!!! 10 weird things human do every day and why?
Source: 
Life's Little Mysteris
Ever noticed that when you stare at your fingers for long enough they  start transforming into alien appendages before your very eyes? You see  the mundane for what it really is: freaky-looking. 
The same goes for the rest of our traits. We take for granted that  funny things make us yell out spastically — also known as laughing — and  that we spend one-third of every day in a deathlike state of suspended  animation known as sleep. But with a little contemplation, these  behaviors seem truly bizarre.
Here are 10 mundane yet weird things we do all the time, and why we do them.
1. Cry
How odd that sadness causes water to spill from our eyes! Among all animals, we alone cry tears of emotion.
Not only do they serve the purpose of communicating feelings of   distress, scientists believe tears also carry certain undesirable   hormones and other proteins that are produced during periods of stress   out of the body, which may explain the cathartic effect of "a good cry."
2. Hiccup
Hiccups are involuntary spasms of the diaphragm — the muscular  membrane in your chest that figures importantly in breathing. A spell of  them ensues when that muscle gets irritated, often by the presence of  too much food in the stomach, or too little.
Weirdly, though, hiccups are as useless as they are annoying; they  serve no apparent purpose. One hypothesis suggests they may be a remnant  of a primitive sucking reflex. Whatever the ancient function, they are  little more than a nuisance now — something to be gotten rid of via 
a variety of creative folk remedies.
3. Sleep
We spend roughly one-third of our lives asleep. No human can go  without it for more than a handful of days, and yet sleep may be the  least understood of all our activities.
It certainly allows for a lot of body "maintenance work," from  production of chemicals that get used during waking hours to the  self-organization of neurons in the developing brain. REM sleep, with  its high neuronal activity, occurs for longer each night during periods  of brain growth.
Several theories point to sleep as a state vital to memory and learning. It may help 
ingrain episodic memories into long-term storage, and it also may simply give our mental waking activities a much-needed break.
4. 
Die
Okay, technically speaking, dying isn't an everyday activity. It is, however, done by a whole bunch of people every day. Why?
We die because our cells die. Though they replace themselves over and  over again for 70-odd years, they can't do so forever. Inside each  cell, telomeres at the end of our chromosomes contain genetic  information that gets clipped away with each cell division. Telomeres  start out long enough to handle a great many scissor snips. But  eventually, they run out of length, the information they held is lost  and the cells can't divide anymore.
Luckily, scientists are working on how to extend the lives of human beings, and think they could someday 
double the average lifespan.
5. Blush
Turns out, the cheek-reddening reaction is a universal human response  to social attention. Everyone does it — some more than others. Common  blushing triggers include meeting someone important, receiving a  compliment and experiencing a strong emotion in a social situation.
Blush biology  works like this: Veins in the face dilate, causing more blood to flow  into your cheeks and producing a rosy complexion. However, scientists  are stumped as to why all that happens, or what function it serves.
6. Kiss
It's weird, when you think about it, that swapping spit seems romantic. Turns out it's a biological instinct.
Kissing allows people to use smell and taste to assess each other as  potential mates. People's breath and saliva carry chemical signals as to  whether they are healthy or sick, and in the case of females, whether  they're ovulating — all important messages for potential partners in  reproduction.
Furthermore, the skin around peoples' noses and mouths is coated with oils that contain 
pheromones,  chemicals that broadcast information about a person's biological  makeup. When people pick up each other's pheromones during a sloppy  kiss, they'll subconsciously become either more or less sexually  attracted to each other depending on what they detect.
Alongside the chemosensory cues exchanged during kisses, psychologists also believe the actual physical 
act of kissing helps couples bond. This theory is supported by the fact that 
oxytocin — a hormone that increases most peoples' feelings of sociality, love and trust — floods brains when mouths kiss.
7. Fart
The answer may stink, but everything we eat or drink gives us gas. In  fact, it's normal to fart up to half a gallon (1.9 liters), or about 15  to 20 toots worth of gas each day.
Particularly fragrant flatulence, however, comes from colonies of  bacteria shacked up inside our lower intestinal tract. In the process of  converting our meals into useful nutrients, these food-munching  microbes produce a smelly by-product of hydrogen sulfide gas—the same  stench that emanates from rotten eggs.
Just like the rest of us, the bacteria like munching on sugary foods  best. The types of sugar naturally present in milk, fruit — and, of  course, beans — produce 
the most farts.
8. Laugh
The punchline of a joke hits you, and with it comes a funny feeling: You're suddenly overcome by
 the urge to   yell out spastically, over and over. Laughing is weird. Why do we do it?
Psychologists think this behavioral response serves as a signal to others by 
spreading positive emotions,  decreasing stress and contributing to group cohesion. For those same  reasons, chimps and orangutans smile and laugh during social play too.
In fact, many hypothesize that laughing evolved from panting. When  our prehuman ancestors wrestled playfully with each other, they got all  panty… and that eventually turned into getting laughy.
9. Blink
It's not that strange that we blink: The tenth-of-a-second-long  activity clears away dust particles and spreads lubricating fluids  across the eyeball. What is strange, though, is that we fail to notice  the world plunging into darkness every two to 10 seconds!
Scientists have found that the human brain has a talent for 
ignoring the momentary blackout.  The very act of blinking suppresses activity in several areas of the  brain responsible for detecting environmental changes, so that you  experience the world around you as continuous.
10. See in 3-D
Hey, wait a second… how do two eyes produce 3-D vision?
It's actually a trick of the mind (or three tricks, to be exact).  First, our brains utilize "binocular disparity" — the slight difference  between the images seen by our left and right eyes. Our brains use the  two skewed versions of a scene to reconstruct its depth.
For a close-up object, the brain registers the "convergence" of our  eyes, or the angle they swing through to focus on the object, to decide  how far away it is.
When glancing at things on the go, we subconsciously gauge distance  by registering "parallax." That's the difference in speed at which  closer and farther objects seem to move as you pass them.
 
Source: 
Life's Little Mysteries
Pakcik Saya! Terjah!!!
!! Wassalam ^^ 
Tabung kewangan sambung belajar Asasi di Universiti Malaya. ^^