Messy Minded Podcast

Spilling the Beans on Idioms

41 min · 21. maj 2026
episode Spilling the Beans on Idioms cover

Beskrivelse

Why do we say someone “barked up the wrong tree”? What does “beyond the pale” actually mean? Why were medieval people throwing armored gloves at each other? And why does the English language sound like it was assembled during a fever dream involving geese, shellfish, buckets, bullets, and bacon? In this episode of Messy Minded, Jess dives into the strange, funny, surprisingly dark origins of common English idioms — from battlefield surgery and public punishments to Shakespeare, medieval marketplaces, and chaotic goose behavior. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

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Alle episoder

35 episoder

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Year One Recap

One year ago, Messy Minded began with a simple question: "How do podcasts go from a microphone to a stranger's ear?" That question led to Vikings, scammers, bog bodies, Olympians, secret societies, cursed objects, talking plants, questionable medical devices, alien discussions, and more side quests than any reasonable person should have followed. In this special one-year anniversary episode, Jess looks back at the first 32 episodes of Messy Minded, sharing favorite moments, memorable stories, and a few reminders of just how much both the podcast and its host have changed along the way. Whether you've been here since Episode One or you're discovering the show for the first time, this episode is a time capsule of curiosity, chaos, and questionable life choices. Thank you for listening, sharing, reviewing, commenting, and encouraging this little podcast over the past year. Thank you to our guests: Sam, Scott, Kate, Steph, Lolo, Will, Jenn, Rita, Ela Darling, Curtis Jenkins, and Professor Chris Impey. Here's to the first year of Messy Minded. Topics featured include: • Iceland and Viking exploration • Internet scams and deception • American secession movements • Secret societies • Olympic history and scandals • Bog bodies • Questionable medicine • Plant communication • Witness protection • Curses and folklore • Superstitions • The limbic system • ADHD • Digital afterlife and griefbots • Aliens and UAP discussions • Language, idioms, and much more Welcome to Messy Minded—a podcast for curious weirdos. Music credits: SoundPlusUS Label and Mr. Lex Oleksii Bezalov for "Spark Groove", “Quirky Sneaky Comedy” Music by Dmitrii Kolesnikov , catch 22music for "Yeah Baby Yeah", The Mountain for "Quirky Sneaky", Alex Grohl for "Tension", Comedy, Quirky, Sneaky music by Starostin, Nikita Kondrashev for "Cosy, Quirky, Comedy", and “Celtic Handmaiden” by Geoff Harvey. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

I går1 h 36 min
episode The Invisible Rules of Talking cover

The Invisible Rules of Talking

Why does kindness sound rude, politeness sounds fake, and nobody agrees on what “normal conversation” is? In this episode of Messy Minded, Jess dives into the strange hidden architecture of human conversation — the invisible rules we absorb from our families, cultures, regions, and relationships without ever realizing it. Why does one person hear care while another hears criticism? Why do some people think interruptions mean enthusiasm while others hear disrespect? Why do Midwesterners say “we should get dinner sometime” without actually meaning… dinner sometime? Drawing from the work of linguist Deborah Tannen, anthropology, childhood socialization research, and a few conversational disasters of her own, Jess explores Greek leftovers, emotional support potholes, accidental interrogations, and relationship misunderstandings. Because most arguments aren’t really about the words being said. They’re about the invisible meanings underneath them. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

7. maj 202640 min
episode Gaslit by Your Brain cover

Gaslit by Your Brain

Cronin et al. (2014) – Visual ecology (UV vision in animals)What if you can’t fully trust your own brain? In this episode of Messy Minded, we explore how the brain builds reality through perception, memory, and emotion—and how that process can sometimes go wrong. From sensory perception and optical illusions to false memories, cognitive bias, and the neuroscience behind how we interpret the world, your mind is constantly filling in gaps with its best guess. We’ll look at how memory reconsolidation can change your past, why eyewitness testimony isn’t always reliable, and how psychological phenomena like the McGurk effect and Pareidolia reveal the limits of human perception. We’ll also dive into sensory deprivation, hallucinations, and moral psychology—exploring how even your emotions and sense of right and wrong can be influenced by physical sensations like disgust. Your brain is an incredible prediction machine… but it doesn’t show you reality—it constructs it. And sometimes? It gets it wrong. @MessyMindedPod Sources: Anil Seth – Being You: A New Science of Consciousness Cronin et al. (2014) – Visual ecology (UV vision in animals) Orfield Laboratories (Minneapolis) – Anechoic chamber research & demonstrations Eskine et al. (2013) – Ginger reducing disgust → more lenient judgments Many thanks for music by: SoundPlusUS Label and Mr. Lex Oleksii Bezalov for "Spark Groove", Nikita Kondrashev for "Cosy, Quirky, Comedy", “Quirky Sneaky”, “Quirky Sneaky Mystery”, “Quirky Sneaky Comedy” Music by Dmitrii Kolesnikov, "spellcraft" by Geoff Harvey. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

23. apr. 202635 min
episode Operation Paul Bunyan cover

Operation Paul Bunyan

Jess takes us back to 1976, when a routine maintenance job inside the Korean Demilitarized Zone spiraled into one of the most bizarre and dangerous standoffs of the Cold War. What started with a tree blocking a line of sight quickly escalated into violence, a tense military confrontation, and one of the most heavily armed “landscaping” operations in history. In this Messy Morsel, we head into the Joint Security Area of the DMZ—where North and South Korean forces stood face-to-face, tensions ran high, and even the smallest actions could carry enormous consequences. Because in a place like that… nothing is ever just about a tree. @MessyMinded If you want to ready more on the topics - check these out: * United Nations Command historical summaries on the Korean DMZ incident * U.S. Army Center of Military History – Operation Paul Bunyan overview * News World Encyclopedia – Korean DMZ & Joint Security Area history * Blaxland, John. The Joint Security Area at Panmunjom (Australian National University) * Oberdorfer, Don. The Two Koreas: A Contemporary History * Various historical accounts and declassified Cold War materials on the 1976 Korean Axe Murder Incident  Music by: SoundPlusUS Label and Mr. Lex Oleksii Bezalov for "Spark Groove", Nikita Kondrashev for "Cosy, Quirky, Comedy", "funny Comedy Kids", and The Mountain for "Quirky Sneaky Mystery", “Lucky go Lightly Quirky” by Geoff Harvey, and "Tension" by Alex Grohl ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

9. apr. 202618 min