@@gari727 He was throwing innocent shade, it’s okay if it went over your head. Scaring people isn’t shady, but people with certain medical conditions shouldn’t be jump scared and I doubt Ellen ever looks into that before scaring people.
I have a heart condition, anxiety and a neurological disorder. Every once in a while some man will think it’s funny to come up behind me and scare me while I’m working. I don’t think they’ll ever do that to anyone ever again afterwards.
I don't scare easily at all, but I do have a healthy startle reflex, and my response to being startled is to violently shove my forearm at the thing that startled me. Years of training aggressive and unpredictable dogs does weird things to your brain.
@@jade1922 Yes and no. Schutzhund dogs are trained to go for the forearm, unless otherwise instructed (such as an armed hand or a leg). For untrained and dangerous dogs, they often go for your face/throat/upper torso if they're being aggressive (not reactive), so it's convenient to feed them your forearm to protect your vitals. With terrier breeds, they'll usually hang on and not readjust their grip, giving you a chance to get control of the situation.
I like James and twin sister loves him. I say that to say, I didn't like this. I don't like when someone says, I don't like a thing and a person continues to do the thing the person doesn't like. Yes, he tried to scare her. The little glances over her shoulder was enough to do it. It doesn't have to be over the top. Just causing her to look over shoulder and raising her anxiety was enough.
Where I live now was an accident. I mistook it for an actual senior high rise. Not knowing it was Hollywood NE. Glad you all kept your streams of money flowing.