This ASMR Soap Curl Crunch Will Soothe Your Nerves
Your relationship with bar soap is probably a simple one: it sits in your shower and you use it to clean yourself. However, people have found another use for this basic household item and it's incredibly mesmerizing. It's a new trend known as "soap crunching," and it's pretty self explanatory: just take a bar of soap and crunch it up. There's something hypnotic about the way slivers of soap curl back or flake beneath your hands as the bar gets smaller and smaller and turns to pieces.
Most soap-crunching stories also have some version of ASMR in their name - a reference to the whispering genre of brain-tingling YouTube videos. Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response - known more commonly as <a href="https://rumble.com/v4inv5-asmr-videos-aka-sorens-creepy-fetish-cracked-responds.html" target="_blank">ASMR</a> - is a phenomenon growing in popularity that is almost too bizarre to believe. It is is a term used to describe a sensory experience characterized by a pleasant tingling sensation in the head and scalp, which can be triggered by sounds like whispering or brushing, and visual stimulus like painting or drawing.
It’s all about ambient sounds, and people claim it gives them “braingasms” and tingling sensations in their heads and necks. Clearly there is a growing community behind these soap-cutting videos, judging from the thousands of views on these videos. It's tough to say whether this is just a passing trend or something it will go on attracting thousands of people like it does now.
Turn the volume up for this super satisfying ASMR sound soap curls being crunched and enjoy! Check out some more of these lulling, <a href="https://rumble.com/v4fysp-oddly-satisfying-asmr-soap-carving.html">soap-cutting videos</a>, feel the calm wash over you, and decide for yourself.
807
views
Who Knew That Shaving Chalk Could Be So Oddly Satisfying
This clip will delight your earbuds as a slab of chalk is shaved. So cool!
Let’s face it, who would have thought to use a potato peeler to peel a sidewalk chalk? Sure, we peel potatoes with it and carrots and zucchini and cucumbers, but never in our existence have we thought to shred a think chalk to powder. Then again, we had no idea how satisfying it would be.
Just the sound of it makes us feel happy and calm. Watching the gypsum fall of in slices that look solid, but are actually fine powder that still likes to cling to itself is mesmerizing to watch. And she shreds it, turning it over bit by bit, until she is left with but a pencil’s worth of chalk.
It is a huge and constantly growing trend. There is more interest in it that for “candy” or “chocolate”. <a href="https://rumble.com/v31pox-intense-asmr-hypnosis-for-sleep-and-anxiety-visual-and-binaural-dreams-virt.html?mref=6zof&mrefc=30" target="_blank">Autonomous sensory meridian response</a> is a term used for an experience characterized by a static-like or <a href="https://rumble.com/v4k9y9-parrot-experiences-asmr-tingles-during-massage.html?mref=6zof&mrefc=29" target="_blank">tingling sensation</a> on the skin that typically begins on the scalp and moves down the back of the neck and upper spine. The term was coined some eight years ago and is also known as “brain massage”, if you believe it! It can be triggered by anything from crackling, to whispering, even accents.
Some people describe it as “the amazing chills you get when someone plays with your hair or traces your back with their fingertips.” We have to say we agree on this, as it is really lovely to have someone stroke your hair, while watching a piece of chalk getting shaved down to almost nothing.
3.14K
views