Dunno when my fascination with chicken started.
I reckon but not confirmed it started after I got out of the hospital, dec of 2007, for 3 days I was deprived of food, I don't know why, and my first ever meal was chicken tinola from the hospital. I thought it was the most sumptious meal I ever had in my life, back then LOL
Right now it is my favorite food of all time, I buy chicken drumsticks, chicken hotdog, chicken ham, chicken adobo, chicken all the way.
Bless them, the most popular bird in the world...
I just remembered back in college, it was a question or was it in Celdran's battle of the Brains - the most popular bird in the world. And then I though of parrots because who can't think of a a parrot or love birds or hmmm maya LOL. and it was chicken all along.
And the tallest grass, LOL, cogon and it was bamboo.
Wait: from Wikipedia
A chicken can be hypnotized, or put into a trance, by holding its head down against the ground, and continuously drawing a line along the ground with a stick or a finger, starting at its beak and extending straight outward in front of the chicken. If the chicken is hypnotized in this manner, it will remain immobile for somewhere between 15 seconds and 30 minutes, continuing to stare at the line.
This may not be clinical hypnosis, but instead a case of tonic immobility. Instead of a hypnotic state, the chicken's reactions are more akin to a turtle moving into its shell, or a deer freezing from a spotlight--a defensive mechanism intended to feign death, albeit poorly.
Interesting...
But which comes first chicken or egg?
Another one from Wikipedia
Syntax
In a manner of avoiding the question or joking, it can be said that "the chicken" came first—in the structure of the question, simply because the words "the chicken" are said before the words "the egg" when the question is asked. In a question that is phrased differently, the answer would be different. Similarly, Randy Garner jokingly refers to an encyclopedic solution:[10]
“ These supporters call attention to the Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary (2001). Upon careful examination of the entries and accompanying definitions, one can accurately assert that “chicken” is found on page 232, while “egg” is not found until page 398. Therefore, according to this argument, chicken clearly comes before egg. ”