in comparison to the lady interpreter who is emphatically dutch german (Afrikaans ) accented , our Colonel is pure Hackney.
minor4th, the post has gone way back now, but where you said you thought an instinctive reaction is to hold protective hands over one's head...I agree.
But, I think that is only instinctive when expecting a general wound or blow, that a person can see coming. If one is already wounded, I think the natural inclination is to clutch or protect/double over that wound, wherever it is. I'm thinking of the photo of Lee Harvey Oswald being shot by Jack Ruby here, his hand automatically crossing to protect his body where the bullet hit, within milliseconds.
I'm doing a Roux. All I'm trying to say is that I find it strange that, having being hit in the hip, Reeva sinks to the floor and puts her hands to her head?? How did she realise so quickly she had been hit by a bullet, and that another one was coming - and coincidentally put her hands up to protect the very part of her body where the next bullet hit?
If somebody shot me in the toilet while I was going to pee, even with a bang it would take me seconds after collapsing to work out what might have happened. It's just not the sort of thing anyone expects....
minor4th, the post has gone way back now, but where you said you thought an instinctive reaction is to hold protective hands over one's head...I agree.
But, I think that is only instinctive when expecting a general wound or blow, that a person can see coming. If one is already wounded, I think the natural inclination is to clutch or protect/double over that wound, wherever it is. I'm thinking of the photo of Lee Harvey Oswald being shot by Jack Ruby here, his hand automatically crossing to protect his body where the bullet hit, within milliseconds.
I'm doing a Roux. All I'm trying to say is that I find it strange that, having being hit in the hip, Reeva sinks to the floor and puts her hands to her head?? How did she realise so quickly she had been hit by a bullet, and that another one was coming - and coincidentally put her hands up to protect the very part of her body where the next bullet hit?
If somebody shot me in the toilet while I was going to pee, even with a bang it would take me seconds after collapsing to work out what might have happened. It's just not the sort of thing anyone expects....
minor4th, the post has gone way back now, but where you said you thought an instinctive reaction is to hold protective hands over one's head...I agree.
But, I think that is only instinctive when expecting a general wound or blow, that a person can see coming. If one is already wounded, I think the natural inclination is to clutch or protect/double over that wound, wherever it is. I'm thinking of the photo of Lee Harvey Oswald being shot by Jack Ruby here, his hand automatically crossing to protect his body where the bullet hit, within milliseconds.
I'm doing a Roux. All I'm trying to say is that I find it strange that, having being hit in the hip, Reeva sinks to the floor and puts her hands to her head?? How did she realise so quickly she had been hit by a bullet, and that another one was coming - and coincidentally put her hands up to protect the very part of her body where the next bullet hit?
If somebody shot me in the toilet while I was going to pee, even with a bang it would take me seconds after collapsing to work out what might have happened. It's just not the sort of thing anyone expects....