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Massive sea creature makes eye contact with boaters off California. See it stare

Massive sea creature makes eye contact with boaters off California. See it stare

Miami Herald17-07-2025
A massive sea creature spotted off the coast of California really kept its eye on boaters.
Boaters got the chance to see an 'absolutely incredible once in a lifetime encounter' with a humpback whale, according to a July 17 Facebook post by the Monterey Bay Whale Watch.
The 'friendly' humpback 'rolled over on their side' and made direct eye contact with the onlookers, the group said.
But the 'outstanding day' on July 16 didn't stop there – the whale even showed off some 'fun behaviors' like breaching and displaying its tail, the group said.
Humpbacks usually display this behavior as a means of communicating with other whales as the sound of them slapping their bodies against the water can be 'heard for miles' underwater, according to The Marine Mammal Center.
Later, the group was able to spot a 'big beautiful cetacean' – a blue whale, the group said.
Along with the bright-eyed humpback and blue whale, the group was able to see a combined 60 other humpback whales and 45 Risso's dolphins throughout the day.
Monterey is about a 120-mile drive south from San Francisco.
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‘How can this be happening?' The coincidence that put my family trauma in a new light.
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They started a laundry business before Dad went to work for New England Telephone Company. He would sit on a bench and assemble parts into landline telephones. Like many Chinese families, they wanted desperately to have a son, which proved difficult for them. By the time I was born in 1977, Dad was already 49 years old and father to four daughters. No one would ever mistake us for the Brady Bunch. Dad was an angry, abusive man who frequently unleashed his verbal and physical wrath on his wife and daughters. He never laid a hand on me, though he was psychologically abusive. Mom suffered from paranoid schizophrenia. She could be loving and caring in one moment and then suddenly attack me with a ruler or Wiffle ball bat for the tiniest of infractions. She heard voices and insisted that the neighbors were using a machine to monitor our thoughts. My eldest sister, whom I'll call Susan, started to lose her grip on reality in her late teens and was also diagnosed with schizophrenia. 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