[post_page_title]The most common type[/post_page_title]
The most common type of dwarfism is called achondroplasia. In fact, it accounts for three-quarters of all people with dwarfism. It’s thought the condition affects 15,000 to 40,000 births.
Achondroplasia means the body doesn’t convert cartilage to bone when it’s developing and leaves the person with an average-sized head and upper body, but shorter legs and arms. The condition can also affect people’s fingers, making them a lot shorter than usual. People diagnosed with achondroplasia typically stand at four feet tall.
[post_page_title]The greatest magic trick[/post_page_title]
Rajah Raboid was once one of the greatest magicians in the world. His specialty? His trick named The Miracle of 37. The magic trick was a simple “cut a person in a box in half” trick, but it was the stage performance that went with the act that made this trick so memorable.
Rajah would cut the person in half only for the audience to witness the head half of the body chasing around their feet. How could it be possible? It can’t have been smoke and mirrors – they often ran right through the audience.