You die alone in your apartment. Your beloved dog—the one who greets you at the door every day, who sleeps at your feet, who you're convinced loves you unconditionally—starts eating your face.
Not in three weeks. Not when the food runs out.
Within hours.
Forensic researchers have documented this pattern repeatedly. And here's the part that'll haunt you: dogs often begin with the face and hands—the parts they've licked and nuzzled most in life. Cats? They typically wait longer, but when they start, they're more methodical.
The disturbing truth isn't that your pet would eat you out of hunger. It's that the behavior often starts as distress—licking your face to wake you up, nudging your hands. When you don't respond, the licking becomes nibbling. The nibbling becomes... more.
Your pet isn't betraying you. It's panicking. And its panic response happens to involve teeth.
Sleep tight.
by JS
for the AdAI Ed. Team


