×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Monday
06
Apr 2026
weather symbol
Athens 15°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> World

11 geniuses with extremely unusual habits

Well, nobody is perfect...

Newsroom December 11 09:01

We all have those little idiosyncratic traits we can’t help doing on a regular basis.

You might consider them embarrassing or too weird to share in public, but it is your eccentricities that make you, you.

Some of the greatest minds and thinkers in history also exhibited weird and off-kilter traits.

Pythagoras

pythagoras-4

Pythagoras was one of the most influential minds in philosophy and mathematics.

He is also one of the founding fathers of vegetarianism, but despite abiding by this strict lifestyle there was a meat-free food he despised.

Pythagoras had no love for beans or legumes, to the point that he forbade any of his followers from eating or touching them.

It’s unclear whether this disdain for the food was down to health reasons or not.

Ludwig van Beethoven

bet

Beethoven was one of the world’s greatest ever composers but his process for writing music was a little unconventional.

The German would often write his music in between washing himself.

Reports suggest that he would pace around his room trying to think of compositions, then eventually pour a tub of water over himself and continue his work.

Honoré de Balzac

hbalzac

Balzac might not be a name that is immediately recognisable but he is one of the most celebrated French novelists.

His series La Comédie Humaine is a widely celebrated piece of literature but his coffee drinking habits aren’t as widely admired.

Balzac would reportedly drink around 50 cups of coffee a day, which is a dangerous amount of caffeine.

He once claimed to work 48 hours with only three hours rest – so coffee obviously helped him stay in the zone, presumably followed by a large headache afterwards.

Igor Stravinsky

igor-stravinsky-3

The second composer on this list also had a bizarre trait which he used to abide by.

Every morning the Russian would stand on his head for 15 minutes.

Apparently, he did this in order to “clear his brain”, which sounds lovely but he probably experienced one or two head rushes.

Leonardo Da Vinci

Leonardo-da-Vinci-polymath

Da Vinci wasn’t a huge fan of sleep. The Italian Renaissance polymath abided by the polyphasic cycle, which involves only take short naps every 24 hours.

Da Vinci’s fellow inventor, Thomas Edison was also a fan of this method of rest, which could explain how they both got so much work done.

Nikola Tesla

Tesla_circa_1890

Another inventor who had unusual sleep patterns was the Serbian-American electrical pioneer, Nikola Tesla.

He preferred only two hours sleep a day, but that wasn’t the oddest thing he would do.

It is said that he would curl his toes 100 times per foot before going to bed in the evening as he reportedly believed it boosted his brain cells.

He also enjoyed the company of pigeons but hated jewellery and overweight women.

Agatha Christie

1278495743_61160024_agata11

As the author of Murder on the Orient Express and Death on the Nile, Agatha Christie is one of the most loved mystery writers.

She didn’t work at a desk or even an office for that matter.

She would write wherever she felt in the mood. This could range from a kitchen table to a hotel room.

Christie always used a typewriter though, and sometimes began writing stories before she even had a plot.

Albert Einstein

sma

Einstein’s eccentricities are long and varied. As a boy, he was slow to develop and struggled to learn to talk.

He believed that this allowed him to contemplate larger questions in life which lead to some of his biggest breakthroughs, his theory of relativity for example.

As he grew older his habits became even stranger. He would allow his hair to grow long to avoid the barbers and didn’t wear socks as he believed they were unnecessary.

Furthermore, a report from his chauffeur suggests that he once ate a live grasshopper.

Friedrich Nietzsche

Nietzsche

Nietzsche is regarded as one of Europe’s most important philosophers whose work has influenced many aspects of modern philosophy and intellectual history.

He did all of his work standing up and would admonish anyone who didn’t.

Nietzsche once called his friend Gustave Flaubert a “nihilist” for relaxing while he was working.

Others who enjoyed writing and standing at the same time included Virginia Woolf and Lewis Carroll.

Charles Dickens

Charles_Dickens_circa_1860s-crop

It appears that writing perfect novels wasn’t the only type of perfection that Dickens strived for in his life.

Reports suggest that the novelist hated having even a single strand of hair out of place and would obsessively comb his hair throughout the day.

He would also dictate his writing to an assistant and go over sentences multiple times, which experts have since speculated could have been a form of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.

Dickens also liked his study to contain a small vase of flowers, a large paper, knife, a gilt leaf with a rabbit perched on it and a bronze statuettes of two fat toads wielding swords.

Jane Austen

jane-austen-cae9ad5c8cdac395

Jane Austen’s books are loved by people all over the world and have been adapted into numerous films and TV shows.

However, when she was writing she hated anyone sneaking a quick peek before it was finished.

>Related articles

US-EU clash over cheese names: Feta, Parmesan and Asiago take center stage

Historic record: Artemis II astronauts reach the farthest point ever traveled by humans (live)

Watch Trump’s Press Conference on the war in Iran (video)

The author of Pride and Prejudice made sure that her bedroom door was deliberately creaky so she could hear anyone trying to enter her room.

Author and security pioneer. Not bad.

Source: indy100.com

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#behaviour#character#famous#genius#habit#Literature#personality#science#world
> More World

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

US-EU clash over cheese names: Feta, Parmesan and Asiago take center stage

April 6, 2026

ALCO: ND’s lead reduced to 11.8 points due to OPEKEPE, 94% worried about the economy because of the war

April 6, 2026

Historic record: Artemis II astronauts reach the farthest point ever traveled by humans (live)

April 6, 2026

Anger in Turkey over the French navy’s large-scale exercise off Crete

April 6, 2026

PPC Group: the construction of the 2.13 GW photovoltaic plants in Western Macedonia is completed, the storage units are “running”

April 6, 2026

Watch Trump’s Press Conference on the war in Iran (video)

April 6, 2026

US agreement with Congo on deportations of illegal immigrants from third countries

April 6, 2026

The Ukrainian army says it has regained control of areas on the southeastern and eastern fronts from Russia

April 6, 2026
All News

> Politics

ALCO: ND’s lead reduced to 11.8 points due to OPEKEPE, 94% worried about the economy because of the war

Marginal gains for PASOK and SYRIZA, decline for the other parties

April 6, 2026

Agreement signed for PULS rocket launchers, part of the “Achilles’ Shield” defense network

April 6, 2026

What does Mitsotakis’ proposal for incompatibility between minister and MP mean, and the reduction of MPs on the table

April 6, 2026

Mitsotakis proposes incompatibility between Minister and MP after the 2027 elections

April 6, 2026

Greek Patriot shot down a drone in Saudi Arabia

April 6, 2026
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2026 Πρώτο Θέμα