Brain and Body
Emotions
Social Habits and Self Care
Random Facts
General Knowledge
100

What is serotonin? 

This "feel-good" chemical messenger in the brain helps regulate mood, sleep, and appetite. Low levels of it are often linked to depression.

100

This common physical feeling happens when you feel overwhelmed by schoolwork or upcoming exams. It can cause sweaty palms or a racing heart.

Stress

100

This four-letter acronym describes the anxious feeling that your friends are having fun without you, often triggered by seeing their posts online.

FOMO

100

This flightless bird from New Zealand lays an egg that takes up roughly 20% of its mother's body size—the largest egg relative to body size of any bird in the world.

Kiwi

100

Who was the artist that painted the Mona Lisa? 

Leonardo Da Vinci 

200

What is cortisol? 

A primary stress hormone that spikes during a "fight-or-flight" response, raising your heart rate and blood pressure.

200

Unlike being sad for a day or two, this mental health condition involves a prolonged feeling of sadness or loss of interest in activities that lasts for weeks or months.

Depression

200

Experts recommend turning off all electronic screens at least this many minutes before bed to ensure your brain can produce enough melatonin for deep sleep.

30 to 60 minutes 

200

According to the Guinness World Records, the longest-running animated TV show in history is what? 

The Simpsons 

200

At Wimbledon in 2010, tennis players John Isner and Nicolas Mahut played a tennis match for this amount of time? 


 

11 hours (3 days) 

300

True or False ? 

Our gut is the bodies "second brain". 

TRUE 

The gut produces about 90% of the body's serotonin and communicates directly with the mind via the vagus nerve.

300

This emotion is often called a "secondary emotion" because it usually hides more vulnerable feelings underneath it, like fear, hurt, or embarrassment.

Anger 
300

This is the negative habit of scrolling through endless bad news on your phone, which can spike your anxiety and make the world feel unsafe.

Doomscrolling 

300

This sea creature has three hearts, nine brains, and blue blood, and it can squeeze its entire body through a hole the size of a coin.

Octopus 

300

Between the years 1900 and 1920, this classic playground rope-pulling game was officially contested as a competitive Olympic sport. What is it? 

Tug of War 

400

What part of the brain controls emotions like fear and anxiety? 

The Amygdala 

400

Experiencing this type of intense, sudden wave of fear can make a person feel like they can't breathe, even when there is no immediate danger.

Panic Attack 

400

This word means putting yourself in someone else's shoes to truly understand and share their feelings when they are going through a hard time.

Empathy 

400

It sounds impossible, but because of how their blood vessels work, these small, slow-moving mammals can hold their breath underwater for up to 40 minutes—longer than dolphins can.

Sloth 

400

Who is the NZ athlete that has won Olympic Gold medals in 2008 and 2012, alongside four World Championship titles.

Valerie Adams 

500

What is the hormone called that signals the body to start getting sleepy? 

Melatonin 

500

This is the psychological term for "bouncing back" or recovering quickly from a difficult situation, like failing a test or experiencing a disappointment.

Resilience 

500

What is it called if you keep a regular notebook or diary to write down your thoughts, goals, or things you are grateful for.

Journalling 

500

This is the only mammal in the world capable of true, sustained flight (unlike animals that just glide, like flying squirrels).

Bat 

500

This specific cup is contested annually between the All Blacks and the Wallabies, historically dominated by New Zealand since the early 2000s.

Bledisloe Cup