It's strange how the brain tries so hard not to die, but when it realizes it is happening it tries to make the experience as pleasant as possible.
@LouciferFlump8 ай бұрын
Exactly! We’re all secretly super smart❤
@princem.15018 ай бұрын
well put.
@MangyPL8 ай бұрын
How is it strange that the brain tries hard not to die?
@dawierdo123458 ай бұрын
@@MangyPL I think the point was how the brain flips the switch to quickly
@drewp19748 ай бұрын
Why is that Strange?? It makes perfect sense.
@gabrieljordan80159 ай бұрын
Nothing like a nice existential crisis before heading to bed.
@fuurson9 ай бұрын
i have anxieties - I don't know why do I watch these videos lol
@thegreatsaiyaman9 ай бұрын
@@fuursonsame, and I thought I could sleep early today...
@manialord16999 ай бұрын
@@fuursonit makes it more light hearted to me
@messybuttons75259 ай бұрын
Oh you too? 😂
@larryjmack60418 ай бұрын
That's something not to think about
@77pax9 ай бұрын
40 years ago, 11.4.1984. I was electrecuted by 25 000 volts. Some days later, I died but I was resuscitated. It's uncanny that I should come across this video today, exactly 40 years later. The physical healing took about 8 years to complete. The psychological healing is still ongoing. There wasn't any trauma therapy available back in the 80's. I've pretty much figured things out through trial and error. I am grateful to be alive and I slow down to appreciate every day that I'm still given. But my actual point is that dying really is peaceful. It was for me anyway. The things I saw, I've seen again once or twice in dreams. It has always been profoundly comforting experience and given my life meaning and direction. Death is not something to be afraid of, unlived life is.
@shadowfax91779 ай бұрын
Woah! That is intense! May I ask if you believe in God?
@Natalie-justNatalie9 ай бұрын
@77pax ❤ Glad you are still here
@badnewsproduction019 ай бұрын
Well said 👌
@trump_reyiz9 ай бұрын
cool starry bra
@visionarybrushstroker76949 ай бұрын
That’s mind blowing. I can never explain the type of dreams that I have , its like a weird comforting feeling around everything you see , when you wake up it makes you wanna go back.
@garynewson94755 ай бұрын
About 10 years ago, I was very unwell. It turned out that I had pneumonia. Before I was diagnosed and treated, I collapsed one day. I was fighting to get enough oxygen, and in quite a panic. My mobile phone was in my pocket, but I was in such a mess that I couldn't speak, so calling for an ambulance would have been futile. It then occurred to me, that the front door was locked, so I needed to get up off the kitchen floor to open it if I was going to call an ambulance. I couldn't get up; I was struggling to sustain myself lying down. I jokingly said to myself that I may as well call for a funeral director! After that, I stopped struggling. I relaxed completely, and there was no more pain. I felt warm and totally at peace. Nothing mattered anymore: I was at one with everything good in this universe. It was like pleasure, greater than anything I'd ever known. An epiphany! I'm not sure how long I was on the floor for. I didn't check the time as I went down! But I think I was probably there for around an hour. I learnt an important lesson that day. The brain will only allow you to suffer for as much as you can take; it will then remove you from your situation, to a place where you can relax: if you recuperate, you'll come back; if you don't, it really doesn't matter in the grand scheme of things. A handful of people may be sad for a while, then go about their lives: most people have no idea who you are; and to the greater universe, you are nothing less, nothing more than you've always been.
@taekookie_775 ай бұрын
woah. take care man i bet you were on fire in all your English tests
@bbygrlpt25 ай бұрын
Not really bc I lost my grandma 3 mnths ago and I still cry and miss her all the time. A piece of my heart went with her and I feel like Ill never be complete until were together again😞
@Boatfam45 ай бұрын
I hope I feel that peace when I die. There have been moments where I've been completely blissful. Had I died those moments, I wouldn't have cared. With happiness, I'm attached to it, but with bliss & peace, I'm simply experiencing. I wonder if it's the same kind of peace you talk about where nothing matters, but nothing needs to matter.
@garynewson94755 ай бұрын
@@bbygrlpt2 Grief always takes a longer path when it's grandparents. You'll always be with her. She'll always be with you.
@132allie5 ай бұрын
I love the later part of your last part of your last sentence ❤ In a religious sense, though, to the Universe (God), you always matter.
@airye9 ай бұрын
As a medical professional, it surprised me that you didn't mention "the Surge" and/or "terminal lucidity", two uncommon but very striking phenomena where a terminally ill patient suddenly gets much better a few hours to days before dying. That includes energy levels, apetite, cognition, general mood, etc. It's rare an not well known, so sometimes some family members believe their loved one is getting better... while its exactly the opposite.
@KillTheCupcakes9 ай бұрын
Yeah it’s actually quite common. I hear that all the time.
@MuirlySims9 ай бұрын
Yeah, that happened with my grandma when she had cancer. She was bed ridden and slept 23 hours a day for a few weeks, and then suddenly woke up, full of energy, requested a decent meal, chatted with the nurses, doctors, and family who were there, and then 2 days later she passed away peacefully in her sleep.
@andrewhooper76039 ай бұрын
Do you have any theories? Maybe a sort of surrender to the process?
@SgtCroaker9 ай бұрын
@@andrewhooper7603I think it is the body's last hurrah. Our bodies will fight tooth and nail to survive. Even though we're dying, the brain hasn't accepted this, thus releasing chemicals in a last ditch effort for a rally.
@jeremystanger17119 ай бұрын
Maybe he didn't mention it because it's rare
@HobbinRob9 ай бұрын
My sister nearly died from anaphylaxis when she was 12. She said she felt very peaceful, there was no pain, and she didn't feel any grief about dying so young, just happy that she'd had a good life. I'm so glad she didn't die, she's one of my favourite people ever ❤
@Raze91109 ай бұрын
Glad for her and you :)
@NightmareRex69 ай бұрын
and other see effing SCP-666-H , and seems to be NOT matter on how "good or bad" one was.
@IAlsoPlayKsp9 ай бұрын
@@NightmareRex6what is bro yapping about
@peartdahurt9 ай бұрын
@@NightmareRex6Wtf were you trying to say?
@jays25519 ай бұрын
@@IAlsoPlayKsp little buddy forgot to take his adhd meds and watched this video with the SCP website opened in another tab
@modelcitizen19779 ай бұрын
I watched my FIL die, and he was a warm corpse for about a day before he stopped breathing. Nobody talks about how long it can actually take to die. It’s not at all like TV where they say their goodbyes to family and then lights out. Those goodbyes need to happen weeks in advance because you’re simply not functional in the week leading up to death.
@LindaJuffermans9 ай бұрын
It depends a lot from person to person. I had a really good conversation with my mother the day before she died; where as the weeks before she was hardly conscious, this day she was very lucid and clear.
@OneCanisLupus9 ай бұрын
@LindaJuffermans It's interesting how often this happens. My aunt, my father, and others in a nursing home have all had a lucid episode before passing. It was a, have something you forgot or haven't said yet, now the time.
@FireOfJagz9 ай бұрын
I remember the day before my grandfather died I went to visit him and he sat in his chair, trying to do something on his phone. I helped him with that and i could tell he really enjoyed that moment. After that we had a long conversation, he talked quite slow at this point though. It still amazes me how much awareness he still had just a few hours before he passed.
@po726449 ай бұрын
My mum is a palliative personal carer which means she's been with many people right to the very end The dying process is draw out for some people, but for others it can be in a flash She told me a story of an old lady who was dying. The driver was inserted which means she only had a couple of days to live maximum, but her son was travelling from Australia to the UK to say his goodbyes She held out until he arrived, but died pretty much 30 mins after she saw his face
@RuskaNoppa9 ай бұрын
@@po72644 My grandma held on for nearly a week after she was told that her sibling, daughter (my mom) and I were coming for a visit later in the week after learning she wasn't doing well at all. She died less than an hour after we arrived, after we'd shared how we're doing and just chatted with her and each other. Weird how sheer will can keep people hanging on for just a little longer even after their bodies are ready to let go.
@saltyberserker42354 ай бұрын
My dad died here at home of cancer last year. Thank you for this video. I miss himm
@servantofthekingchosen59613 ай бұрын
My dad died at home of cancer also in August and I miss him very much as well!😢😢
@vvvvvvvvvv5992 ай бұрын
im afraid i may die at 15 because of cancer. i feel 2lumps on my neck helpp
@MoDash978 ай бұрын
My 52-years-old cousin died 2 days ago. He simply went to sleep and asked his wife to wake him up in a couple of hours. When she went to wake him up and he didn't respond she called an ambulance and he was reported dead upon reaching the hospital. I went to see him and he looked like he would just wake up if you call him. Watching this video I'm relieved to know he was relaxed and I hope he had these good dreams you mentioned. R.I.P cousin I'll never forget you.
@mcg038 ай бұрын
RIP
@Amberxxbbunni7 ай бұрын
So sorry for your loss x
@mtmcommunity7 ай бұрын
Crazy thing is I lost my friend back in 2020, heard the news from my other classmate 3 days after he passed. 2 weeks later I had a dream with him in a very very bright place, biblically accurate too heaven. I couldn't see my body, I was looking for my hands, my legs, my torso but seen nothing. Then he appeared out of the brightness and hugged me. Told me he'd see me whenever I arrive there, when, I don't know but just enjoy life while you have it. Love you bro, then walked back off into the light and disappeared
@OneRedKansan557 ай бұрын
It is a good, informative video. By the way, I am sorry for your loss
@ThaParamorph7 ай бұрын
@@mtmcommunity That's crazy. In my culture, it's said that it's dangerous to have physical contact with dead people that appear in your dreams, as they might try to pull you into their realm, leading you to death. I always had that in mind, especially once when I dreamed about my deceased grandfather, who appeared on the other side of a bridge, trying to hug me. I still remember that instead of walking over to him, I just turned around and woke up shorty after it. That was like 15 years ago, and I still remember it with a warm feeling.
@GuineaParents9 ай бұрын
I put off watching this, because i have severe death anxiety, but this was very comforting. Thank you
@scoobsydoo9 ай бұрын
I’m literally 21 seconds into this video and the thought of my brain turning off sent me into a flight or fight mode and I got really scared and I had to stop watching 😭 death anxiety has to be one of the most scariest things in the world there’s no comfort you know it’ll happen but you don’t want it to atleast not at this time which is why it’s so nerve wracking ugh!
@GuineaParents9 ай бұрын
@@scoobsydoo my exact issues. It's not like other fears, where it'll never happen. It must happen to complete our life cycle. It sounds like there might be more to life after this though, which to me is all I want
@GiDaOne9 ай бұрын
@@scoobsydoo Damn so I was not the only one. I literally felt like blood sugar dropping, feeling like I might pass out if this got worse. But the video was still very interesting
@nesnahnevard49079 ай бұрын
"death anxiety" Sounds like you're super egotistical. Like you're so great and important that you think you should just live forever. Just keep eating animals and all that. And occam's razor suggests that there is nothing after this. Why is it so hard for people to believe or accept that our consciousness ends with our bodies? If I lose my seeing organ, I can no longer see. If I lose my hearing organ, I can no longer hear. So what should happen if I lose my thinking organ? I ascend to a higher realm? Give me a break lmao.
@TaiSai_069 ай бұрын
Welp, hope you guys live long. 😐
@audionmusic27879 ай бұрын
“…the sleep is no longer rejuvenating…”. I’ve been dying for decades now.
@cherylthompson27319 ай бұрын
Me 2.
@TyeArtisik9 ай бұрын
😭
@BSGCCollective9 ай бұрын
this.
@jol43429 ай бұрын
Aye. Me too!
@AprilReigns189 ай бұрын
Same
@user-cy9ip7kg2d3 ай бұрын
My mother was in hospice care for cancer, at home. The day she died, I went in her room and sat with her and told her how thankful I was for how I was raised and for the moral values she taught me, and how she taught me to cook and bake and take care of a family. I told her what a wonderful mother she was, and I love her. She passed away shortly after I left her room. Once I was home, several states away, a week or so later, I woke in the middle of the night with the feeling of someone squeezing me tight. I was a mess. I didn't know what to think. I KNOW it was her, telling me she loves me and that she was at peace. I cried so much that night, and still do, thinking she came to visit me. I miss her SO much my heart hurts. There isn't a day that goes by that I don't think of her and what she has given me in this life. I've passed on what she taught me, to my own children, in her glory. I love you forever, Mom. My mother; my pillar of strength, love, wisdom, and hope.
@misodinamosaКүн бұрын
You were so forgiving to have such a great mom! God bless you!❤️🙏🏻
@NotAProducer8889 ай бұрын
Damn... "feeling like home" made me want to cry, not only because it's so affirming, but also because it makes sense. What happened before our birth is unknown, and what happens after our death is too. It's like we've all been there, and will all return at some point. I hope it's a beautiful place full of peace.
@justaguy21839 ай бұрын
According to tons of NDEs and even some doctors, it’s most likely a place full of peace. And yeah I agree, nobody knows what was before our birth and after death, but both sure feel like a place of belonging and home
@emilz0r9 ай бұрын
Probably doesn't feel like anything, like it did(n't) before we were born. I guess you can call that peace
@manuelk18539 ай бұрын
So true
@justaguy21839 ай бұрын
@@itshuzzah Just like before the universe? There was and never will be “nothing”
@justaguy21839 ай бұрын
@@emilz0r Again, we don’t know what was before birth, doesn’t mean it was nothingness.
@-seemsee-9 ай бұрын
“Knowing they were dying, but felt like they were going home” Wow..
@darn_you9 ай бұрын
You do go home. God says it. That we will return to dirt when we pass away. So, we do go back home.
@Shugg-Goff-HHoffical9 ай бұрын
In way I suppose that's what's happening ( not getting into the religious side of if) they are returning back to where they came from before the time of thier birth.
@devinlindberg2539 ай бұрын
If that’s not Jesus welcoming you to heaven I don’t know what is.
@Forget19879 ай бұрын
Yeah it was dark but it was colorful at first then I felt like I was going somewhere good and I couldn't leave my daughter here alone
@darn_you9 ай бұрын
God says, that we turn back to dirt (return home).
@jasonborne16818 ай бұрын
I nearly died from cardiogenic shock. I was already in the er when I lost consciousness and I felt as if I was drifting into an unusually peaceful and comfortable sleep everything was amazing. The next thing I knew I woke up with a breathing tube down my throat an impella circulating my blood a team of 5-7 doctors working on saving my life. A cardiologist was yelling at me telling me to “fight your dying Jason fight for your life you’re dying” Jason your dying right now you have to fight to live”. The contrast between my perceived comfort while unconscious and reality of my situation once I regained consciousness was like nite and day. I have sense made a full recovery.
@MrCabbage-qz2vd7 ай бұрын
thank you for sharing your experience.
@cryinsquirrel6 ай бұрын
I find the doctor shouting that pretty harsh. i d have a heart attack waking up to someone saying that lol
@chrisshabatowski43496 ай бұрын
Jesus Christ, it's Jason Bourne!
@ast-og-losta6 ай бұрын
wow, man...Im glad you are ok. Thank you for sharing. I wish you blessings.
@MegaLPlover6 ай бұрын
bro it's spelled night
@HARDC8RE_MAMMOTH7 ай бұрын
I’ve owned more than 15 dogs, and 2 days before one of them dying, they stopped eating. And the worst part is they tend to go to a place out of site, and that’s it 😞
@suicune20015 ай бұрын
My dog kind of did that. She stopped eating and one night she wanted to go outside and just kinda wandered around for a while in a very dazed state. She didn't die that night but I had her put down a couple days later since she had lost so much weight and had a seizure in my arms. I couldn't bear to watch her suffer anymore. 😭
@HARDC8RE_MAMMOTH5 ай бұрын
@@suicune2001I’m so sorry 😔. I had to put down my 15 year old English Bulldog because she just couldn’t get up to do her needs. The days before I put her down, I took her out in a stroller, and gave her nice streaks every meal. It’s so painful, I have all my dogs ashes here with a photo and their fur just in case someday we will be able to clone them.
@suicune20015 ай бұрын
@@HARDC8RE_MAMMOTH Yeah, it's really rough but they provide so much joy and we give them the best life we can. ❤ I don't think I'd clone my dog even if I could. I'd rather rescue one in a shelter who needs me. They deserve a good life, too.
@DennGreenIII3 ай бұрын
Was it a husky? Members of the wolf family share the same trait, when they are dying they choose to isolate themselves far from others so that they can die in peace
@botdance99 ай бұрын
Well that was oddly hopeful and reassuring
@Novastar.SaberCombat9 ай бұрын
I encourage you to look up Sam Parnia's work.
@Gerickmb9 ай бұрын
How so? Sounds like the worst thing I could possibly think of!
@nepsyasudra32629 ай бұрын
@@Gerickmb Would suffering before death be preferable?
@Gerickmb9 ай бұрын
@@nepsyasudra3262 that doesn’t really matter to me. Peace or pain. It’s the eternal nothing that bothers me the most!
@Thund3rDrag0n129 ай бұрын
@@Gerickmbi mean hey at least you won't be conscious for it
@billmeloche49189 ай бұрын
I died from a Heart Attack...it was my third one. As soon as my heart stopped, there is no pain. It was the most perfect feeling! When the Doctors finally got my heart going again (After a couple of minutes - I was told later) all the pain came back. I've since had two more; I guess it's not my time yet.
@enzothatguy9 ай бұрын
You're here for a reason brotha!
@MemedPixel8 ай бұрын
You are really lucky, you lived even after events that couldve caused death
@PorterStatsTheSecond8 ай бұрын
Good luck man.
@joeschmoe40348 ай бұрын
i laughed out loud reading this before finding out it was all unironic
@ezharm58 ай бұрын
Your feeling was alive even when your heart stopped working?
@Caiyde9 ай бұрын
My fourteen year old dog died in my arms on the 25th of March, 2024. He was the light of my life and had helped me overcome suicidal ideation in my teens. I lay with him on my bed for his last few hours because the plan was to take him to the vet the following day so he could be put to sleep, but he never made it that long, and just stopped breathing while we lay there. The death rattle scared me, because for weeks now I've been thinking that was him struggling to breathe, and that he suffocated and died in pain and fear. It's comforting to know that he wasn't in any distress and was actually very relaxed. You've given me some peace of mind, and I really can't thank you enough.
@pennybunny9 ай бұрын
Sorry for your loss 😢
@UniDeathRaven9 ай бұрын
I have lost few cats and few dogs. I know how it feels like.
@lauraharwood65819 ай бұрын
What a lovely peaceful passing, lying, so loved, in the arms of his best friend. Bless his darling heart - I know he is so grateful for the life you gave him, and is waiting eagerly for you. He’ll be the first to greet you when you cross! ❤️
@karma0is0a0bitch9 ай бұрын
@@karianickshame on you. No compassion. It must suck to be you.
@bille82489 ай бұрын
@@karianick That's really insensitive. Pets are part of the family, if you ever had a pet you would know that. It's a very normal reaction to be sad and upset when your dog dies--I know I was. Doesn't matter that it wasn't human, the comfort and emotional support they give you is just as valid as human companionship.
@agustinreyes61116 ай бұрын
The last stage is you being uploaded into the cloud for storage until your next avatar is ready for reload.
@xthexskrillex6 ай бұрын
thats what i bin thinkin last 13 years
@AntoniOline5 ай бұрын
heaven or hell?
@agustinreyes61115 ай бұрын
@@AntoniOline you’re in both rite now.
@Dream999725 ай бұрын
@@agustinreyes6111next avatar means u talkin bout recantations cuz i believe in it Im 18 year old probably i wont live for long maybe a year or two max my life was full of suffering since birth i hope i get better in next
@zoponex32245 ай бұрын
god, i hope not! i couldn't bear having to do life again.
@MockinGlobes9 ай бұрын
I recently watched my father die. He was in a twilight for about a month before he passed. He was just transferred to a hospice center from the hospital and they gave a call to my family saying his vitals aren’t looking good, if you want to be with him when he goes, come now. I’ve never drove so fast, probably would have went to jail if caught. Sat with him and my mom for 6 hours until my sister arrived after her drive from her college. He waited until surrounded by his family. His eyes were closed most of the time I was there but he looked me straight in the eyes as he took his final breath. Seeing this vid gives me a lot of comfort.
@matteooz27359 ай бұрын
What an honour mate! Beautiful to hear
@PatLadsChan999 ай бұрын
Sorry to hear that, went through something similar with my Dad earlier this year. Hope your well
@flatt5859 ай бұрын
Sorry to hear that, was very similar when my grandma passed. I feel it's one of the things you never really get over, at least I haven't.
@saturnhex98559 ай бұрын
I'm glad this video gave you comfort. I'm sorry about your father, but I hope that your final moments together, especially with the info from this vid in mind, give you solace and resolution. Best Wishes!
@rocketsurgery9129 ай бұрын
My mom did the same thing to me back in 2011; eyes closed until the last moment when she looked right at me with a serene look on her face, then drifted away. I felt a lot more at ease about dying after that. And yeah, I drove like a maniac to get there, too. Glad we’re not bunk mates in the slammer. 😂
@rileybender36559 ай бұрын
When I was a kid I nearly drowned in a river, to the point that I lost consciousness. I have a stark memory of the panic leading up to the moment I couldn't hold my breath any longer and breathed in the first gulp of water. THAT part was horrible, but afterward I very distinctly remember my experience being a lot like what the video describes. I became totally at peace with the fact that I was disappearing, and I spent a few bleary moments looking up at the sunlight rippling above me and thinking that my life had been good enough. People seem to be taking comfort from this video, and I thought sharing this might help reinforce things. 🙂 I'm still scared to die all these years later (I'm 34 now), but it's comforting to me as well that my experience then wasn't a fluke.
@-.-..._...-.-9 ай бұрын
I think this entirely depends on the environment you are in when you are dying. When I was 9 my Mom and I were hit by a drunk driver and the only thing I can remember is the gurgling sounds my Mom was making before she died and as I was bleeding the only thing I could think of were those sounds and immense sadness as I tried to cry when I closed my eyes
@ZiggyonMars9 ай бұрын
I had a similar experience! I was 10 and choking. I was very panicked, realised I was going to die, then felt the most peaceful feeling, and in my head I went “oh well” because nothing had to matter anymore, there were no worries or burdens.
@Mr.Helper.9 ай бұрын
Sp no going into the matrix and breaking the code when you die I guess
@The-Oneness119 ай бұрын
@@-.-..._...-.- Condolences .
@rileybender36559 ай бұрын
@@Mr.Helper. funny guy
@blakewhittington43369 ай бұрын
My wife passed from cancer in 2009 and was on a morphine drip the last 2 weeks. When her best friend from her childhood walked in the room and was talking in the room my wife heard her and started talking back a little so we knew she could hear us at that point. She did eventually start that horrible breathing sound. She passed on January 30, 2009. R.I.P Randi Whittington
@josephnissenson32529 ай бұрын
I'm very sorry you had to experience that brother
@vulpinemachine9 ай бұрын
Sorry for your loss.
@healthiswealth14529 ай бұрын
What horrible breathing sound, may I ask
@Patralli9 ай бұрын
My condolences to you and your family.
@_DB.COOPER9 ай бұрын
My condolences.
@pickledpixel6 ай бұрын
Thank you. Thank you so much. I watched my dad pass away three years ago and it was heart wrenching to see what he went through with the struggles to breathe. I didn't know if he was afraid or even aware of what was happening as he was in and out of consciousness and to see this what you say was like you released so much stress and depression I have felt all this time for him. It is now like you have made everything right for me and I no longer have to feel my dad went as bad as I thought. I feel you have fixed in my heart what had been broken all this time.
@Anni_james6 ай бұрын
*Psychedelic saved my life from Depression and anxiety,all thanks goes to this mycologist who has been my guide during my journey on DMT,he also got other psychedelic stuffs in his store,shipping discreetly worldwide*
@Anni_james6 ай бұрын
Dude is on telegram as¿¿
@Anni_james6 ай бұрын
@Nutshroom ¿¿
@Vladimyra859 ай бұрын
I'm 39 years old. In 2007, when I was 22, I was given a less than 1% chance to live due to the Stevens-Johnson Reaction I had from the IV and oral antibiotics I was on. When I arrived at the hospital that morning, I was about to be in respiratory arrest (and they were able to vent me before this happened thankfully). My heart rate was 234 (my heart thankfully never stopped nor had to be shocked back into rhythm). And my blood pressure was 70/30, but I was conscious and talking to the nurses and doctors working on me. I remember the ambulance ride, vaguely as I was extremely cold and could not stay awake. I remember the scream of the engine and the EMT saying "Stay awake. I need you to open your eyes." Y'all, that is seriously the most difficult thing in the world to do, but when I arrived at the hospital, I remember being wide awake and feeling absolutely no pain whatsoever. This is important because not only do I have Fibromyalgia and was diagnosed at 12 with it, but I was on antibiotics because of the MRSA staph infection I had from the 4 back surgeries that the surgeon refused to treat properly, and at that point, I had an open wound the size of a softball in my back to my spine to be packed twice a day, but I felt no pain at that moment. Matter of fact, I felt absolutely amazing and could not understand why everyone was worried and in a rush. I was joking and laughing with everyone. I remember the doctor asking my permission to put me on a vent, and I was like "Sure. Yeah. That's fine." And I remember him saying "I'm gonna put you to sleep now.", and the next thing I know, I'm having the most weird dreams, BUT I can still "see" my room, even though at this point, I'm in a 17-day coma. At one point I had a fever of 109 for over a day and a fever of 106 for 4 days. I didn't see any light UNTIL I suddenly was woken up once while they were trying to switch out my PICC Line. I think this was a few days into my being in the hospital for 22 days, and they were using an MRI machine to do the placement, and they were bringing me out of the coma, and they accidentally completely woke me up, and I remember that was the ONLY time the entire time I was at the hospital that I was scared and thought I was going to die. I wear glasses and am legally blind without them, so all I could see was a bright, white light, and 6 gray figures hovering around me. I remember I couldn't breathe (I was being bagged at that point), and I kept trying to move my arms and legs (reaching for my mouth so I could breathe, and by the way, that is an automatic reflex to do that. It's weird and hard to explain.), and I couldn't move because the figures were holding me down, but saying "It's okay. You're okay. You're going to be okay.", but I was absolutely terrified and I remember the last thing I thought was "This is how I die." Next thing I know, I'm being woken up for real and having the tube removed from my throat, and being told to breathe in and breathe out. The entire experience was something that's so incredibly difficult to explain, but I did. When I was actively dying, I felt happy, pain-free, amazing. I couldn't figure out why everyone was so worried. It was the best I have ever felt in my entire life. I'm not afraid of the pain of dying. I'm afraid of missing out on life when I die.
@tinywhereas9 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this, it was so interesting to read and was super comforting to hear the end of your story 😊
@SgtCroaker9 ай бұрын
SJS is such a terrifying thing to have! Especially given that the mortality rate for SJS is very high! I remember feeling no pain at all during a massive heart attack that resulted in an emergency cath, but I was extremely scared and I was sobbing because I didn't want to die. Once they pushed the meds (which includes Valium) in the cath lab, my fear mostly vanished. And the only sensation that I felt was a tug in my heart as they were performing the procedure. The cardiologist would tell me to breathe deeply and I would feel that sensation. Other than that I felt nothing.
@untruereviewer9 ай бұрын
very well weritten. Thank you for sharing!
@Gatozparty9 ай бұрын
I feel that now my thoughts about death has changed after seeing multiple people saying they felt no pain, and it makes me feel better to know that the people in my life who have passed away felt little pain when they did die
@gorgono19 ай бұрын
mising out on life, really? The world has gone to shit, you shouldn't miss it at all. We failed as species and society
@ShawnBean9 ай бұрын
Speaking from experience: in 2018, I suffered a MAJOR heart attack that actually killed me twice -- they had to resuscitate me from flatline twice in the hospital. I can't really describe the experiences and my memories -- although I do recall waking up entubated after the second flatline experience, trying to raise my hands to my face and feeling them restrained to the sides of my gurney, and thinking "Oh, so, we have come to this." I'm certain that I was on some extremely powerful sedatives at the time; the cardiologists had just drained 1,300ccs of dead blood from the pericardial membrane around my heart so that my heart could beat again. Here's the thing: I KNEW what condition I was in and that I had very little chance of coming through it alive. The fact that I did is much more a testament to the skill and determination of my cardiologists than it is to anything I contributed to the experience. But, dying, those two times, was far and away the most PEACEFUL experience I have ever known in my life, and that includes some thirty years of fairly regular meditation. Nature is not cruel. The pain of dying is what results from us fighting to live. When we accept our fate, there is no more pain, no more distress, no more fear. I don't know what comes next; I never saw a tunnel of light nor met long-deceased relatives waiting to guide me to the Great Beyond. But, the fact that dying, itself, is a peaceful experience leads me to believe that whatever comes next, we will enjoy it.
@matteooz27359 ай бұрын
Think you hit the nail on the head mate! 👍
@El3ctr0Lun49 ай бұрын
I do hope you're right about enjoying what comes next. Unfortunately there seems to be no empirical evidence to support the idea of an afterlife. For all we know, death is truly the end. I really wish it wasn't though, I like the idea of living on in some other realm and being able to reconnect with loved ones who have passed away.
@BeautifulDove-i7u9 ай бұрын
JESUS told that theif that "today, you will be with me in Paradise!"
@oddbrothersproductions3 ай бұрын
@@El3ctr0Lun4there is , in Christ
@MustyMouse9 ай бұрын
This made me feel really comforted, actually. Thank you
@SB-vh9bs9 ай бұрын
comforted how? it sounds absolutely terrifying
@Deee3r5 күн бұрын
I was 14 years when I developed a insulin resistance so I had to have some blood tests done. I wasn't feeling well since I woke up but I had to fast anyways to get the blood test so I waited for my dad to pick me up so he could take me to the lab for the tests. He took more time than usual and as time passed (3 hours) I started to sweat like crazy and feel confused and anxious, I felt soo weak that I could barely walk. When we arrived, we had to wait another hour in the reception and when they told me to get into the box I was already feeling like I was going to faint. The nurse asked me the habitual questions and she said that it was normal if I felt that bad because I didn't eat since the previous day so she would take the blood as soon as possible. She filled the tubes (4) and asked me if I felt ok but I couldn't move my mouth to answer. I looked at her just moving my eyes up, everything looked shiner than before and my heartbeats felt really low but strong. All of a sudden I felt so much peace and some kind of quiet euforia that I didn't even understand what was happening when my body was sliding down the chair. I felt a shiver going up my spine and when it reached the back of my neck, I felt my head falling and my chin touching the bottom of my neck. Then, there was nothing. When I woke up they told me I had seizures and that my blood sugar was so low that I was in a risk of dying right there if I wasn't helped by anyone or if that happened to me home alone. I have fainted a few times in my life for other reasons but I never experienced the same sensations that I had that time. Well, I didn't die but I think is the closer thing to death I have experienced. Sometimes I feel tempted to seek those sensations so I could feel them again. My experience seems like a joke when I read the other comments.
@carlcat9 ай бұрын
I'm 76 years old and not too long ago experienced a heart attack. It was very painful but once the paramedics came and gave me Nitro and Aspirin the pain subsided and I began to feel very relaxed and comforted that my life was over and I could now relax. I hope you do well and find peace.
@Throckmorton.Scribblemonger9 ай бұрын
You were high.
@carlcat9 ай бұрын
@@Throckmorton.Scribblemonger You don't get high on aspirin and Nitro. Trust me, I was there.😁
@riceburner47479 ай бұрын
We're you on any heart medication? If not, do u do annual spots with your PCP?
@Throckmorton.Scribblemonger9 ай бұрын
@@carlcat They must've given you something else as well.
@carlcat9 ай бұрын
@@Throckmorton.Scribblemonger While in the ambulance I asked them what did they give me and they said Nitro and Aspirin. Keep in mind they're not doctors and need to limit medication so as not to give me something that would conflict with another medication given at the hospital that could save my life.
@noname83549 ай бұрын
I think this is likely about people with proper pain meds. My dad had at-home hospice and he started actively dying when I got home over spring break 2 years ago. We couldn't legally have a morphine drip, so he spent his last few days in pure agony, screaming for someone to kill him when he was coherent enough to do so. He barely slept due to the pain. In fact, my mom said that his last words were "I can't breathe." So, keep in mind that what's being explained here isn't what happens for everyone and good pain meds are necessary
@patchesheadphones35709 ай бұрын
Holy shit, I'm so sorry. I hope your dad doesn't have to suffer that pain anymore. It's ridiculous that the healthcare system wouldn't allow your father a peaceful death. I hope you and your family are doing okay with the loss.
@gblakev9 ай бұрын
@@patchesheadphones3570 As Noname said they weren't legally allowed to administer morphine at home. This is an issue of state laws. There are other pain killers that can be given at home but not everyone is responsive to them.
@modelcitizen19779 ай бұрын
That’s awful. Depending on the state, at home hospice definitely has a morphine option as long as staff is there to administer it. When they were there for my FIL, they even took us aside and said “you’re not allowed to give this to him, but I’m allowed to show you how to administer it, as well as clearly explain what a lethal dose is, and I have no way of knowing what happens after I leave for the day. Do I need to explain any further?” It never came to that, but they’re not unaware of the situation.
@gblakev9 ай бұрын
@@modelcitizen1977 We had hospice nurses for my sister-in-law. They weren't allowed to give her "too much" pain killer but they were able to stop feeding her (at her request). She wasn't in any more pain but it did take over a week. Eventually her body shut down without food. My brother was in a hospital in another state. When the end was very near, the nurses were able to keep increasing his morphine until he succumbed.
@tianamatson9 ай бұрын
Yes, my grandpa's last word as he died was "help!" I'm so glad I wasn't there for that.
@chloenord2809 ай бұрын
My grandpa passed away on the 30th last month, so this video brought some clarity and peace of mind for me. Thank you for always educating us
@topshotta200024 күн бұрын
Sorry 😢
@laneweatherbee22324 ай бұрын
"I think about dying all the time, that's why I made this video." LOL I hear you bro. My dad just died like 8 months ago, and it was terrible, but also right at the end it felt somewhat peaceful. I've always been somewhat obsessed with what dying really is so your offhand reference to thinking about dying all the time really felt validating to me. Thank you.
@wesley64422 ай бұрын
I have been thinking on this a lot lately too, I can barely function I feel I am such a weak person unable to handle things anymore, lost my step dad and it just broke whatever was left of me into pieces.. now all I think about is death and even worse, ways I could die, ways we can suffer as humans and the absolute terror of a pain or condition being so bad and so inescapable that you opt to take medicine to "check out" of life.. that is truly horrifying.. I live in constant fear of these things now, it's paralyzing
@laneweatherbee22322 ай бұрын
@@wesley6442 I want to tell you everything will work itself out eventually but I can't know that for sure. All I can say is I hope you find some activities you can do that take the raw edge off of things for you. The sting of losing someone so close to you doesn't really seem to get any easier, you just learn to accept its presence.
@womble9019 ай бұрын
Step 2's sleep not being rejuvenating and constant fatigue sounds awfully like what day to day life feels like 😅
@shaman54339 ай бұрын
Exactly what I thought 😅 Maybe I am already dying slowly 🤔
@MartijnMuller9 ай бұрын
@@shaman5433we're all dying. Some people are just dying faster than others.
@mathwizar9 ай бұрын
@@MartijnMullerdeep
@MurdocsMinion9 ай бұрын
Yeah, that bit hit me a lil weird, since I have a chronic pain condition, and sometimes need to sleep for a full 24 hour day when my energy is low enough and the fog is bad enough.
@GloomyFish9 ай бұрын
literally though
@whosurdaddy89079 ай бұрын
Thanks for the existential crisis.
@ulicadluga9 ай бұрын
Yes. The video is extraordinarily presumptive. Like anyone knows what it's like to drown in your own saliva!
@techleontius91619 ай бұрын
There are two types of people: "This made me feel really comforted, actually. Thank you" "Thanks for the existential crisis."
@kryptoid25689 ай бұрын
@@techleontius9161Those are comments
@techleontius91619 ай бұрын
@@kryptoid2568 and what's wrong with that?
@kryptoid25689 ай бұрын
@@techleontius9161 digital rights
@JohnnyAllan-vj7sj9 ай бұрын
I appreciate those people for not dying so they could tell us what it's like to die
@driveri14359 ай бұрын
Underrated comment.
@jude34268 ай бұрын
Lots of people have had this happen
@burnburn6458 ай бұрын
@@jude3426 2 for me i think? maybe 3 but for sure once, clearly remember doctor/nurse/brother/roommates faces. humbling experience to wake up just fine and be told you got resuscitated a couple times, after asking where your stuff went.. yeah.. no memories though from the duration. i remember moments before roommate/emt door breaking in, and when i jumped out of the hospital bed to do pushups before getting released!
@burnburn6458 ай бұрын
@@DEVIL_HIMSELF_ ye sure we can always hear more fun times ^_^
@sdsfee8 ай бұрын
who got bros reboot card
@j.d.46977 ай бұрын
As a dead person I have to say living is overrated.
@WilliamMarcotte-io4go6 ай бұрын
Yes it is as a 54 year old I'm betrayed by family and hod too God too very disappointed by it all
@mac113806 ай бұрын
Do you vote Democrat?....lol...Just messing with you.
@ayuwoki4535 ай бұрын
@@mac11380😂😂😂😂
@gordon31865 ай бұрын
Reminds me of a gravestone I read once, "Overall, life was just one big disappointment."
@Scantronimus4664 ай бұрын
You have surprisingly good internet connection down there.
@erinunderwood31039 ай бұрын
Its scary thinking that one day we just wont exist anymore
@applegal30589 ай бұрын
I don't know why I have no desire to live forever. I'm fine with going back into the earth and eventually being forgotten about. In the grand scheme of things, I'm really not that important and my death is inevitable. Sorry of that sounds depressing, but it's the truth of life. Perhaps it gives us more incentive to be kind and live while we're alive.
@ambycarr16959 ай бұрын
Scary for some, comforting for others
@stokerbramwell9 ай бұрын
I mean, technically we don't *know* whether we'll completely cease to exist or go on to something else. Until we go through it ourselves, oblivion is just as speculative as any afterlife
@applegal30589 ай бұрын
@@stokerbramwell yeah that's true. I think I just return to the earth and bugs and bacteria eat me. Plants grow. Animals eat that. So kinda like reincarnation without the religious attachments. My energy isn't destroyed but recycled.
@SharkWitchMeruna9 ай бұрын
@@applegal3058well said, I agree
@mangopeach50799 ай бұрын
I just recently watched my grandpa die. This video actually brought me some peace. Thank you ❤️
@t.n.h.ptheneohumanpatterna83349 ай бұрын
lol
@JustStampTheTicketGuy9 ай бұрын
im now in the same situation with my granma and i feel the same
@t.n.h.ptheneohumanpatterna83349 ай бұрын
@@JustStampTheTicketGuy hahaha
@PeterHamiltonz9 ай бұрын
I was with my Grandfather when he passed, and we went through all of this as well. Let me take a moment to say, I saw him as clear as day about a week after he passed. At the same time, I saw a strange look on my mother's face, and I asked if she was ok, she said her father had just said "Everything is going to be ok" into her ear by which I saw him standing. I've shared this story with lots of other people who have also seen family members after they passed. I don't know what it means, but it does give me a little comfort.
@supersaiyanzero3869 ай бұрын
probably bait I used to do stuff like this when I was drunk@triangleunderstander7801
@burdenedsappo9 ай бұрын
Who knew the random recommended ASAP science I clicked on this afternoon would bring me much needed comfort. The best dog I ever had passed away november of 2020 in my arms from cancer that went undetected until her last day. It was so unexpected that euthanasia wasn't an option, there was no time. Her last breaths haunted me, it was very disturbing to watch her gasp for air and I always look back wishing i couldve done something different. To know that there was a possibility she wasn't suffering gasping for air brings me so much comfort. Thanks, guys!
@GODHATESADOPTION9 ай бұрын
Its peaceful
@adityasharma28709 ай бұрын
I almost drowned twice. If I can recall correctly, while you're gasping for Oxygen, panicking and thrashing about in the water, it's thrilling and scary. But the moment the thought of "death" comes to mind, the o2 deprived brain turns tranquil, and peaceful
@mariemorgan77599 ай бұрын
@@adityasharma2870 I almost drowned when I was seven years old, the same thing happened to me. I had the realization that my life was over, and then I felt calm about it.
@AprilReigns189 ай бұрын
@@adityasharma2870I almost drowned as a child and remember holding onto the side of the pool and then sitting on the deck while my mother yelled at me. Nothing in between.
@STARRY_SCARAB2 ай бұрын
The first time I had a seizure, I felt like I was dying. There was a few moments of pure panic, almost trying to “fight” it, and then I just… let go. It’s hard to explain, but it’s like I released all the tension in my body. It sounded like water going down a drain, or maybe like paper crumpling up before it all went black. Obviously, I didn’t die, and I don’t think I was even close to dying, but it certainly felt comfortable once I’d “given up”, so to say.
@Eireman_on_Twitch9 ай бұрын
Thank you for having the courage to make these videos. My story time: my oldest son was enlisted in the US Army National Guard, a new father, and preparing for wedding his fiancé when he was diagnosed after dozens of incorrect “walking pneumonia” suppositions as having a mediastinal (chest cavity) sarcoma. This is a misfired bone cyst defect that for unknown reasons triggers MOST OFTEN in men in their early 20s. It is 1 in 5M or less known cancer, which is 99.99% lethal. I watched my 23 year old son, a trained diesel generator engine specialist with plans to enter mechanical engineering full time, waste away under chemotherapy, which DID shrink the tumor dramatically, but also watched as it recovered faster than his body. He passed away while undergoing radiation therapy as the tumor crushed his heart and lungs. He died with my wife (his mother) and I at his side. So of interest, loss of consciousness happened several times during that last 8 hours. But Mr. Engineer, woke up, excited that he was introduced to people he didn’t know, but that we shouldn’t worry. He was going to be a fire fighter, trained to save people from fires. That was the last thing he said to his mother, fully upright in bed and holding her shoulders. He was EXCITED. His only other words were to our parish priest who heard his confession and prepared him for passing. Once Father left, he fell asleep and passed a couple hours after. Yes, I’m a traditional (Tridentin) Roman Catholic. But I’m also a scientist in thought. I can’t help but rethink what stimulus brought his excitement AND STRENGTH out at the end. He passed in September 2022, 3 days before his Mom’s and my 25th anniversary. I’m not ashamed that I’ve been crying writing this. But there you go.
@AmbersDaintyBush9 ай бұрын
Sounds like he was an amazing young man. Thanks for sharing a bit of his memory with us ❤
@gamma7479 ай бұрын
Sir--crying is nothing to be ashamed of--by gender or by age. As my doctor said--it's a natural stress-relieving response. Certainly better to do that than punch walls--I almost broke a knuckle! But also--thank you for sharing/I hope it helped some.
@technopoptart9 ай бұрын
thank you for being there for your child. it is harder than turning away and letting it happen without you there
@circelarue59549 ай бұрын
I'm so sorry for your loss. I have no doubt you will always mourn. God bless you.
@AlejandroDrago9 ай бұрын
Love to you.
@TheLeondude9 ай бұрын
My mum and I were attacked last year and, while I only suffered a punch to the jaw and a concussion from falling I to the floor, the attackers smashed her head in with a crutch. I kid you not, she went through every single stage you mentioned in this vid and, after the paramedics at the scene noticed she stopped breathing and were telling her to stay with them, I just shouted "WAKE UP!". That is the only reason my mum is still alive after that experience.
@justice4all9779 ай бұрын
Your faith that she would wake up healed her
@TheLeondude9 ай бұрын
I wouldn't exactly say "healed" since after she came back, we had to go to the hospital to staple her head shut and she can no longer read unless she has a pair of reading glasses but, yeah, my faith certainly brought her back. Speaking of faith, she actually saw a vision of Jesus while they were scanning her (can't remember if it was an MRI scan but it was certainly some type of scan to determine the severity of her injuries) and Jesus actually told her, when her and I do move on from this world, she is to be buried with me instead of cremated. Though I would like to point out in her vision that Jesus looked like he was suffering, with blood coming from his head and his hands and I think she said there was fire beneath his feet as well. Kinda depressing to know after all this time, he is still suffering for our sins but at least he was nice enough to tell mum to guide me because I legitimately don't know what I would do without her.
@FriendofDorothy7 ай бұрын
How interesting. Dying or even being dead in the Bible is depicted as sleeping. Jesus essentially said "Wake up" too when he healed the dying or brought back the dead.
@Neopopulist7 ай бұрын
@@TheLeondude Not trying to diminish your experience, but shouting wake up is not akin to saving someone lol. The ONLY reason your mom is alive is because trained medical professionals saved her life...
@TheLeondude7 ай бұрын
@@NeopopulistLet's agree to disagree.
@tbray9 ай бұрын
I haven't been afraid of death...ever...though i admit that i was always kind of worried about the actual process. I read once that when you are experiencing death sometimes you'll see your life flash before your eyes. someone said "in situations of stress, your brain will try and find a similar thing you may have experienced in the past to help put you at ease, but when you're dying and since you've never died before, your brain flips through your memories like a rolodex looking for a something that you can relate to". The human brain is fascinating. Said my brain.
@RobertodelaVega-t3w9 ай бұрын
I'm not a Rat... I'm HUMAN. The Light is a portal, we never Die, we transform into another dimension to continue our lives.
@Garpeel9 ай бұрын
@@RobertodelaVega-t3w This guy really believes in an afterlife LMAO
@hannesaltenfelder43029 ай бұрын
That's a cool theory. Makes sense to me.
@thisisobviouslynotmyrealname9 ай бұрын
and since there is nothing ou can relate to as compared to death, the flipping goes on and on in a vain search
@feonasmith92269 ай бұрын
Ha Ha rolodex...showing your age
@nosajay7013 ай бұрын
DUDE I finally found you again after Years... I am subbing to you before I loose your channel again
@thatonebeone9 ай бұрын
i just lost my dad and watched him slowly pass away in the hospital 😭 been hard lately without him 😭 Edit: thank you for all the love and support ❤️ I'm just a lost soul right now 😭 depressed, sad, lonely, confused.. my world now feels like a dream 🥺 i promise my dad ill take care of my mom and better myself 🙏
@editorjeannie23189 ай бұрын
Sorry❤
@austinfreyrikrw66519 ай бұрын
My condolences. I too relatively recently witnessed the passing of one of my parents, my mother, about 6 months ago. It will be hard for a while. You will miss your dad a lot. But things will gradually get better and you'll hopefully keep most of the happy memories with you.
@rose_blue19 ай бұрын
RIP ❤
@julesrules72979 ай бұрын
I brought you some snacks and a puppy, friend. 🧉🍦🥮🍣🍿🥨🍓🐶
@t.n.h.ptheneohumanpatterna83349 ай бұрын
haha
@bryanbooneart9 ай бұрын
My dad died last year. He was in his 80s and congestive heart failure finally caught up with him. Fortunately I was able to get to the hospital for his last days. Once the doctors said there was nothing more to do my dad didn't want to just extend things by staying on the drugs just barely keeping his heart going so we were all present as he died. It was weird and sad and I wasn't prepared for the death rattle. Fortunately my aunt knew about it and said it was normal, but I would have probably been less stressed if I knew it was a sign of relaxation not distress. I'm getting pretty emotional thinking about it, but this video really helped me process what I experienced and what I feared my dad was experiencing. Hopefully he was experiencing the positive things outlined here. I really do feel better after watching this. Thanks for sharing it.
@bsfbestshortfilmsonyoutube9 ай бұрын
I had a near death experience. I was assaulted and suffered a blow to my head. However, the moment of the blow I felt 0 pain. i went unconscious. everything went black. i felt myself sinking into a relax state and slowly switching off. i remember telling myself. ' death,feels lonely, I know I will switch off soon into nothingness... Then soon after I seen a BRIGHT LIGHT ! my religious programming made me think ? GOD is this you ?. it was the bright lights from the operating table and the skilled doctors & nurses saving my life ! My brain had swollen out,and I had lost my hearing and unable to walk for 2 years. But @ least I didn't die ! I got another chance to fulfill some more dreams & goals !
@aloko25449 ай бұрын
Omg you should do a KZbin video on your recovery process. I’m serious this can help and instill hope for people going through similar long term recovery like you had to go through
@azerty972129 ай бұрын
Damn bro what a story !
@bsfbestshortfilmsonyoutube9 ай бұрын
@@aloko2544 I never fully recovered but @ least I didn't die @ earlier age. Thanks for the comment 👍
@paulseblano27619 ай бұрын
Can you walk again?
@bsfbestshortfilmsonyoutube9 ай бұрын
@@paulseblano2761 yes. The first year it was difficult. Second year I relearnt how to cycle bike. I can now walk & cycle. The permanent disability issues i have are a constant head tremors, PTSD and permanent deafness in one ear 👂with constant tinnitus. 😑 I manage. It could have been worse.
@brdgrhm2 ай бұрын
5 years ago I went into cardiac arrest during a stent procedure. I felt nothing, as if a light turned off into darkness. From the moment I was revived, I profoundly felt as if I had gained a “superpower” and a new appreciation for each waking day. The world would be a much better place if everyone realized the gift they have been given. As a side note and to pay it forward, I always remind folks over 50 to get a calcium CT scan to see whether they have any cardiac risk. Take care of yourselves!. ❤️👍🏻
@hugopcabral9 ай бұрын
This comment section feels so real. Thank you for the content. My grandfather died some months ago, I now can look back at what he went through. I was with him almost everyday till the end and he always talked about dreaming about the past and "going home". I hope he is.
@KelradRez9 ай бұрын
As someone whose grandpa died a few days ago. He showed all these steps before dying. Thank you for the info
@Nessa___9 ай бұрын
My grandmother died on the 15th and she was very peaceful and her breath just got shallower and fewer until her last xx
@nellekx3 ай бұрын
Watching anything related to death increases my heart rate and i feel like im shortening my life by watching this. Does anyone else feel like this
@AlyssaLuisa9 ай бұрын
I watched my mom die. I saw this video at 11:11. I’m a medical provider, very clinical, but have never been able to come to terms with watching her die. I feel she led me to this video to help me understand.
@alextremo14869 ай бұрын
I’m very sorry about your mom. This doesn’t compare to losing your mother. But I was just telling my gf how I bag up pets that we put down and it’s very hard knowing it’s someone’s loved one. There are special clients, owners that we’ve seen over the years and those do hurt. But none of that prepared me for when I had to put my first pet down. Crazy how even when they’re at rest the universe helps us connect to our loved ones. Que descanse en paz.
@jacktimefilms58249 ай бұрын
GG
@DarthKater3119 ай бұрын
🫂
@mikejameson76789 ай бұрын
Ah yes, exactly the video you need at 2 AM. Also, "How dying feels like" reminds me of kzbin.info/www/bejne/a3fIlWqdedehgM0
@ulicadluga9 ай бұрын
Yes. Cheered me right up 😰
@BIGMark-wx6gn9 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂. U can DucKing say that again !!!!!! I'm Just in my damn bed thinking happy thoughts waiting for the weekend and get this at night 😂
@jgomez15899 ай бұрын
Ahh I see it’s on purpose cuz different times zones for me lol but same
@jnbg615849 ай бұрын
Funnily enough, I’m watching this at 230am in my own time zone. Though I work at night, so this is normal for me
@ehabahmed70369 ай бұрын
3:55 for fml
@tommyNix40989 ай бұрын
You have a lot of courage to explore this topic. Thank you.
@SM-nd6rp2 ай бұрын
I had a bad seizure a few months ago from mixing my medication with alcohol and was dead. Woke up in the hospital I could hear the nurse calling me name from a distance and it got closer and closer.. while I was dead.. just black nothing else.
@RobbieManic9 ай бұрын
My neighbour died last year in June and I saw him the last few days before he went. I live in a shared accommadation so we had a shared kitchen and he told me he had a bowel issue, pneumonia (at Christmas) and another problem (the swelling in his legs). He asked me to put something in the outside bin for him because he was struggling to walk, and I did so for him, offering to help with anything he needed. Our rooms were opposite each other, so I heard him being sick and coughing a lot in the last few months before he died. I remember telling him I was concerned with his swollen legs and wanted him to see a doctor (they weren't concerned at all, unless he lost all feeling in them) and the last words he said to me were "I'll be dead soon, there'll be a room free". That was 2 days before he went.
@Xemaxemaxema699 ай бұрын
GAYUP
@Xemaxemaxema699 ай бұрын
Was it Uncle Hamish?
@jacktimefilms58249 ай бұрын
GG
@hbuels71258 ай бұрын
I died a bit when i got shot. It was okay. Im alive now and certainly do not fear death, but am usually happy i get to continue to experience life, even though others have a habit of making it less than desirable at times.
@jonwhittaker63078 ай бұрын
mhm
@T.D.F.M7 ай бұрын
I experienced dying when I was 16 due to severe head tramua and brain hemorrhage, I became very weak to the point I couldn't move and it was hard to even breathe.
@WilliamMarcotte-io4go6 ай бұрын
Yes my relatives do that then God all a disappointment
@halftime8144 ай бұрын
Yeah it's alot of evil ppl in this world and most of them are in the government
@Natinka2229 ай бұрын
I'm 25 and I'm extremely scared of dying. I think about it all the time, mostly at night before I go to bed and it's really hard to stop thinking about it. My brain just can't comprehend that I won't exist after sometime and I just start spiraling into a hole of those kind of thoughts. When I wake up the next day I hope these thoughts are gone but they reaper more often than before and I start making conclusions like "why do I bother do anything at all", "nothing matters, i don't matter", "life is too short why do I have to work half my life and not do what I want (wait... I can't because someone has to pay the bills)", "I have dreams but I'll never be able to achieve them" and so on. I also have depression and this really worsens it. I've tried talking to relatives but most of them don't really believe I have depression in the first place (even though it's diagnosed from a doctor) and when I tell them about my thoughts their answer is "stop thinking about this you're too young". Yes, I am young... for now. I guess I'm sharing this because I search for an answer different from what my relatives are saying or for some hope or something? I don't know, just something to make me feel better. I've never been so honest and I've never shared something so personal to me on the Internet. I hope you guys won't laugh at me. Sending love to everyone. ❤
@samanthamartin14079 ай бұрын
This is EXACTLY what I've been going through for the past 6 months. I'm only 24, and I wonder how I'll cope as I grow older. It came on after I had a series of panic attacks that lasted almost 3 weeks, with the final panic attack being so bad I thought I was dying right then. I've been a mess, but I've been working through it. Personally, I don't entirely believe that we cease to exist, although my brain is inclined to believe that I'll no longer exist because it sounds like the most logical idea. Something about it doesn't sit right with me.
@ishanmatta3799 ай бұрын
Search ayahuasca and learn about it. Also look for Ian Stevenson and his work. I’m not sharing this and asking you to believe what I say. I believe there is something beyond us and ofc does not include religion.
@unknownRebelPL9 ай бұрын
32 and same story
@BlatentCheater9 ай бұрын
Believe in god. It will help. It helped me. I had the exact same thoughts as you. Here's some things to help you believing some sort of higher power (aka god) is real. (I'm agnostic and semi theist).: Ppl tell u abt the big bang. It came from a singularity. Well, there the hell did the singularity come from? Someone must've created it. Guess what? That's god. Trust me, it helps knowing theres life after death. Hope this helps.
@gorgono19 ай бұрын
honestly I struggle as well. Believing in something will help. If you believe there is nothing after, you are a lost soul ... it will drive you nuts. How do I know? I've been there and back. I didn't believe in anything and my life was empty. There has to be more, if people just stop and think how weird life is, they will see we couldn't have just "popped" form a freaking explosion. Science tries to explain things, but science is not all knowing, not at all. Science is wrong all the time. We as society just "normalized" our lives and pretend that it is normal to be living in an endless void, flying around on a rock into never ending nothingness. People are too busy with their jobs and what not, so they dont have time to just lay down, relax and think abou it, they refuse to do it. Why? Because if you do, the first thing that will happen is panic, existencial crisis. It is not an easy process. Big Bang and Evolution are wrong theories, believed by the blind sheep who refuse to research and think for themselves. Yes, there is evolution, but not to the point where a fully new species can be created ... The world is maddness rn
@dyingcrowd4833812 күн бұрын
I almost died from blood loss (not injury related), but it happened over the span of about 50 days of consistent heavy bleeding. I would black out for around 15+ seconds when I stood up or moved too quickly at all, I couldn’t hear much and I felt like I was floating. Throughout this time I felt just lethargic really, my iron was super low as I was already anemic but I was super tired too. I wasn’t hungry or thirsty, and just wanted to sleep all the time. It was similar to being in a dream state of sort… I can’t remember much from that time just feeling tired, oddly relaxed and the only visual memories I have during that time is mostly just me zoning out for long periods of time. Anyways thank God that my mom convinced me to go to the hospital, I wanted to wait two more days to see my doctor but they told me at the hospital about an hour away that I would have died the next day if I hadn’t gotten their help. Had to get two blood transfusions and had basically three prior iron infusions as they thought that was causing my symptoms. But yeah, this video is pretty relatable for me. At least the first part about the relaxation feeling, it’s surprisingly true as I knew something was a bit odd as it didn’t feel like the normal anemia symptoms I had felt before, but I didn’t really want to go anywhere or do anything out of exhaustion and numbness.
@bluewarrenlim8 ай бұрын
7 months ago, i was in a motorcycle accident. I was flying and i nearly died due to impact of my head on the road. Before almost dying, memories of my entire life flashed into me while i was heavily breathing and time is slowing down hence i controlled how i fell
@willynthepriestess8 ай бұрын
Same, same bro. Broke both femurs and died on the helicopter. Besides feeling like a concertina I remember being at peace and giving myself permission to go, "It's ok mate, you can go..." Then waking up in traction before surgery. Hat off, dude. We're still here😉
@cameronwheeler32196 ай бұрын
I was a pitcher in baseball and when I was a teenager I had a ball hit directly towards my face. Everything slowed down and felt like everything was in slow motion like in a movie. I ended up catching the ball otherwise I would have been dead. Someone had filmed it and watching it in real time it was so fast. The ball had to have been 100+ miles off the bat
@MrPervezAlam5 ай бұрын
@@cameronwheeler3219 that's amazing.. can you share that video? I am really interested, something like that happened to me but I missed the little ball which hit my eye :( :D
@unbadger9 ай бұрын
This video was posted 5 days before my dad passed and now im watching it 5 days after. I wish I had seen this video sooner but luckily KZbin has some genuinely great videos on this subject. I’m happy to say most of this video is familiar to what I had already researched but I’m still glad I watched it. Thanks guys, been watching your channel for many years ❤️
@riceburner47479 ай бұрын
First of all, YOU ARE WAY TOO YOUNG TO THINK ABOUT DYING! Great video & spot on. I am 71, my parents, 4yr older sister, & my fraternal twin bros are all deceased. EVERYDAY, I wonder when its MY time. So many famous ppl are dying around my age. There are times I hit lows as u state. Dreams, experiences, etc. I just try to do the best I can, with what I have and let the chips fall where they may. I have lived my life. 👍✊️🖖❤️ PS. A person dying/or in a coma, can hear what u say. This is your chance to tell them how much u love them.😊😊
@LouciferFlump8 ай бұрын
People can die as babies, people can live into 3 figures. Don’t wonder when it is your time! Enjoy your life!!! Best wishes ❤
@ThirdEye7108 ай бұрын
I don't think that coma info is true lol.
@ceinwenchandler47168 ай бұрын
@@ThirdEye710 Hard to verify, yeah. But it's still worth a shot, right? It can't possibly hurt if you tell someone on their deathbed how much you love them and that you look forward to seeing them again when it's your time. And it might give you some closure if you say all the things you regret not saying earlier. (Should probably try not to say anything that'll make it more stressful in the even that they CAN hear you, though.)
@lynnsundrop8 ай бұрын
That's what the nurses say when you're visiting them in the hospital. Idk if it's just to comfort the family/friends, but you would think it would be unethical to lie about something like that @@ThirdEye710
@MaximeGagné-j4q8 ай бұрын
death can happen at any time, she dont mind ur age, so much people have die around me since im a kid.
@ellentau4273 ай бұрын
I had a near death experience and it was so wonderful and so calming that when I was told I had to go back I asked to stay. I woke up after 3days of being in a coma and instead of feeling at peace I was extremely angry to be back.
@Mazer199449 ай бұрын
I am VERY afraid of the dying experience to the point I am having panic attacks. This video really helped me calm down about it a little bit. Thank you ❤
@kittymandias9 ай бұрын
Me too. I didn't have a real fear of dying until I got some health problems. It wasn't anything life threatening, but something has changed, and know I'm afraid of heart attacks, severe allergies, asthma, and anything that may kill me in minutes. I hate feeling this way.
@gorgono19 ай бұрын
I had at least two panic attacks per month last year and this year still continues. So I take medication, but because of them I developed health anxiety ... it is awful, you are not alone.
@motivemaker78539 ай бұрын
It's ok. We are all going to experience it someday. Everyone alive today will pass through life within 150 years (barring technological advancements), so know that you're not alone in this experience.
@barrymoore44709 ай бұрын
This is the miracle of death, in how it comes to us and takes us whether we feel like we can handle it or not. Just as life has a way of working itself out, I think death does too.
@hbennett56405 ай бұрын
Yes, I have read other articles that our body, mind, and the shut down process are all ways the body protects itself and leads to a peaceful end.
@seansisley76709 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for making this video. I watched my Dad pass away January 12th, 2024 I won't go into what I witnessed, but it was very traumatizing for me. This video really helped me understand what he went through, and helped with the continued grieving process I am going through. You all are awesome, keep the great content coming.
@nysari_9 ай бұрын
I love seeing content like this that seeks to demystify death, I feel like there's been a trend lately of seeing more of it around and I'm so here for it! I'm a long-time fan of Caitlin Doughty and her Ask a Mortician series, and I recently came across Hospice Nurse Julie who spoke about a lot of the same things in this video from the perspective of what it's like to sit vigil for a dying person. I think knowing what it's like, knowing what happens to your body during and afterward, knowing what your wishes would be for your remains... it all helps with finding peace around death.
@loomonda184 ай бұрын
My last grandpa is dying... He is at the stage of eating and drinking small spoonfuls. He has been sad for many years of I'm being honest. He is 94. It's odd seeing him like this.
@babydactyl9 ай бұрын
i've had a theory that an afterlife is essentially a dreamlike state, and the "flash before your eyes" moment is your brain scanning a large part of your core memories to simulate the most relaxing place for your consciousness to rest after death (or whatever the afterlife you imagine is there after death), maybe as an evolutionary trait to reduce suffering. it feels like a lot of this confirms that theory. i think dreams and death are closely linked, and i hope we're able to learn more about dreams as science progresses
@TheLordsCanary9 ай бұрын
I just read a book that kindaaaaaaa explored this idea with a story where Sleep and Death are brothers, and I wish the author would’ve gone more in depth with it! The pacing was a bit clumsy but if anyone is interested the book was Nocturne by Alyssa Wees.
@babydactyl9 ай бұрын
@@TheLordsCanary omg! i'll check that out thank u!
@ruriwijaya5959 ай бұрын
That's interesting, I have another theory related to that, about humans' belief in the concept of soul. When someone passed away, we still feel their presence strongly because they have such a huge impact on our lives, so the feelings of someone being here/alive is different from the real state of someone actually being here/alive So my theory is that humans believe soul exist because we can't grasp the concept of death so we mistake the feelings of someone's presence for their actual presence that is death
@gwynethpearson88709 ай бұрын
I’m skeptical on the evolutionary trait to reduce suffering theory because I’m unsure how there would be any selection pressure for specific experiences before death. I have my own theory that the feelings we feel when we’re about to die is a result of the body trying to ease itself of pain. Your body naturally releases opiates as kind of a painkiller (I think) so it’s possible that when everything is shutting down, it causes such a ruckus that the body over corrects and releases so much that you end up actually feeling pretty good. What this video was saying reminded me a lot of what people experience when they take strong drugs like h3r01n, where you become very calm, relaxed, and kinda enter these dreamlike states. Now I’ve never experienced dying nor have I ever taken opiates so take this with a grain of salt.
@langreeves64199 ай бұрын
@@gwynethpearson8870yes, most evolutionary traits are based on what causes offspring.
@eli.braun98947 ай бұрын
As someone who has OD'd and shit, I will say dying is weird, I've never seen a tunnel or light but for some reason, I can picture my dead body from a third-person perspective above my body. Almost like I left my body and then looked down at it.
@Boatfam45 ай бұрын
Very fascinating. I think it's called an out-of-body experience. I've experienced it via meditation (albeit, to a lesser degree).
@santiagocarreno58812 ай бұрын
CPuld you please elaborate a lot on that, really interested; did other people after you woke up, confirmed in a way that what you saw was real?
@Calbizzle9 ай бұрын
I work in a care home & have seen more death working there in three months than in my entire life. It’s great to know that the people who passed were at peace. Thank you so much ❤
@frustationoverloaded59769 ай бұрын
u guys help keeping that peace for them , thank u
@dm00652 ай бұрын
One of the things that worries us most I think about dying is how hard it will hit our loved ones. They'll hardly notice, apart from being drawn from their routine for a few days while they get you buried and do other arrangements. Not because you dont matter to them, but because they've got lives of their own and they're busy. Every now and then something will happen in their day that they'd like to talk to you about, then they'll realize they cant, because you're dead. And that'll fade over time. That's about the most impact you'll have on anybody. Cheers!
@editorsanimationVlogs9 ай бұрын
just what i wanted to watch before bed tonight
@grahamkelly86629 ай бұрын
Same here 😂
@sheilapate76049 ай бұрын
I know right 😮
@mangocrumble34199 ай бұрын
Welcome to the party pal
@sdfjkhuiaghj9 ай бұрын
same lol 😂😂😂
@KennethCochran-h2p9 ай бұрын
Me too
@allisonself92109 ай бұрын
Remember watching your channel in high school......over a decade ago! Wow! Yall are going STRONG!
@TheYoungB69 ай бұрын
Thank you for this. This info was actually pretty comforting to know
@monkmell6 ай бұрын
Well, in 1975 when I was a 10 year old child, I had a near death experience or Nde. There’s no way that, that was a illusion or chemical “BANG!” of any sort! I floated over myself and was met whilst “up there” by a old lady who telepathically told me “you have to go back, it’s not your time yet” I was absolutely FURIOUS! Why? Because whilst being over my lifeless body I felt like I had instead of being surrounded in Oxygen, I was surrounded in pure LOVE. Not a word of a lie. I even remembered thinking that I was going “home” and I was really looking forward to it. (I had been very bullied as a child, plus my family life wasn’t much to write home about either!) I could hear peoples thoughts…everything but telepathically! My vision was perfect too (I normally wore National Health glasses from the UK…I told you I was bullied didn’t I!) but the point I’m trying to make is this…there’s no way that my brain was doing this to me! If I was or had been so uninhibited, there’s absolutely no way I’d have ended up in some Hospital room looking down on myself! Instead I would have gone to Disney Land (I’d seen it on the tv) or gone to my best friends house! Also, I told my best friend what had happened when I got home, and mentioned it to my grandfather. He was the type of person who was a complete Conservative, a mechanical engineer, not in the slightest bit spiritual and lastly he was a big “0” when it came to anything “fantastical” or emotional! He was the sort of man you didn’t confide in is what I’m trying to say! I took the plunge and told him about it all. He asked me what the old lady looked like? When I explained her appearance to him (and remember how I described him!) he looked like a man who was in utter, utter cold shock. I had never met or even heard him discuss or describe his mother, he just wasn’t that sort of person. In those days (when she was alive) women wore floor length skirts, blouses that were like Polo necks and had long hair done up in a bun. Anyway, (sorry this is so long!) I described her to him, even to her Purple and black lined blouse that tapered inwards to the waist. She also had a broach clipped to her neck. Then…and this is the part that amazes me…I completely forgot about the entire incident for the next 35 years! I remembered it only when I was reading a book by Eckhart Tolle and I was researching the subject of Spirituality and Spiritualism. So, I understand that a lot of the biological processes are true, but I definitely WON’T and NEVER will believe that, that is THE only truth about the way we die. I just won’t! 😊😂🎉❤
@hbennett56405 ай бұрын
I loved your story❤
@monkmell5 ай бұрын
@@hbennett5640 Thanks! It’s all totally true too. I feel I have to keep repeating that because there are so many people who think it’s impossible to be real, that it’s just something people lie about! I used to think when we died it was just going to be a black nothingness, but that’s definitely not the case! 🤗
@ethanebonhart67055 ай бұрын
thats a beautiful memory, thank you for sharing it with us
@Boatfam45 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing, it was a great read. One thing that fascinates me about some near-death experiences is when they have either a choice to stay or return to life, or they're told that it's not time yet. There is profoundly beautiful about that to me for some reason. One can only imagine what lies beyond. Perhaps it's incomprehensible. But I hope it's something good.
@monkmell5 ай бұрын
@@ethanebonhart6705 You're very welcome! Thanks for taking the time to read and respond to it! 🤗
@anewsin9 ай бұрын
Hi. Died twice in one week just over 10 years ago. I have literally nothing too add to your assessment. Well, other than the fact that me and every other person who I have met who has died and "come back" love to talk about it insensately just because we feel trapped in a life that we cannot get away from, whether it is by our own methods or by external forces.
@kevinhank179 ай бұрын
Hi, can I ask what you mean by that? Do you mean you feel like it was better on the other side? I've come close to not coming back and I had an interesting experience when that happened, I know one guy who also went and came back but he won't talk about it. When it happened to me I definitely saw some things but I wouldn't say I feel trapped in life again, more like I was born back into life I guess. Hard to really clarify. I'd be interested if you felt like elaborating, I haven't really heard anyone else's experiences.
@anewsin9 ай бұрын
@@kevinhank17 I appreciate what you responded with. I got sick and flat-lined twice. There is a tonne more on that, so I wrote a book a few years ago. I was cynical before, but I have become more so since my "return". That's why I worded things the way I did.
@kevinhank179 ай бұрын
@@anewsin okay thanks, yeah I wasn't sure what you meant. I can understand that though, personally I started to care a lot less about not being able to control things in my life, which isn't necessarily a good thing, since I drowned. Like the importance of things kinda faded maybe. Enthusiasm went out the window as well, like anything that happens now just kind of is acceptable but nothing to get excited or mad about. The guy I mentioned that won't talk about it obviously had a rough experience, mine started bad but then just got real weird and I hate not knowing if it was just hallucinations as I slipped away or not. I've read lots of experiences from people saying they saw family or their chosen religious icons but mine was nothing like what I've read. Anyways, I'm over sharing, thanks for clarifying what you meant, I get it I think.
@rayvincyful19 ай бұрын
Shadows die Twice
@vicaria1199 ай бұрын
I watched my father die and the death rattle was the worst part. Its nice to know he was actually in no pain. Miss him ❤
@bethdealmeida67899 ай бұрын
Witnessed the same...my father passed away 4 months ago and this was comforting...oh, Dad 😥🕯
@minnedejong98586 ай бұрын
2:54 saw a video of a dying dad with his son by his side. He heard that rattle and saw a "soul" (a light) coming out of his dads belly.
@acommoncurry5 ай бұрын
I've seen it to
@nickenglehart64694 ай бұрын
Gonna link the video or just assume everyone has seen it???
@jesusjimenez67554 ай бұрын
May you send the link? 🥺
@BOBMARTINTOM_624 ай бұрын
Not everyone can link ☠️
@thom4s._.r9 ай бұрын
thank you bro, this makes me feel a lot better.
@Smashingblouse9 ай бұрын
I’ve nearly snuffed it 5 times. Two from massive blood loss trauma and 3 from ketoacidosis leading to sepsis and all manner of complications. My experiences have been panic, pain, terror more pain more terror. There wasn’t a slow build up to any of the events so there was no time to prepare my brain. It’s left me with absolute gratitude and admiration for the emergency staff that saved me and every day I’m not experiencing that is a massive bonus. Everyone is different of course but I have a high pain threshold and not much scares me. It is painful, it is scary. Even if you’re not religious you will damn sure be praying to any deity that cares to listen, trust me. Also hope to hell you’ve got a set of docs that aren’t stingy with the painkilling needle because you’ll be silently screaming for it before the “peace” of the coma.
@SB-vh9bs9 ай бұрын
well thats a cheerful comment
@Smashingblouse9 ай бұрын
@@SB-vh9bs everyone is different and death or dying is obviously a unique experience for everyone. I’ve watched someone simply close their eyes and go. The truth about such matters isn’t supposed to be cheerful but it is the truth.
@CovidIslandDiscs9 ай бұрын
Sorry you have had to live through such horrible experiences.
@LenDawg2039 ай бұрын
lmao! thanks for giving me something to look forward to. cant wait !
@Smashingblouse9 ай бұрын
@@LenDawg203 it’s just my personal experience and it’s not like that for everybody. If, for example, you last until old age and end up in a home the chances are you’ll just pop off in your sleep. That’s exactly what happened to our family friend. She did start to refuse food and drink (she had dementia) and one day she just passed. No pain, no struggle, no fear just bye bye. My situation was different. Every time it was an emergency so completely out of my control, no lead up if you will. One thing I will say is try and make sure your diet and lifestyle is as healthy as you can make it because if the time comes and it’s too soon for you then fight. Fight with all your power to keep mr black cloak, big scythe thing from taking you. Be well 🫶🏻
@ahorrell9 ай бұрын
My experience was this: - it wasn't frightening, it was quite calm - it felt very inevitable (that feeling was incorrect!) - it was still scary, but in a weird calm way (?) - I was profoundly profoundly alone in the experience
@Amiralbayrak9 ай бұрын
did the time feel slow
@connesuir9 ай бұрын
experience? how so?
@ahorrell9 ай бұрын
@@Amiralbayrak Not really, but I was very very in that moment.
@ClintWestVood9 ай бұрын
Every living creature on earth dies alone. we may be surrounded by loved ones but its our own experience
@ahorrell9 ай бұрын
@@connesuirlol this reply, i'm literally dead (but seriously, I'd rather not talk about it cos I'll have to deal with awful targeted ads from Google)
@The_Forgiven_Serpent5 ай бұрын
Just kills me to think about this… This is how my great-grampa went. Died of old age. One of the sweetest people ever. God bless his soul.
@rishabhanand72049 ай бұрын
My grandmother passed away recently after suffering from pneumonia. This really helps
@samihanaznin58548 ай бұрын
after reading those comment section i am extremly sorry for what u guys have to gone though or watched ur loved one in those situation . I hope those souls could rest in peace. And people who survived im happy for u also man enjoy ur life u r lucky and spend time. You never know when ur time came in
@aidensface41319 ай бұрын
Watching this exhausted even after sleeping 24 hours. "My time has come"
@RalphVB8 ай бұрын
No one needs 24 hours of sleep tho lol.
@ChadeGB4 ай бұрын
I was present when my wife's mother died from pancreatic cancer. She was in her 40's, very thin and weak, was at a point where she was unable to stand, struggled to even sit up anymore and couldn't speak. The night she died though she was quite active and animated, then in one sudden moment she swung her legs round off the edge of the bed and stood up, held her arms out in front of her and her sister jumped up and put her arms around her and she just passed away there and then in her sisters arms. Not something I, or anyone else there is ever likely to forget.
@GR-ji9fw9 ай бұрын
This is actually comforting.
@chanelise78949 ай бұрын
one thing i wonder is the sudden deaths, such as the implosion where within a second, the whole of you is gone. no time to think about anything/you don't realize you're going to die/are dying.
@marcse7en9 ай бұрын
I always think if you die in your sleep, you won't know you're dead? ... If you slowly slip away, like in the movies, you know you're dying, but if it's in your sleep, or sudden, you might not know you've died, and that would really annoy me! Not to know I've died?
@youtuber234509 ай бұрын
Every soul shall taste death, is mentioned in the quran. No matter if it's in a sleep or sudden one. Nobody actually knows what it feels like, but it's very painful for non Muslims. That's for sure, I'm not trying to scare or belittle you, but it's the reality. It's painful even for non practicing muslims
@yaboifredrickscadon9 ай бұрын
@@youtuber23450 Death can be painful for Muslims too what are you talking about 💀
@notbroken43429 ай бұрын
@@yaboifredrickscadon Religious brainwashing has that person believing non Muslims suffer because they chose the wrong religion.
@yaboifredrickscadon9 ай бұрын
@@notbroken4342 Oh
@suban21638 ай бұрын
Bit out of nowhere, but I would like to thank the two of you for being one of my biggest inspirations. I stumbled upon this video, and I recognized this channel and voice immediately. I have watched your videoes since I was 12 (almost 21) now, and I haven’t seen your channel pop up on my recommended in a long time. And to say I wouldn’t be studying 1st semester in medicine without this channel would be a lie. So truly, from the bottom of my heart: thank you
@thewilliam83427 ай бұрын
I’ve died 3 times. Extreme confusion, uncertainty & significant curiosity. No fear @ all because you don’t understand what’s going on & it happens amazingly fast.
@4am4465 ай бұрын
Wow that’s profound I really wanna know if anyone has seen God/things like that
@thewilliam83425 ай бұрын
@@4am446 Sorry, no visions of a supreme being …🤷🏻♂️
@TishieMcTashie9 ай бұрын
I'm so glad to hear about feeling relaxed, and not getting pain from the death rattle (scared the poop out of me when I heard it). I flew to NY from UK to help with home hospice care for my grandad in his final weeks and he went from barely conscious, randomly back to his jolly old self (except weaker and bed bound), then sleepy with odd physical behaviours like biting random things but still responding to pain, to being barely responsive and taking 5 minutes to swallow a mouthful of water on his last day. He swallowed then exhaled and that was that. It's been a year and there hasn't been a single day gone by without a flashback to Grandad's bedside.
@satabdichatterjee8 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this video.
@marianamonteiro88409 ай бұрын
Thank you ❤ This video is consoling for me, as it makes me rethink the departure of loved ones.
@Atlas_Cloud4 ай бұрын
My mom died at 52 and the week of her actively dying was the most difficult I’ve ever experienced. The death rattle is no joke and it makes you feel awful.
I wrote an unpublished book on all types of human death , about 25 years ago . Thanks for updating me on the subject , I really enjoyed it . Most people are so negative towards the subject because they lack direct and important information on the subject . Thanks again and spread the word --- have no fear of it .
@Ease549 ай бұрын
But...I REALLY like it here!...
@benjaminhawthorne19699 ай бұрын
I am epileptic and I had a "Near-Death Experience" in 2018 after suffering a Grand Mal Seizure, Traumatic Brain Injury and a Paralytic Stroke. At the start of the seizure, I saw a bright white flash of light. After I struck my head and was knocked unconscious, I do NOT recall much. I am told that I endured six (6) craniotomy brain surgeries, which saved my life, but to tell the truth, I was "gone" during all of this. I regained consciousness in my hospital bed, but it was YEARS before I understood the extent of my ordeal. I could see how dying slowly from a terminal illness would be a much different experience than what I went through. In fact, while I was in the Skilled Nursing Facility recovering from my own ordeal, my mother was dying slowly of Esophageal Cancer. 😢 She was in "Palliative Care" and then Hospice. My family told me very little about this and I was prohibited from saying farewell to her.
@robertjarman42619 ай бұрын
Read some Dostoyevsky.
@lotashiana9 ай бұрын
happy that you're still here ❤
@benjaminhawthorne19699 ай бұрын
@@lotashiana I am too, Dear! Thank you! 🤗 I thank Our Lord every day in prayer. 1st for giving me life and then for returning my life to me.
@sasookay5145 ай бұрын
A close friend of mine died from a fentanyl overdose last year. It's very surreal trying to process what she went through with her brain shutting down from lack of oxygen and suffering brain death as she was in the hospital. This video does shed some light and a offers a bit of comfort. Thank you.
@chekote9 ай бұрын
You tackled this sensitive topic very well 👏🏻
@NatalieHarrisonLim9 ай бұрын
Yes this is exactly what I needed during an existential crisis 😃
@KopyErr9 ай бұрын
Something that somewhat calmed me down when I was having an existential crisis about death, was thinking that everyone, my friends, all the people I know, the people I put on a pedestal, we all go through the same thing In union, a feeling of togetherness and closeness, like they're gonna go through it too But I don't know if thinking that was more effective when you yourself came to the thought instead of being told it, or if an existential crisis is something that you just have to wait out after all
@domri45179 ай бұрын
Don't worry, you were "dead" for the last 13.5 billion years before you were born.. So you allredy know how it is, kinda
@justaguy21839 ай бұрын
@@domri4517 I mean, there is also reincarnation, pre-existence, and not just “nothingness” that gives a view of what happened before we were born
@domri45179 ай бұрын
@@justaguy2183 oh yes... i mean, that sounds a bit nicer and more hopeful 😅