What Are Your Final 60 Minutes Actually Like?

Right now, somewhere in the world, someone has exactly sixty minutes left to live. They don't know it yet. But what's actually happening inside their body has almost nothing to do with what movies have taught you. In this video, you'll discover what real medical research says about the last hour of life - from a 2013 brain study that found a surge of activity in dying brains, to evidence that hearing may be one of the last senses to fade, to why the process is rarely the violent ending most people lmagine. You'll see why this ancient biological program is shared across mammals, and why it may explain something cultures have sensed for thousands of years. If this changed how you think about life, death, or your own body, leave a like, drop a comment, and subscribe for more videos that turn real science into stories you'll actually remember. Sources & Further Reading: Boriigin et al. University of Michigan, near-death brain activity study (2013) Blundon et al., University of British Columbia, hearing in hospice patients study (2020) Cheyne-Stokes respiration, clinical literature on end-of-life breathing patterns Anthropological research on ancient burial practices and deathbed rituals #science #humanbody #evolution #anthropology #didyouknow #education #psychology