![]() ![]() Since you've thought about it, my impression was more that we're forced to distribute consciousness. (you might also see things that aren't part of the car but I'm leaving that out here to talk about how long an experience feels like) It can feel even longer when recalling the memory. The experience under the influence might feel like it took 2 minutes, but in reality it probably took 10 seconds. Like how it's somehow symmetrical in shape, the reflection of the car from the sun, transparent windows that somehow reflects the environment a little bit but is still somehow lets you see the inside of the car, the front part of the car looks like a face, the car is larger than you, etc, etc. You've probably seen a car before so it's not something you need to pay attention to.īut under the influence of psychedelics you pay attention to all the details of the car. Under normal circumstances when looking at a random car, you most likely just see a car. When it comes to feeling "slow motion" on psychedelics, it feels like you're just taking in and focusing on too many details so your memory of the experience feels a lot longer than it actually was. The subconscious knowledge of this is why we've internalized and re-expressed the "judgement upon death" notion across many religions. If you "pass", then the simulation ensures your exist for at least a while longer, otherwise, it lets the event take its course. So the rapid processing starves the normal "subjective you" process, and your consciousness gets to "peek through" at the workings of the simulation as it judges whether you dying would be catastrophic. This requires intense extra compute in real-time to assess each moment of your life, and the reason you experience it is because there's no priority in that moment to maintain the normal veil between "in-time" (real time subjective to observer) and "out-of-time" (ie as in simulation time) experience. I have another theory: life-review is the simulation diverting additional compute resources to your local "process" to quickly judge whether or not your annihilation would be optimal for the reality/simulation/timeline. ![]() I was dimly aware of the ground at the last moment as it came towards me and thinking back on it the scenes faded and real time came back along with my sense of the outside world aka the ground. A precession of memories certainly indicates time flow. I have no recollection of the composition of ‘the slideshow’ but do remember for eg love for my mother in certain ‘scene(s)’ and that was more of a ‘real-time’ segment. of course early memories are not (for me)as complex or emotionally involving or nuanced with language so the bulk of memories were from later life. Enough to re live the experience with a different perspective. Was that seconds or moments or just memory clusters firing I don’t know. I don’t remember a cradle to present run through of memories but I certainly saw / experienced a slideshow and then ‘real time’ moments of positive interactions with people, which then moved on. It’s not easy to characterise / quantify an answer but there was no experience of time, I was not aware enough of externalities to know what slow motion would be as that implies a connection to outer time. Zemmar's name was spelled incorrectly in an earlier version of this article.I went onto study physics, I used to think about it every now and then. "If I can contribute to tell them that your loved one in this moment doesn't have pain, they're fine, they're experiencing the most memorable moments of your life before they go, I think that would mean a lot and comfort my patients."ĬORRECTION (March 12, 2022, 1:50 p.m.): Dr. "These families have an unimaginable amount of pain in these moments. Zemmar hopes this case could bring comfort to grieving families after losing a loved one. Since this was only one case, more research is needed to determine if this phenomenon is something all of us experience or not.īut Dr. That’s how they realized just how rare it was to capture this type of brain recording. Zemmar said the study was done in 2016, and they waited years to publish their work, reaching out to colleagues with the hope of finding more case studies. His work is now published in the journal "Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience."ĭr. "I would like to think that it is a soothing feeling just before we die, and we experience the most memorable experiences of our life flashing in the span of seconds through our head just before we go," he said. What is Powassan Virus? What to Know as US Death Reported From Tickborne Illness ![]()
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