What happens after you die?
Whether you need a domain, website, or online store, make it
with Squarespace. What happens when you
finally kick the bucket, so to speak?
Despite our mostly
science-grounded views on death these days, it seems many of us believe in life
after it. In 2014, UK citizens were
polled by the Telegraph, and just under 60 percent of respondents said they
believe some part of us lives on. In the
U.S., still a very Christian nation, Pew Research in 2015 asked people what happened
after you die.
The survey found
that 72 percent of Americans believed you go to heaven, which was described as
a place “where people who have led good lives are eternally rewarded.” 54 percent of U.S. adults replied that they
believed in hell, which was described as a place “where people who have led bad
lives and die without being sorry are eternally punished.”
With that in mind,
welcome to this episode of the Infographics Show, what happens when you die? It seems a lot of people do believe that
after death we might be ensconced in some cloud-strewn paradise, or conversely,
if we haven’t adhered to the ethics prescribed to us by our chosen religion or
denomination of that religion, we might be faced with eternal hellfire and the
prospect of groveling to a bearded red man who hardly ever puts down his
pitchfork.
But let’s start with
some empirical realism and what actually happens to the body when we die. Physicians know your dead because the heart
stops beating and there is no longer any electrical activity in your brain.
Brain death equals
dead, although machines can keep you going a little bit longer. You can also have what’s called a cardiac
death, which means the heart stops beating and blood no longer flows through
your body. The strange, even wonderful
thing is, people that have suffered cardiac death but have been brought back to
life have said they were aware of what was going on around them.
Others have talked about walking towards a light in such a
near death experience. You can be
brought back from what we call clinical death, but you only have a grace period
of about 4-6 minutes. But let’s say you
get to the light and pass through; this is what we call biological death – game
over, the final whistle, dead as a dodo.
This is where it gets
kind of undignified, but what do you care, you’re dead. Once you’re definitely no longer with us,
your muscles relax, and this means your sphincter will too, meaning that triple
Whopper and large fires you had for lunch will spill out of you – the gas you
have in you may also leak out and cause a stink.
The same goes for
the pee you’ve got in your bladder, so dying not surprisingly is a bit of a
messy affair. And men, you might even
ejaculate. As for women, you may give
birth after you have died if you were pregnant, which is something called
“coffin birth”.
It doesn’t happen
often, though. Instead of pushing, it’s
the gases in the abdomen that squeeze the newborn into the world. As the body gets rid of what is trapped
inside, noises may be emitted from your mouth as air escapes.
Nurses and people working close to dead bodies have
regularly reported hearing very alive-sounding moans and groans coming from
dead bodies. You may twitch, but this
doesn’t mean there is life in you, these are just muscle contractions. You could also soon get an erection if you
died lying on your stomach and the blood flowed down there.
All your blood will
pool to a certain area of your body. This
is called “livor mortis” and it’s the reason parts of you will have that dark
purple color you have seen on TV. These
are the lovely things that can happen quite shortly after you go. With no blood flowing through your body, it
will begin to cool down, known as “lager mortis”, or simply “death chill”.
It will keep cooling
until it is the same temperature as your surroundings. You will become stiff within about 2-6 hours,
and this we call “rigor mortis”. This is
because calcium is getting into your muscle cells. Cells break down without blood flow and this
leads to bacteria growth, and that’s why you start to decompose. You may look like your hair or your nails
have grown, but that isn’t the case. What
is happening is that your skin is receding, giving the impression of growth.
The skin will
loosen, too, and blisters will appear on the body. The next stage is putrefaction, when bacteria
and microorganisms start feasting on you.
You’ll soon start to stink as bad as anything you could have imagined
while you were alive. One person
described the smell as: “Rotten eggs, feces, and a used toilet left out for a
month x 1000. It is unholy.”
Soon everything that
is soft becomes liquefied, with things like bones, cartilage and hair remaining
strong. You’re already well on your way
to decomposing by the time you are being put in the ground. But if embalmed and buried, decomposition
could be a slow process.
Left above ground,
you’ll be a liquefied mess within about a month, feasted on by insects, maggots,
plants, and animals. Underground, some
experts say it might take 8-12 years before you are reduced to nothing but a
skeleton. After around 50 years, even
your bones will become part of the Earth.
We should add the rate of decomposition depends on all manner of
factors, too many to list here. But we
think you get the picture.
While some people
report that their near-death experience was a scene to behold, that’s not
always the case. One person writing on Reedit
said his experience was as follows: “It was just black emptiness. No thoughts, no consciousness, nothing.” French philosopher Rene Descartes (Renee
Day-cart) believed the soul was separate from the body, as many religions will
tell you, and perhaps when we die something lingers on.
Friedrich Nietzsche
talked about the concept of eternal recurrence, or eternal return, meaning all
existence or energy in the universe has forever and will forever keep repeating
itself ad infinitum. You live the same
life, again and again, forever.
Now doesn’t that
make you want to live well? Here we
could make similarities to the Buddhist belief of the “Wheel of Samsara”, wherein
all souls, lives, will begin a cycle again after death, except not the same
exact life. Something we call
reincarnation, which some people say is connected to what we sometimes call de
ja vu.
Buddhists believe we
can end this vicious cycle if we can become truly enlightened, therefore
achieving nirvana. Or do we make our way
to heaven after our bodies stop working, tipping our cap to St. Peter at the Pearly Gates, hoping he won’t
deny us entrance for stealing that candy bar when we went on a school trip to
Niagara Falls? Will we be taken into
paradise, a place replete with excellent foods and gorgeous maidens that make
your dead knees go weak? Or will we
simply seed the Earth, our souls nothing more than a worldly fancy that took
our minds off our cosmic insignificance and the feeling of futility that we sometimes
experience here on tear-firma? That’s
something we can’t tell you, but we would love to know what you think. Share your thoughts in the comments and
please don’t die on us! Also, be sure to
check out our other video called This is How You Will Die!
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