Probably the closest to an actual jump scare is when the organ segment suddenly cuts off, leaving silence for a few moments before "Place in the World Fades Away" draws to a close with a distorted variant of "Thy Cross doth call me."
The saddest thing about dementia is when people are about to die , they remember some parts of their life, and have even been able to speak and breathe as if they never had dementia.
Yes - a very good friend of my mother described this in her grandmother who had dementia. When this friend's grandmother was dying, she suddenly became very alert and distressed asking when her granddaughter would be there (she hadn't remembered who she was in years) I think unfortunately she passed while they were en route on a plane, but I think just the knowledge that she was trying her hardest to be there for her was comforting.
@@SavannahBurris yea, i guess that's why at the end of the last 6 minutes of the album you hear about 5 minutes of the cheery music after hours of distorted sounds, kinda signalling hope. And then abruptly ending with a 1 minute silence, probably for when you take a 1 minute silence for when someone passes away.
It infuriates me. It's like they defeated the condition but it's too late. Like, why does it even matter if they're in the final minutes, damn it. I hope I never experience anything similar.
Imagine: you’re in your 80’s and it’s the final stage of dementia. you cannot remember anything or anyone hell, you can’t even remember how to eat or write or do any other basic human functions! All you remember is carti’s verse in Earthquake.
Wanna hear about my sub-6 dementia speedrun I got once? I think I got it... Did I? Who are you? Wanna hear about my sub-6 dementia speedrun I got once?
A good way to stave off dementia is to continually learn things throughout your life, learning a new language at a late age is a good way to stimulate your brain, and lower the chances of you getting dementia later in your life.
I'm a psychology student, and I specialize in older people. I'm currently on my apprenticeship, in a hospital, where we see a lot of old people who have been labeled as possibly having cognitive issues. Our role is to talk to them to get a better idea of their case, and make them take tests in order to determine whether or not the cognitive deficits can be observed. It began to be a very mundane thing after a month or two, and I forgot what I was really doing to them and their families. If we can detect a neuro degenerative, I forgot what I does to them, and how hopeless we all are against dementia. I feel so shitty
Today was my last day of apprenticeship and my last patient was a 70 yo woman who had either Parkinson or lewy's body dementia. She absolutely knew what was coming coming for her, the slow descent of forgetfulness and cognitive troubles. I could hear those songs while she was talking. She was the first not to be anasognosic towards her issues, to be fully aware and to be able to explain to us what she was feeling and the constant dread of what the future will bring to her.
humans has been fighting disease for the past decade, but not completely like coronavirus they just came out of nowhere,and about dementia that has been lasting for a quite a long time still aren't curable
You know that feeling when you have a really vague memory of a dream. Like, you don’t know when you had that dream, what happened in it, who was in it, or where you were, but you still remember a few vague details? Now imagine that happening with your real-life memories. Imagine being in a room you don’t recognize, surrounded by strangers, and you sense that they’re important but you can’t remember why...
the struggle of remembering what happened to a dream, i can't imagine myself dealing with that with real life memories. yup, i'm terrified of dementia now.
Imagine knowing about terminal lucidity, having dementia and Suddenly remember that after remembering you die and you're just like: oh for fuck sake come on!
Honestly I think the scariest part about this is that the song you hear at the end isn’t the original tune that you’ve been hearing through all of the stages
Also doesn't help that it sounds like a church choir, but kinda muffled and far away and it gets suddenly quieter given the static and record fails that had been going on for a while. Gives the feeling of completely drifting away from reality so hard that your senses don't seem to stay on the same page, all there is is a far, far away chant of something you seemed to believe but you don't know what it is, it's not tangible, doesn't seem to be something at all. Then, you don't even remember you exist. And you are there, breathing like a vegetable. That is, until you forget how to do that too.
@@fx00 thats the exact point actually. at this point in the project the protagonist has died and this part is basically the scene of their funeral. goes to show how good the caretaker is at portraying what he wants to lol
Yknow what’s scary I listened to the 6 hour version and I have absolutely no memory of it and what I felt, I just remember sobbing and walking around my house
Me: “What a lovey little song.” *7 minutes later* Me: “What a lovely little song.” *7 minutes later* Me: “What a lovey little song.” *7 minutes later* Me: “What a lovely little song.” *7 minutes later*
this is for the people who can't stand listening to the 6 whole hours but trust me, listening to the whole project is worth it. i had a great experience although it creeped me out.
this will definitely come off weird, but im happy my grandma died without having dementia. i loved her to pieces, and even to this day shes the only parental figure that seemed to genuinely care for me.
i feel like in the long version it progressed so slowly that it just felt like drifting into a sleep, and the scary sounding statics only reminded me of horror games, so it didn’t affect me a ton. in this one, having it all layer out and going by so fast feels like you didn’t have time to say goodbye to anyone and something as precious as life was just taken from you in a matter of 7 minutes.
0:06 stage 1: just vibing 1:30 stage 2: ok not vibing anymore 2:18 stage 3: this is getting creepy 3:20 stage 4: oh no 4:25 stage 5: ewhre ma i 5:08 stage 6:
Do you ever notice the pottery is reminiscent of a couple playing/dancing around the base of a tree? You can see the woman's dress and her lifted heel, while the man rests his hand on the trunk, looking back at her.
I think its kinda sad that i can just appreciate it, but not like actually enjoy it (the original i mean) I think the music is kinda tideous and after 3H im just exhausted, made it through once, but it was just kinda hard to keep on. :/
I listened to the god-awful 6 hour-version of this and it was excruciating. I don’t fear of getting old or fear of dying, but I fear that I lose the ability of feeling of being myself. While I was writing my homework and listening to this, I thought “what if one day I forgot how to write? What if I forgot how to speak or how to walk or how to eat my favourite meals?” I wish I die along with my memory instead of my memory dying first.
If I find out I have dementia or Alzheimer’s I might just kill myself before the very bad stages, I don’t see the point in putting yourself and your loved ones through the pain of not knowing who you even are or who anyone is
I recently went through this with my grandfather, the funeral felt less like death than his final year. I had already grieved his death before it happened, while I could still speak to him. It’s a hell of a thing
@@masicbemester yeah, half of the people over 90 are suffering from dementia, but still, the thing that strokes increase the chance of getting dementia is a fact
(My interperetation) As the video goes on, it's like the songs themselves are having trouble remembering the original melody. It gets more chaotic as it progressively forgets which part of the tune is when. And then there's the loud and intrusive parts, trying to fit back into order again, but don't know where to be. Eventually, it just gives up; leaving empty ambience. And then the angels come to take it away, it was told it was one of the best.
The fear is pointless. You’re aging everyday and can’t stop it. Stop wasting your time worrying about getting old and use the time instead to take advantage of your current self. You’ll never be younger then who you are at this very moment.
There are many ways to potentially prevent dementia, according to scientists! You should eat healthy, if you haven't done it already and can afford it, and do things that stimulate and enforce your intellectual capabilities. I heard that learning a new language keeps your brain active and may even prevent dementia(may be wrong though). I know what it's like to be riddled by anxiety of a potential illness, you just gotta keep going, research from reputable sources, and try not to let it get to u
several top comments be like: Imagine you're (insert number after 60) and you are (describe your mind withering away) and all you remember is (insert 21st century pop song)
I understand. The first few moments are of fun and adventure. Then is goes to some mild anxiety, you stay for longer and get more cautious. More jumpy. More afraid. You forget the plans you wanted to do earlier while you were playing. You feel like something is watching you and then. You remember everything is okay. Nothing can hurt you. You should probably turn off the computer and go to bed. You can play tomorrow…..right?
Around 5 minutes in when the music stops, that symbolizes the person listening "dying" and the end of the song is the funeral/peace of no more dementia
Ive actually experienced something like that due to depersonalization, I can tell you it's the most horrifying thing I've ever experienced, to not remember/reconize yourself or family members. I had the memories, but all emotion and familiarity had gone.
this makes me think about my grandma a lot. in the past 2 years her physical and mental state have been degrading so quickly. i remember when she used to pick me up from school, and she used to walk faster than me. i remember when, every morning, when i was a lot younger, she got on the 7 am train to get to my house and then walk me to school. i used to talk about that a lot with my mum, and mention how despite her age she was so very healthy. she agreed with me. back then, i thought it'd always be like that. i thought my grandma was special, because my friends often talked about how their grandmas weren't very physically active, and about how they needed their time to do their things - i'd laugh and tell them my grandma got things done faster than me or my mom did. nowadays, she can't walk. she can't move her legs at all. she can barely write or move any part of her body. she's constantly trembling. she's in a nursing home, despite how, when i was younger, i promised her i'd never let her go to one. i promised her she'd be with us forever, and i promised everything would always be the way it was back then. and she's still lucid. she can see herself deteriorate. she can feel her mind losing control over her body. she still remembers when she used to play with me, and she talks about that a lot. she cries over it often. and i cry, too. thing is - she's not going to be lucid for much longer. she's starting to forget things, like her full name or her birthday. she has no perception of time anymore, and thinks that things that happened weeks ago were years or months ago instead. her body is so deteriorated, soon her mind will be, too. and at this point, i think that's the best for her, despite of how painful it will be for all of us that deeply care about her. she doesn't deserve to see herself crumble any longer. if youre going through anything like this as well, i'm very sorry. please stay strong!
Listening to this remind me of my grandmother. She had dementia, it started when she was in her 50s late 40s i think. She couldn't remember a single thing that involved present times. she would constantly forget names, forget where she left something or forget some important information. I remember she would always constantly ask the same questions over and over again. Thankfully she was a very humorous person, so she would make jokes about her not being able to remember things. about the only thing that she could remember crystal clear was music she loved and memories from her younger years. She would always talk about her younger years. When she was on her death bed, the only thing that would get herself up and awake was music. She would even try singing lyrics despite being unable to feed herself or bathe herself. It would spark a light in her like nothing i've ever seen. Although dementia is scary, and getting old is scary. i like to think that music is the one thing that keeps up all sane. Music is honestly such a beautiful thing.
You can always listen while doing work or in the background, people are saying it's the adhd version bc it's typically way more difficult for someone with adhd to sit through it, for medical reasons.
I’ve listened to the entire album, and I always come back and listen to this shortened version once in a while to remind myself of how privileged I am to be able to remember, to think, to be me. Isn’t it ironic that us able minded people always “forget” how privileged we are…
dude this music is actually so beautiful i don’t understand the creepy aspect but i haven’t gotten that far but it’s kinda getting scary and intense as i type this
imagine being at the last stages of this,, you'd be like a husk, a shell of someone who used to be so charming, so energetic, so unique. you couldn't even remember who you were, and that's what terrifies me
I've taken care of people with late stage dementia and it is truly heartbreaking to see their children come to visit and they don't even recognize their own children, their grandchildren. I've even had people that don't recognize themselves and their spouse from their own pictures.
My great grandad died of dementia and that’s what it was like. He used to be such a funny charming person, seeing him like that really hurt. I still remember when I was like 6 I really liked ballet and he would always dance with me (terribly on purpose) and make me laugh. I really miss him, but I know he’s happier now.
as someone who's been having memory issues, this haunts me everyday whenever someone discuss with you about what you did in the past, laughing with friends while I'm the only one there who's beginning to develop anxiety and fear as I have zero recollection of that event. Slowly fading away in the crowd while they all remember, I don't. Pitch dark submerged into abyss as their voices echos ever so slowly and faded away. Do note that I'm in my 20s and I lost almost all of my memories from past, childhood, highschool, college, and sometimes yesterday.
Keep strong bro, there's always keeping things in journals and scrapbooks to combat the pain and still have a way to look back into what you've forgotten
It’s terrifying how much I understand this comment. Anytime I have to delete photos from my phone, I have a sinking feeling because I know once they’re gone I will never remember the memory, nor that I even deleted it.
In some way, feel you. Some days I cant remember anything from more than a few years ago, the rest of the time I get small pieces or even just feelings from some vague, unspecified amount of time ago. It's upsetting to not only me but, for people like my gran who tried their best to make my earlier life a little happier.
@@betelgeuse2054 yeah idk either sometimes it just says random stuff that doesnt even relate to headphones but it’s usually like that the power is low or that its turned on yknow
@@YaBoiSam if we all have a short attention span to not watch the 6,5h long version then we all started scrolling in the comments and found this at the same time. So yeah XP Edit: hey it's Pico
I had to watch both of my grandparents go through the stages of Alzheimer's and it was horrifying. When it started getting bad for my grandpa, I had been away at college and hadn't seen him in a year, and when I came home to visit for the holidays I had to lock myself in the bathroom and quietly sob. It was so hard to see my Papa so frail and confused. Near the end of his life he was talking about seeing shadow people in the house, and his mind was deteriorated to the point he was almost child like. My Nana only lasted a year after he passed away, and would wake up multiple times each night crying out for him, or for her dog that had passed away months ago. The last week of her life, she didn't eat, speak, get up... Alzheimer's is one of the most terrifying diseases out there, it really is just so sad what it does to someone. :(
I've tried to listen to this. I've tried to listen to the originals. I can't. I don't fear getting old, but just listening to these tracks gives me this sense of.. dread. I get tingles all over my back and neck and my vision starts to feel spotty. It doesn't actually get spotty, or cloud, or anything at all, but it still feels harder to see, harder to breather. I've tried to listen to this, but I always start to feel weak and disoriented. I'll inevitably try again, whether it be in a few days or a few months. But I know I won't be able to get through it. I'm not even 20 yet so It's not like I know about getting old, or what dementia feels like, but it still all feels oddly.. familiar.
That's interesting; I don't blame you, and honestly maybe being almost 22 but knowing what I've exposed myself to in media I must be mostly dead inside compared to you, that I'm so hardened and insensitive about this kind of entertainment 😆🤭 partial joking aside, I got used to it the more I heard, or during the day and with people nearby, even if I was wearing headphones, I honestly most of the time skim the 6 stages, I've only heard all of 4 once and the first 3 a few times through.
What i can say, this was an incredibly profound read and take on the project that I didn’t think to consider until now that I’ve read this. Your smart for not even hitting 20 yet 😂
@@ssandz6648 ive only heard of dementia patients dying from other illnesses, infections and conditions. i assume after a certain point, eating, swallowing, and drinking becomea difficult which would lead to being malnourished which makes them more susceptible to illnesses. there's probably cases of it that i don't know about but i've never heard of patients dying from dementia alone
@@anti_fragile Correct. Eventually you forget what eating is, or your body just atrophies enough you get too weak to swallow or get up. Or you get run over by a truck at stage two because you just got a bit disoriented and walked to the street, who knows.
it's weird, i can hear the struggle to keep the music going, to keep remembering the melody, but it keeps getting more faded away like you're hearing it from a distance, with the crackle and breaking of the music that i can only assume is a metaphor for the mind breaking down to where there's only this hum that is blissful but terrifying. then it's replaced by another melody, you don't like this melody, where did the other one go? what did it sound like? i can't remember that well
The final melody at the end is supposed to represent how people with dementia in their deathbed usually get a last wave of Brain activity and clarity in their last minutes before dying.
@@NOTequinox it's disturbingly uncertain. One can't understand why it's coming closer and is always expecting for it to do... Something, besides just zooming in, something that might scare us, and we don't like that.
My grandma has dementia and I can’t begin to understand how terrifying it must be. It’s even more chilling knowing that she’s on her death bed due to COVID 19 right now:(
It is believed at the end stages of dementia the person in question might hum their favorite tune, and, when they forget that. It's an estimated few weeks before their life comes to an end. It's mildly depressing
@@TheMintGamers Actually, no. The ending represents Terminal Lucidity, a phenomenon where some people regain consciousness/clarity shortly before their death. This happens in a couple of conditions, dementia being one of them.
@@soul1924 You slosly lose your memory and consciousness until you eventually die not knowing anything. Sometimes, people with dementia recover clarity a few moments before their death, which is called "Terminal Lucidity", that's why the end of EATOT is suddenly so musical and harmonical again after 2 and a half hours of unrecognizable ambience
Lost my dad to dementia when he was only 62, a horribly fast decline too, only took about 2 years from diagnosis to the time he passed. Saw it all, the decline in short term memory, followed by long term, the vivid hallucinations and talking to people who aren't there (and in one case, his bother who had passed away quite a few years prior, when he was seemingly fully cognizant at that time). Not just passing comments or anything, full on conversations like he was on the phone with them. This 7min version hits a very personal note... Hug the people you care about while you can, y'all.
My dad is 57, was just diagnosed with Parkinson's 4 months ago although I'm sure he has Alzheimer's and dementia. I am his caretaker. He has the EXACT symptoms you speak of, talks to people who are not there daily, including his father who died from Alzheimer's 10 years ago. I will be surprised if my dad makes it to 62. Please man, if you read this, please let me know if you have any advice for what I'm going through.
I know it's about dementia, but around 3 minutes in it felt like someone who was beginning to realize their reality wasn't real and they are desperately trying to wake up, with what seems like ventilators sounds and all.
the way it slowly gets reduced to just unrecognizable noise is so scary... at some points you can almost figure out what you're hearing, or you hear the music again, but it gets taken away from you so quickly and you're just in a mush and can't hear what's going on, remember what used to be playing, or when it ended.
stage 1: everywhere at the end of the time stage 2: everywhere end of.. end of the... stage 3: everywhere end.. stage 4: where is time.. stage 5: end stage 6:
As French youtuber Feldup once said, “It’s incredible how we *are* our memories. All our past experiences, all our mistakes, it forms who we are. Without memories, we are not ourselves, we disappear.”
@@eli-ti5um no. Your whole personality just doesn’t exist anymore. Everything is our memory, even how you act, because it’s based on your previous actions. If you never had any memories, there’d be no « You » there’d be an empty shell with no mind. A Post-Awareness Stage 6 patient. Just nothingness.
@@gambe96 that emptiness is us. that state of being and not thinking nor remembering, is a state of presence and being. our memories are our ego. our egos hold onto the past, our minds subconsciously build up a false image of ourselves that we call “ourselves”. we are not who we are by thought, but by being. the mind is always there, the centre never ends. the brain however, does affect the mind’s activity. but no matter what, the mind doesn’t fully stop.
@@etn6444 Thats my interpretation of consciousness, to me existing and not being capable of thought and interaction is inexistance. The body and extremely short-term consciousness exist at stage 4-5. Stage 6 is nothing. No consciousness, a physical shell that can’t interact with or think of anything. But if your interpretation of the conscious is different that’s ok.
I'm more terrified by the fact that if my mom haves demetia. She wouldn't remeber me at some point of her life. All of those moments, those smiles, forgotten. My grandma haves it, my mom probably haves it and i probably have it. That's the reason why i write all my thoughts in notes, leave something in the world and take something for me, forever.
my grandfather has Alzheimers and in only 2 years he lost almost all of his ability to remember things. He only remembers his childhood, his family, and University of Texas football. Day to day stuff is off the table. He can't function without my grandmother with him 24/7. He was and still is one of the smartest men I ever knew.I wish that his memory wasn't being stolen from him, not just for my sake but for my grandmother and dads sake. Once he forgets them, they will be broken.
My great aunt has a form of Parkinson’s that’s progressed to be the equally tragic antithesis of dementia. Her physical body has rotted away, to the point where she can barely swallow and mostly grunts instead of speaking, but what few words she can form make perfect sense. She’s entirely lucid, but she’s trapped inside what’s essentially a corpse.
I remember my grandpa I his deathbed. He somehow remembered me once and took my origami gift for his birthday. Next was my cousin and he didn't really look at her, like he'd just passed by to get my crane and left...
Stage 1: Shawty's like a melody in.. Stage 2: Shawtysy's likȨ̷̵̷̴̷̷̶̸̷̶̵̶̸̵̴̵̵̴̴̷̵̵̷̸̴̷̴̸̴̷̶̵̷̶̸̷̴̨̢̢̢̨̨̨̢̧̧̧̨̡̛̛̛̛̛̛̛̗̱͎̘̮̬̺̬͔͓͙̱̙̟͖̲̜̳̗̠̤͕͖̫̼̖͓̻͉̘̻͕͙͔̝̗̬̗̮͙̟̞̫͓̮̻͔͚͕̥͉̰̲͈̩̮̭̯͕͎̝̘̜̝̮͍̬̭̙̭͚͓̲̯̝̬͍̪̗͇̗̥̬̰̰̯͙͎͎̱̤̮͎͇̠̩͉̻͚͍̫̟̤̩̜̌̒͊̍͗͐͊̾̎͑͌̄̓͊̇͆̋͑̈̀͆̈́̒̌̏̀̋́͌̅̏̌̒̿̔̊̋͑͒͆̈̂̀͒̿̅͗̑́͐̈́̑̅̇͂̍̿͂͊̾̓̓̃̓͂̿̈́̇́̋̋́̂͌̈́̀̀͗͛̇͐̀̑̄̓̄̑̆̿̌̅̏̅̇̌̈́̋̾̑͛̀̽̈́͛̐̓́̌̈͘̕̚̚̕͜͜͝͝͝͝͝͠͠ͅͅͅͅͅͅe a melody in.. in in Stage 3Ȩ̷̵̷̴̷̷̶̸̷̶̵̶̸̵̴̵̵̴̴̷̵̵̷̸̴̷̴̸̴̷̶̵̷̶̸̷̴̨̢̢̢̨̨̨̢̧̧̧̨̡̛̛̛̛̛̛̛̗̱͎̘̮̬̺̬͔͓͙̱̙̟͖̲̜̳̗̠̤͕͖̫̼̖͓̻͉̘̻͕͙͔̝̗̬̗̮͙̟̞̫͓̮̻͔͚͕̥͉̰̲͈̩̮̭̯͕͎̝̘̜̝̮͍̬̭̙̭͚͓̲̯̝̬͍̪̗͇̗̥̬̰̰̯͙͎͎̱̤̮͎͇̠̩͉̻͚͍̫̟̤̩̜̌̒͊̍͗͐͊̾̎͑͌̄̓͊̇͆̋͑̈̀͆̈́̒̌̏̀̋́͌̅̏̌̒̿̔̊̋͑͒͆̈̂̀͒̿̅͗̑́͐̈́̑̅̇͂̍̿͂͊̾̓̓̃̓͂̿̈́̇́̋̋́̂͌̈́̀̀͗͛̇͐̀̑̄̓̄̑̆̿̌̅̏̅̇̌̈́̋̾̑͛̀̽̈́͛̐̓́̌̈͘̕̚̚̕͜͜͝͝͝͝͝͠͠ͅͅͅͅͅͅ: Melody in, in my Stage 3: Yes Shawty, who Ȩ̷̵̷̴̷̷̶̸̷̶̵̶̸̵̴̵̵̴̴̷̵̵̷̸̴̷̴̸̴̷̶̵̷̶̸̷̴̨̢̢̢̨̨̨̢̧̧̧̨̡̛̛̛̛̛̛̛̗̱͎̘̮̬̺̬͔͓͙̱̙̟͖̲̜̳̗̠̤͕͖̫̼̖͓̻͉̘̻͕͙͔̝̗̬̗̮͙̟̞̫͓̮̻͔͚͕̥͉̰̲͈̩̮̭̯͕͎̝̘̜̝̮͍̬̭̙̭͚͓̲̯̝̬͍̪̗͇̗̥̬̰̰̯͙͎͎̱̤̮͎͇̠̩͉̻͚͍̫̟̤̩̜̌̒͊̍͗͐͊̾̎͑͌̄̓͊̇͆̋͑̈̀͆̈́̒̌̏̀̋́͌̅̏̌̒̿̔̊̋͑͒͆̈̂̀͒̿̅͗̑́͐̈́̑̅̇͂̍̿͂͊̾̓̓̃̓͂̿̈́̇́̋̋́̂͌̈́̀̀͗͛̇͐̀̑̄̓̄̑̆̿̌̅̏̅̇̌̈́̋̾̑͛̀̽̈́͛̐̓́̌̈͘̕̚̚̕͜͜͝͝͝͝͝͠͠ͅͅͅͅͅͅis shawty?? What melody are you Melody in my?? What what MeStagȨ̷̵̷̴̷̷̶̸̷̶̵̶̸̵̴̵̵̴̴̷̵̵̷̸̴̷̴̸̴̷̶̵̷̶̸̷̴̨̢̢̢̨̨̨̢̧̧̧̨̡̛̛̛̛̛̛̛̗̱͎̘̮̬̺̬͔͓͙̱̙̟͖̲̜̳̗̠̤͕͖̫̼̖͓̻͉̘̻͕͙͔̝̗̬̗̮͙̟̞̫͓̮̻͔͚͕̥͉̰̲͈̩̮̭̯͕͎̝̘̜̝̮͍̬̭̙̭͚͓̲̯̝̬͍̪̗͇̗̥̬̰̰̯͙͎͎̱̤̮͎͇̠̩͉̻͚͍̫̟̤̩̜̌̒͊̍͗͐͊̾̎͑͌̄̓͊̇͆̋͑̈̀͆̈́̒̌̏̀̋́͌̅̏̌̒̿̔̊̋͑͒͆̈̂̀͒̿̅͗̑́͐̈́̑̅̇͂̍̿͂͊̾̓̓̃̓͂̿̈́̇́̋̋́̂͌̈́̀̀͗͛̇͐̀̑̄̓̄̑̆̿̌̅̏̅̇̌̈́̋̾̑͛̀̽̈́͛̐̓́̌̈͘̕̚̚̕͜͜͝͝͝͝͝͠͠ͅͅͅͅͅͅe3in Seantys Stage 5: Į̵̛̛͈̫̣̞̬̮͔̳͎̦͔̞̩͚̖̦̤͉̱͓̦̊͊̈́̂͗̓͐̇͊̽̐̊͑͗͆̑̓͑̈̉͑̓͘͜͜N̷̛̼̼̱̬̘̱̫̜͈̲͚̲̹͍̹̆̃̈́̀͂̉̈́̋͌̏̀͘̕͝͝ ̷̢̢͚̦͕͇̎͆̌́̿́̾́̽̅͐̀̿̚͠M̷̨̡̮̱͇̤̜̮̟̰͚̞̳͍̻͚̤̠̲͉̜̻̏͋̊͋͑͜͠Y̵̡̛̛̙͖̼͉̺̟̫͖̠̼͔̲̻̤̏̿͌̀̀̊̅̀̆͗̿͊̌̀̄̂̾̓͌́̿̋͘̚͜ ̴̡̧̨̨̨̛̟̹̜͍̪̰̮̮̟͍͓̙̼͓̲̼͌̈́̈́̈̆͌͊̂̀̽͐̋̐̈́̇̃̍͋̂́̈́͘͜͝Ḩ̶̡̛̲̦̦͓̜̩̩̪͍͎̟̯̲̪͔͎̲͔͉̰̺̻̤̦̖͖̻̺̩͚͎̪͌͐͗́͑̎̈́̐̓̈̓͋̔̈́̌͂͊̚̚̚̕͜͠͝͠Ȩ̵̧̨̛̮̙̯̪͇̰̱̮͉͐̾͑̇͆̈̏͌̒̔̋͒̂͗͐͂͊̓̿̇̋Ą̶̢̡̛̛̱͇͙͎̞̬͇̀͂̍̈̔́̇̓̎̏͌̀́͐̍̇̎̿̄̐̿̾̉̍̈́͒̏̅̎̌̂͘͘̚͠͝͠͠D̸̨̛͕̖̖̤̯̱̦͈̟͕͚͉̺͕̻̔̐͐̾͊̉́̀̀̂͗̅̆̄͑̈́͒̑̌̒̌̄̌͛̂͒̂̑̈́̿̾̓̉̅̄͂͝ Stage 6: ▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓ █████ █: ████████
This is how i imagine a video that goes along with this: A person in a room listening to a radio that sits in the middle of the room. It is playing their favorite song. Out of nowhere an invisible force begins to pull on the shirt of the person. They gradually start being pulled away from the radio. They realize what is happening and they try to resist. They grab onto tables walls, anything to resist the force pulling them away. The song becomes fainter and fainter. They are finally pulled completely out of the room and they can no longer see the radio, but they still hear a faint, distorted reminiscent of the song. They drift down a dimly lit(with flickering lights) hallway, and there are pictures on the walls representing their memories. The flickering light makes it too hard to process the photos. They finally drift away into the darkness.
even the one that's about 50 times shorter is terrifying. I know that I'm only 15, I'm not afraid of this happening to me, yet, but my parents... Will I be in college, or off working somewhere else when this shit happens to them? Will I one day have to return home, leaving my life behind to care for my ailing mother and father? After listening to this,, I couldn't let them suffer this fate alone. Never.
what if you wanted to go to heaven but god said *Post-Awareness Stage 6 is without description.*
what if you wanted to go to heaven but your entire soul is long forgotten before you get there?
Yo Pierre, you wanna come out here?
Creepy
D
@@ioutra6121 thats just the brain though
even the speed run is horrifying oh my god.
Lol
Not sure why you expected something different tho
LMAO
I stopped at 3:28 because I became too scared
@cubearenice lmao you actually made laugh
“Yo pass the aux”
“You better not play trash”
lool
“But alas, he did not have to do it to ‘em”
what is an aux? what is trash? who am i passing it to? where am i? who am i?
How to give all of your friends a panic attack
@@thatmfka5817 My man, i think it was a joke about dementia, because he was forgetting everything :>
This whole album just feels like a jump scare that never comes.
Nothing without god.
Nothing is the scariest thing.
Probably the closest to an actual jump scare is when the organ segment suddenly cuts off, leaving silence for a few moments before "Place in the World Fades Away" draws to a close with a distorted variant of "Thy Cross doth call me."
No pico
No
No
No pico
Yeah
And that's scarier than a jumpscare
No no, the whole thing is a jumpscare. Trust me.
the fact that i keep forgetting the name of this album is unreasonably ironic
Wait what is it called
SAME.. I can’t tell if it’s on purpose or not, I had to go to TikTok doe it
@@Aardydarling everywhere at the end of time
Oh ok I didn’t know there was an album
I always think it's called "EveryTHING at the End of Time" for some reason.
adhd-friendly everywhere at the end of time
YES AHAHAH
I have ADHD so this is great
Hellyeahworksforme
want to... like... likes have... 69 in the number...
ADHD friendly dementia
when you wanna listen to everywhere at the end of time in one sitting but have adhd
me but without adhd bc ik not a self diagnosed person B)
HAHAHAHAHA YESSS
Can't believe how attacked i feel rn xD funny comment tho
Oh hey I’m not the only one :)
fucking exactly
The saddest thing about dementia is when people are about to die , they remember some parts of their life, and have even been able to speak and breathe as if they never had dementia.
Yes - a very good friend of my mother described this in her grandmother who had dementia. When this friend's grandmother was dying, she suddenly became very alert and distressed asking when her granddaughter would be there (she hadn't remembered who she was in years) I think unfortunately she passed while they were en route on a plane, but I think just the knowledge that she was trying her hardest to be there for her was comforting.
@@SavannahBurris yea, i guess that's why at the end of the last 6 minutes of the album you hear about 5 minutes of the cheery music after hours of distorted sounds, kinda signalling hope. And then abruptly ending with a 1 minute silence, probably for when you take a 1 minute silence for when someone passes away.
Like a final push before everlasting darkness.
Terminal lucidity, such a scary concept...
It infuriates me. It's like they defeated the condition but it's too late. Like, why does it even matter if they're in the final minutes, damn it. I hope I never experience anything similar.
Imagine: you’re in your 80’s and it’s the final stage of dementia. you cannot remember anything or anyone hell, you can’t even remember how to eat or write or do any other basic human functions! All you remember is carti’s verse in Earthquake.
Well, the last thing you forget is music, so ur right
even worse: you were a cardi b fan when you were young and all you remember is the words “NOW GET A BUCKET AND A MOP THATS THE WAP”
kakyoin the epic gamer I’m not replying to your comment out of anger rather curiosity, why do you dislike WAP?
This comment
earfquake 😔
Now imagine this is stretched out over several hours, days, weeks, months, years, decades.
:[
I'm sorry...what day is it again?
kittypie aiden is that you ?
Yeah, I mean, imagine this stretched into something like 6 hours
@@noacier6666 ?
*DEMENTIA SPEEDRUN **6:49** LETS GOOOOOO*
Wanna hear about my sub-6 dementia speedrun I got once? I think I got it... Did I? Who are you? Wanna hear about my sub-6 dementia speedrun I got once?
@@nordinreecendo512 im so confused, whats dementia
@@patrickyackley5836 Are you genuinely asking, or is this another dementia joke?
@@nordinreecendo512 whats a joke? wait, where am i
@@patrickyackley5836 "Knock knock" "Who's there?" "Dave." "Dave who?" "Dave bursts into tears as his grandmother's dementia tears his family apart."
i feel guilty not being able to sit for 6 hours while many people suffering from actual dementia have been fading for years
Frikin same
same here
Fax. Like I wanna listen to the 6 hour version because it would be right or sum but I have the attention span of a goldfish
i dont…
@@teeheebrah6584 take the time to listen to it, it’s an experience that you cant describe, something that’s so odd but yet interesting
A good way to stave off dementia is to continually learn things throughout your life, learning a new language at a late age is a good way to stimulate your brain, and lower the chances of you getting dementia later in your life.
thanks this bit of hope made me feel better. the whole comment section is depressing
yep! but if you do get dementia, it is terribly depressing. we had to watch my great grandma drift away and soon not remember how to even walk.
What if you are stupid and can’t learn a new language
@@shady8045 you get dementia
@@lekwisdrome555 fair
Everywhere at the End of Time but you’re out of time
Haha
Everywhere at the end of time but you refuse to run out of time.
True
Lmfao
That hurts even more :,(
everything's gangsta until everything's gangsta until....
yeah i stole this comment
Ok that's kinda dark
Maybe you just *forgot* about seeing that comment
Wait wtf is gangsta?
What’s everythi wha wa?
I'm a psychology student, and I specialize in older people. I'm currently on my apprenticeship, in a hospital, where we see a lot of old people who have been labeled as possibly having cognitive issues. Our role is to talk to them to get a better idea of their case, and make them take tests in order to determine whether or not the cognitive deficits can be observed. It began to be a very mundane thing after a month or two, and I forgot what I was really doing to them and their families. If we can detect a neuro degenerative, I forgot what I does to them, and how hopeless we all are against dementia. I feel so shitty
Today was my last day of apprenticeship and my last patient was a 70 yo woman who had either Parkinson or lewy's body dementia. She absolutely knew what was coming coming for her, the slow descent of forgetfulness and cognitive troubles. I could hear those songs while she was talking. She was the first not to be anasognosic towards her issues, to be fully aware and to be able to explain to us what she was feeling and the constant dread of what the future will bring to her.
obama
hey goodluck with your apprenticeship works! a philosophy student here :D
@@CowboyCatRO I swear i'll find a way to get you
humans has been fighting disease for the past decade, but not completely like coronavirus they just came out of nowhere,and about dementia that has been lasting for a quite a long time still aren't curable
Ah yes because my one gripe with dementia was that the process was too slow. Now i have the pleasure to experience it all in less than 7 min. Thanks!
Dementia SPEEDRUN
Now listen to this on repeat for six hours for Dementia: REMIXED
how is this pleasure-
sschylivy its sarcasm
6 hours is for chumps.
This is perfect for when you want to suffer but don't have a lot of time
me
Exactly 😌
...left
that would be the plan
I listened to the whole 6 hours and I didn’t feel shit
Playing this at double speed to beat everyone else's dementia speed run times.
HHDKKKBFFJB LMAOO
PogU
playing this at 200% speed to get even faster run, any tips? Stage 6 is really hard.
Too bad, I have a browser extension that allows me to play it in 4x speed. Give me my world record
@@CarlosMagikarpiano My world record is ruined....
You know that feeling when you have a really vague memory of a dream. Like, you don’t know when you had that dream, what happened in it, who was in it, or where you were, but you still remember a few vague details? Now imagine that happening with your real-life memories. Imagine being in a room you don’t recognize, surrounded by strangers, and you sense that they’re important but you can’t remember why...
.....
oh no
And I thought forgetting my dreams was the worst thing ever.
the struggle of remembering what happened to a dream, i can't imagine myself dealing with that with real life memories. yup, i'm terrified of dementia now.
man why tf did you have to say this
what if i'm 80 and the only thing i can remember is how to make a pickaxe in minecraft
LOL
i guess you would remember minecraft's ost lol
That... is scarier than any of the audio in the video
that’s an epic poggers gamer moment
But you can't remember how to make the crafting table
it gets too political at stage 4
This is true
Joe
Lol
they really sold out :/ i miss stage 1 where they really cared about the music
not really. sometimes politics have to be brought up. they're important.
“I’d rather lose my life than have to lose myself.”
- George Watsky
Mood
I am going to have to agree with him
I thought it said “-George weasley” 😂😂😂
In the moment
@@unsolicitedd same. I was thinking, when the fuck did George get so philosophical?
0:07 stage 1
0:43 stage 2
1:36 stage 3
2:33 stage 4
3:22 stage 5
4:04 stage 6
5:10 terminal lucidity (suddenly regaining all memories briefly before death)
6:31 death
Imagine knowing about terminal lucidity, having dementia and Suddenly remember that after remembering you die and you're just like: oh for fuck sake come on!
Thanks
@@youravaragefriendlyweeb2807 “I’ve regained all my memories… it’s a miracle! I’m going to live! I’m going to… Oh well crap”
@@leongar32009 stage 3
@@leongar32009 stage 3
Honestly I think the scariest part about this is that the song you hear at the end isn’t the original tune that you’ve been hearing through all of the stages
Also doesn't help that it sounds like a church choir, but kinda muffled and far away and it gets suddenly quieter given the static and record fails that had been going on for a while. Gives the feeling of completely drifting away from reality so hard that your senses don't seem to stay on the same page, all there is is a far, far away chant of something you seemed to believe but you don't know what it is, it's not tangible, doesn't seem to be something at all. Then, you don't even remember you exist. And you are there, breathing like a vegetable. That is, until you forget how to do that too.
@@KassKuri same, immediately got the vibe that i was dead and that this was my funeral
WHAT
@@fx00 thats the exact point actually. at this point in the project the protagonist has died and this part is basically the scene of their funeral. goes to show how good the caretaker is at portraying what he wants to lol
Wait, I thought the point was that it was the same song.
If this is this bad I can't even imagine how terrifying the 6 hour version is...
Yknow what’s scary I listened to the 6 hour version and I have absolutely no memory of it and what I felt, I just remember sobbing and walking around my house
56 mins into the long version.....it just creeped me out for the first time a little bit, its only going to get worse
This is actually worse because of how fast it is
@@MicrogramHeathen i like classical music but when i got to stage threee i dippedd
I just dont get it, what do you feel? I listened to this and its just a normal distorted song for me. Nothing special
"This is a certified hood...uh...certified hood...um...certified...certified...what was I saying?"
Hood classic, my good sir?
@@quimbus_bingley oh yeah! This is a cood hlassic!
@@angrywaffle427 you said cloocd lgalssic wrrong
yeehaw, oh and /cbalcabbhdbalckdmalmxnncfdjdnnjsjxksjiwoqkjsjdiur
???
Me: “What a lovey little song.”
*7 minutes later*
Me: “What a lovely little song.”
*7 minutes later*
Me: “What a lovey little song.”
*7 minutes later*
Me: “What a lovely little song.”
*7 minutes later*
What a ... what a .. what a
Lovey day we are having
not me just forgetting that this was only 7 min-
Korega, requiem da
wow that was funny
this is for the people who can't stand listening to the 6 whole hours but trust me, listening to the whole project is worth it. i had a great experience although it creeped me out.
Should I listen to the 6 hours one first then this one, or this one then the 6 hours one? I don't want to miss out on either one.
@@a.ramponi6962 i went for the whole 6 hours while studying
absolutely worth it
this is just too short i feel
no. people recommend that anyone who is currently experiencing mental health issue should not listen to this.
bruh some people do not have the time of day or mental strength
Yeah i had a severe panic attack when i tried to listen to it, i would not recommend
this is a certified hood classic
Damn son, where'd you find this?
@@soukikismet2485 Damn son, wait. Are you....?
@@masicbemester Damn son, these bitches want some
vikernes Damn son. Wait, are you my son? Who are you? Where’s my mom? Where’s my dad?
@SomeBruh nah bitch you fuckin dumb
Well this just became the most depressing poo ever
sad shit, man
Indeed
Was it a clean shit tho?
dawg same :/
Elite shit
this will definitely come off weird, but im happy my grandma died without having dementia. i loved her to pieces, and even to this day shes the only parental figure that seemed to genuinely care for me.
How is that weird at all lol, hell wanting your family member to die after getting dementia is far worse
@@spicymeatballs2thespicening i mean i thought it could be seen as weird for kinda saying "happy my grandma died!!"
@@lightlylemony good intent for a message, bad phrasing
Your happy she passed with out having dementia I understand.
i feel like in the long version it progressed so slowly that it just felt like drifting into a sleep, and the scary sounding statics only reminded me of horror games, so it didn’t affect me a ton. in this one, having it all layer out and going by so fast feels like you didn’t have time to say goodbye to anyone and something as precious as life was just taken from you in a matter of 7 minutes.
DrDoodlehead well said mate
I did fall asleep about halfway through stage 3 hahaha
Which is scarier?
A slow process of death with all the time you need to say goodbye
Or
A quick instant death without getting to say goodbye
Yikes
@@lolstuffenjoy9880 quick death 0.0
0:06 stage 1: just vibing
1:30 stage 2: ok not vibing anymore
2:18 stage 3: this is getting creepy
3:20 stage 4: oh no
4:25 stage 5: ewhre ma i
5:08 stage 6:
*Post-awareness stage 6 is without description*
I’m at 3:19 rn
Now 4:16
4:28 is messed up
@@ogfox9803 Yep, stage 4 is fucking messed up, we know.
Do you ever notice the pottery is reminiscent of a couple playing/dancing around the base of a tree? You can see the woman's dress and her lifted heel, while the man rests his hand on the trunk, looking back at her.
Yeah I see it, nice find.
Wow that’s cool. Never knew that.
I thought it was a ribcage...
Yes! I saw that too!!
;-;
The last two minutes sounds like an angelic choir. As if you’re being called home. The end is near and it’s time to wake up.
I was reading that just as that part started to play and you just gave me goosebumps
That works
i always thought it was like funeral organ music, but no i get it now
It doesn't compare to the original, but still really good in my opinion, especially for 6 minutes
I don’t think anything could compare to the original, but this is definitely a good way to summarize the idea behind the original work in my opinion
I think its kinda sad that i can just appreciate it, but not like actually enjoy it (the original i mean)
I think the music is kinda tideous and after 3H im just exhausted, made it through once, but it was just kinda hard to keep on. :/
Bosh same I cant really appreciate it its long and I’ll get distracted during those 6 hours
Huh, the original was so bothersome to listen to, this video is definitely better
@@bosh6604 I think the point of it was to be tedious in some parts tho
I listened to the god-awful 6 hour-version of this and it was excruciating. I don’t fear of getting old or fear of dying, but I fear that I lose the ability of feeling of being myself. While I was writing my homework and listening to this, I thought “what if one day I forgot how to write? What if I forgot how to speak or how to walk or how to eat my favourite meals?” I wish I die along with my memory instead of my memory dying first.
If I find out I have dementia or Alzheimer’s I might just kill myself before the very bad stages, I don’t see the point in putting yourself and your loved ones through the pain of not knowing who you even are or who anyone is
I once spent a few days in a psychiatric hospital and man... I felt so bad seeing the people in there who have lost themselves
Damn that's some cold truth right there
Vatan Sari you can do physician assisted suicide, its becoming more and more acceptable for people with terminal illness
me when manual breathing mode engaged
This isnt depressing this is horrifying.
fr
@@minecraft-nc3gd i managed to find your account twice 0-0
@@hermisondi_3500I comment a lot
I find it both horrifying and depressing
Isn't it both?
When you want to suffer but your school only gives you ten min breaks between classes
NEW NORMAL PFP POG
Yo you get ten minutes? We get, like, three and a half?!
You guys are getting breaks?
@Dillon Howington new normal?
@Dillon Howington ?
okay, i looked away for a few minutes and realized the picture was slowly zooming in..creeped me the hell out
Mirnya Mei omg I looked up when you said that and screamed
I just noticed that after reading this comment
you asshole
Yo wtf
I looked up when I read this and jumped a little
my grandma was recently diagnosed with dementia, she hardly remembers me and it makes me cry because i was the closest to her.
Regards man.
i’m sorry. that’s awful
Sorry to hear that
I hope you're okay!
Oh this hurts a lot...
this is the version for people with a 3 minute attention span
yeah i fell asleep during the 2nd and 3rd stages because i was getting bored 🧍♀️ nothing bad happened tho
I was at stage 2 but I got bored, I wasn't even teary or sad anymore. Just bored.
@@crabohato4954 stage 2 is not the sad part.
@@glumbortango7182 part 1 was for me tho
listened to the whole thing and didnt cry
One of the hardest things you will ever have to do is grieve the loss of a person who is still alive.
I recently went through this with my grandfather, the funeral felt less like death than his final year. I had already grieved his death before it happened, while I could still speak to him. It’s a hell of a thing
I'm in the process of doing just that with my mom. Dementia is brutal to watch.
@@iLUMENi_ sorry for your loss.
ambiguous loss 😎 also happens when the person you’re grieving is someone who’s gone missing ✌️ ironically using happy emojis so i don’t cry ✨
:(
when you're eating cereal at 3am
when you and da bois be hunting for BEANS at 3am
When you're havign a storke n 3amn mrnh r m;sdf] ]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]
When you sit alone with the lights off staring into a candle at 3 am
Hi Joe
@@cornsyrup9947 hi, gluuk duuk
Anybody just feel alone when the music stops?
Yes, thats the actual “CUT” from everything after such dense sound experience, only confusion remains.
I'd describe it more a feeling of, "being awake, but not alive."
ThatAwesomeFacedGuy u wanna talk bro?
Yep
I feel the opposite actually. It feels like there's something extremely ominous near me
It's like the musical equivalent of a stroke
The album was actually made to be the musical equivalent of dementia, so you're not quite far
@@masicbemester strokes increase the chance of getting dementia
@@ohseespolice7419 it's not what I meant. The older you get, the more likely it is to happen.
@@masicbemester yeah, half of the people over 90 are suffering from dementia, but still, the thing that strokes increase the chance of getting dementia is a fact
@@ohseespolice7419 oh, I didn't know that. Thanks for letting me know.
(My interperetation) As the video goes on, it's like the songs themselves are having trouble remembering the original melody. It gets more chaotic as it progressively forgets which part of the tune is when. And then there's the loud and intrusive parts, trying to fit back into order again, but don't know where to be. Eventually, it just gives up; leaving empty ambience. And then the angels come to take it away, it was told it was one of the best.
wait this is exactly how I felt about it
Of course this gets recommended to me after I spend 6 hours listening to the complete edition in one sitting
ONE SITTING HOW
I SKIPPED THROUGH IT AFTER 40 MINS JEJSNDNDNDNNFND
@@just_a_perosn954 I listened to it while doing homework LOL
@@just_a_perosn954 I just sat through it all night when I did it
I listened to the whole thing but wherever I could. So not one sitting like a mad lad.
i’m so afraid of getting old. a lot of people in my family have gotten dementia and alzheimer’s but to be fair they were alcoholics and industrymen
Just be a alcoholic industryman and you'll be safe for sure bro
@BENJAMIN NORRIS I think your taking my comment too seriously
nobody knows the reason behind dementia, it could be hereditary, which is sad
The fear is pointless. You’re aging everyday and can’t stop it. Stop wasting your time worrying about getting old and use the time instead to take advantage of your current self. You’ll never be younger then who you are at this very moment.
There are many ways to potentially prevent dementia, according to scientists! You should eat healthy, if you haven't done it already and can afford it, and do things that stimulate and enforce your intellectual capabilities. I heard that learning a new language keeps your brain active and may even prevent dementia(may be wrong though). I know what it's like to be riddled by anxiety of a potential illness, you just gotta keep going, research from reputable sources, and try not to let it get to u
several top comments be like:
Imagine you're (insert number after 60) and you are (describe your mind withering away) and all you remember is (insert 21st century pop song)
yes
You’re smarter so that’s good
@@mushroom8521 well thank you?
@@WarriorDan2008 i think they meant the OP
Imagine you're 79 and you are loosing your mind after slowly going into insanity,and all you remember is "shawty's like a melody in my head"
this album feels like playing Garrys mod alone....... and I can’t seem to explain it
ok
Omfg I know EXACTLY what you’re talking about!!!
SAME
I understand. The first few moments are of fun and adventure. Then is goes to some mild anxiety, you stay for longer and get more cautious. More jumpy. More afraid. You forget the plans you wanted to do earlier while you were playing. You feel like something is watching you and then. You remember everything is okay. Nothing can hurt you. You should probably turn off the computer and go to bed. You can play tomorrow…..right?
The uncanny valley
imagine at Place in the World Fades Away you just hear "yo pierre you wanna come out here"
Edit: Likes, and yes, it will be a carti feature.
Then the bombest bass drop ever into hardest rap you heard all year
I needed this, I was getting to sad.
in new york i milly rock
like ur pfp
This comment is gold 🤣🤣🤣
it feels like it's getting harder to breathe when the music suddenly stops
our mind is desperate to find a rhythm because rhythm = familiarity... and it's not there
@@cutestpunk4648 woah 😳😳
Around 5 minutes in when the music stops, that symbolizes the person listening "dying" and the end of the song is the funeral/peace of no more dementia
You made me breath manually i hope your happy
holy fuck it does
This is very depressing. Just imagine you remember your face, and after some odd years you don't even recognize yourself.
Or one day you go to sleep, then when you wake up you realize you're 80 years old.
@man with a username do u know what it’s called?
Ive actually experienced something like that due to depersonalization, I can tell you it's the most horrifying thing I've ever experienced, to not remember/reconize yourself or family members. I had the memories, but all emotion and familiarity had gone.
@@gray01216 OMG....thats super sad and terrifying...
i dont even remember what i look like
this makes me think about my grandma a lot. in the past 2 years her physical and mental state have been degrading so quickly. i remember when she used to pick me up from school, and she used to walk faster than me. i remember when, every morning, when i was a lot younger, she got on the 7 am train to get to my house and then walk me to school. i used to talk about that a lot with my mum, and mention how despite her age she was so very healthy. she agreed with me.
back then, i thought it'd always be like that. i thought my grandma was special, because my friends often talked about how their grandmas weren't very physically active, and about how they needed their time to do their things - i'd laugh and tell them my grandma got things done faster than me or my mom did.
nowadays, she can't walk. she can't move her legs at all. she can barely write or move any part of her body. she's constantly trembling. she's in a nursing home, despite how, when i was younger, i promised her i'd never let her go to one. i promised her she'd be with us forever, and i promised everything would always be the way it was back then.
and she's still lucid. she can see herself deteriorate. she can feel her mind losing control over her body. she still remembers when she used to play with me, and she talks about that a lot. she cries over it often. and i cry, too.
thing is - she's not going to be lucid for much longer. she's starting to forget things, like her full name or her birthday. she has no perception of time anymore, and thinks that things that happened weeks ago were years or months ago instead. her body is so deteriorated, soon her mind will be, too. and at this point, i think that's the best for her, despite of how painful it will be for all of us that deeply care about her. she doesn't deserve to see herself crumble any longer.
if youre going through anything like this as well, i'm very sorry. please stay strong!
@Dillon Howington it's okay, thank you for your concern
Dude this disease terrifes me.
@@vibrantgleam it's a terrifying disease indeed. the fact that there is no cure or no way of stopping it is even scarier.
@@fawndeu Ikr. And the fact your loved one could get it too.
That was terrifying. I have no idea what to say but im so sorry.
Listening to this remind me of my grandmother. She had dementia, it started when she was in her 50s late 40s i think. She couldn't remember a single thing that involved present times. she would constantly forget names, forget where she left something or forget some important information. I remember she would always constantly ask the same questions over and over again. Thankfully she was a very humorous person, so she would make jokes about her not being able to remember things. about the only thing that she could remember crystal clear was music she loved and memories from her younger years. She would always talk about her younger years. When she was on her death bed, the only thing that would get herself up and awake was music. She would even try singing lyrics despite being unable to feed herself or bathe herself. It would spark a light in her like nothing i've ever seen. Although dementia is scary, and getting old is scary. i like to think that music is the one thing that keeps up all sane. Music is honestly such a beautiful thing.
I've heard that apparently music and peoples favorite songs are some of the last things people with dementia forget.
Music is a universal language. No matter where you’re from or what kind it is, everyone understands it :)
Was your grandma hot?
@@gwen_gets_got Shut the absolute fuck up.
@@aes_lake welcome to another episode of how to catch a weirdo on the internet
Idk why people saying this is adhd version, I do think I should be longer but not all of us got just 6 hours to spend on this
because joke
Fair enough
You can always listen while doing work or in the background, people are saying it's the adhd version bc it's typically way more difficult for someone with adhd to sit through it, for medical reasons.
you should listen to the minecraft version. It's 1h15m long but it still gives the same sense of dread and despair
I have adhd and can't the shortened version because it's too long
someone should make a 1 hour or 30 min version, because 7 min feels too compressed and 6 hours is very hard to do without breaks.
@Miguel Carriedo i was about to recommend that one as well. it feels even more personal since it hits close to home to the newer generations
well there are 2 minecraft versions
on is around an hour and the other is like 30 mins
@Miguel Carriedo oh ok
just pause
ua-cam.com/video/c3gpdZrT0eA/v-deo.html
here’s something similar
the mincraft version
I’ve listened to the entire album, and I always come back and listen to this shortened version once in a while to remind myself of how privileged I am to be able to remember, to think, to be me. Isn’t it ironic that us able minded people always “forget” how privileged we are…
dude this music is actually so beautiful i don’t understand the creepy aspect but i haven’t gotten that far but it’s kinda getting scary and intense as i type this
Have you listened to all of the Caretaker's final album, Everywhere at the End of Time?
It's supposed to be an experience, you can enjoy them individually tho
I've been listenin to the other stuff and so far i feel nothing
i feel like it’s music from up -
I hope we hear back from u
"you cant tell a story in a song with no words!"
The Caretaker: Hold my beer ... hey why are you holding my beer give that back.
Alright now that’s funny, that’s my favorite comment now
im- stop i- what was i saying again
That was actually really smart gold star
Wow how clev - uh wha - wh - where am - wh - what..
This is clever!
Seriously!
That's clever!
Genius comment! :D
Really clever
Edit: This is clever!
imagine being at the last stages of this,, you'd be like a husk, a shell of someone who used to be so charming, so energetic, so unique. you couldn't even remember who you were, and that's what terrifies me
thats why im killin myself first babyyy, no dementia for me! well i hope i get an honest diagnosis before i forget those i love.
Bruh thanks for giving new a new feae
I've taken care of people with late stage dementia and it is truly heartbreaking to see their children come to visit and they don't even recognize their own children, their grandchildren. I've even had people that don't recognize themselves and their spouse from their own pictures.
Bold of you to assume I am charming
My great grandad died of dementia and that’s what it was like. He used to be such a funny charming person, seeing him like that really hurt. I still remember when I was like 6 I really liked ballet and he would always dance with me (terribly on purpose) and make me laugh. I really miss him, but I know he’s happier now.
as someone who's been having memory issues, this haunts me everyday whenever someone discuss with you about what you did in the past, laughing with friends while I'm the only one there who's beginning to develop anxiety and fear as I have zero recollection of that event. Slowly fading away in the crowd while they all remember, I don't. Pitch dark submerged into abyss as their voices echos ever so slowly and faded away. Do note that I'm in my 20s and I lost almost all of my memories from past, childhood, highschool, college, and sometimes yesterday.
oof.
im so sorry about that. very sorry. I hope you won't get diagnosed with dementia.
Keep strong bro, there's always keeping things in journals and scrapbooks to combat the pain and still have a way to look back into what you've forgotten
It’s terrifying how much I understand this comment. Anytime I have to delete photos from my phone, I have a sinking feeling because I know once they’re gone I will never remember the memory, nor that I even deleted it.
In some way, feel you. Some days I cant remember anything from more than a few years ago, the rest of the time I get small pieces or even just feelings from some vague, unspecified amount of time ago. It's upsetting to not only me but, for people like my gran who tried their best to make my earlier life a little happier.
Omg i was listening to this and then my headphones were running low so they went “PLEASE CHARGE ME” really loud
wtf kinda headphones speak to you??? what?????
@@betelgeuse2054 mine i guess, sometimes it just talks
@@luci0000 w h a t ??????
@@betelgeuse2054 yeah idk either sometimes it just says random stuff that doesnt even relate to headphones but it’s usually like that the power is low or that its turned on yknow
@@luci0000 that’s so weird... and you have to charge them? your headphones? why do you have to _charge_ your headphones??? what....
I tried to sleep listening to this. WORST. IDEA. EVER. Now, I'm even terrified to close my eyes.
take a shower and clear your mind up it’ll probably help a lot
Same man I don’t remember what I did before going to sleep
I had no troubles
@@pisulolol haha, i think he got to sleep by now; it had been a week
You absolute mad lad
the cut at 3:40 just left me terrified that the noises were gonna come back.
Imagining it with the context of dementia is horrifying.
holy shit I've seen your comment when i was at the 3:30 part, this couldn't have been a better warning
@@ichigokurosaki7162 same
@@smileyfacegr6691 did we all see this comment at the same time in the video?
@@YaBoiSam if we all have a short attention span to not watch the 6,5h long version then we all started scrolling in the comments and found this at the same time. So yeah XP
Edit: hey it's Pico
@@ichigokurosaki7162 you are absolutely correct i looked up at the time and was like oh that’s in 10 seconds
I had to watch both of my grandparents go through the stages of Alzheimer's and it was horrifying. When it started getting bad for my grandpa, I had been away at college and hadn't seen him in a year, and when I came home to visit for the holidays I had to lock myself in the bathroom and quietly sob. It was so hard to see my Papa so frail and confused. Near the end of his life he was talking about seeing shadow people in the house, and his mind was deteriorated to the point he was almost child like. My Nana only lasted a year after he passed away, and would wake up multiple times each night crying out for him, or for her dog that had passed away months ago. The last week of her life, she didn't eat, speak, get up... Alzheimer's is one of the most terrifying diseases out there, it really is just so sad what it does to someone. :(
I've tried to listen to this. I've tried to listen to the originals. I can't. I don't fear getting old, but just listening to these tracks gives me this sense of.. dread. I get tingles all over my back and neck and my vision starts to feel spotty. It doesn't actually get spotty, or cloud, or anything at all, but it still feels harder to see, harder to breather. I've tried to listen to this, but I always start to feel weak and disoriented. I'll inevitably try again, whether it be in a few days or a few months. But I know I won't be able to get through it. I'm not even 20 yet so It's not like I know about getting old, or what dementia feels like, but it still all feels oddly.. familiar.
That's interesting; I don't blame you, and honestly maybe being almost 22 but knowing what I've exposed myself to in media I must be mostly dead inside compared to you, that I'm so hardened and insensitive about this kind of entertainment 😆🤭 partial joking aside, I got used to it the more I heard, or during the day and with people nearby, even if I was wearing headphones, I honestly most of the time skim the 6 stages, I've only heard all of 4 once and the first 3 a few times through.
What i can say, this was an incredibly profound read and take on the project that I didn’t think to consider until now that I’ve read this. Your smart for not even hitting 20 yet 😂
@Porsche Boxster Content wait dementia is fatal? Thought it was just brain degenerative wow I’m so dumb 😕
@@ssandz6648 ive only heard of dementia patients dying from other illnesses, infections and conditions. i assume after a certain point, eating, swallowing, and drinking becomea difficult which would lead to being malnourished which makes them more susceptible to illnesses. there's probably cases of it that i don't know about but i've never heard of patients dying from dementia alone
@@anti_fragile Correct. Eventually you forget what eating is, or your body just atrophies enough you get too weak to swallow or get up.
Or you get run over by a truck at stage two because you just got a bit disoriented and walked to the street, who knows.
it's weird, i can hear the struggle to keep the music going, to keep remembering the melody, but it keeps getting more faded away like you're hearing it from a distance, with the crackle and breaking of the music that i can only assume is a metaphor for the mind breaking down to where there's only this hum that is blissful but terrifying.
then it's replaced by another melody, you don't like this melody, where did the other one go? what did it sound like? i can't remember that well
Underrated comment omg
Damn
thank you for putting it into words
Why is the phrase "I can't remember that well" so familiar? No joke
The final melody at the end is supposed to represent how people with dementia in their deathbed usually get a last wave of Brain activity and clarity in their last minutes before dying.
EW THE PICTURE IS COMING CLOSER
Wtf I NEVER NOTICED THAT FUCKKKKK
*EW'TH!*
why does ivan seal’s artwork wanna check my vibe please help me-
why is it disgusting?
@@NOTequinox it's disturbingly uncertain. One can't understand why it's coming closer and is always expecting for it to do... Something, besides just zooming in, something that might scare us, and we don't like that.
I love you dad and I'm always gonna be here, even at the end of time..
My grandma has dementia and I can’t begin to understand how terrifying it must be. It’s even more chilling knowing that she’s on her death bed due to COVID 19 right now:(
Rest in Peace
@@etn6444 i- girlllll you don’t know if she dead yet 😭😭😭
@@helzyguzman9164 oh shit, sorry i'm bad in english i thought that when he said "death bed" it was like the bed where she died
@@helzyguzman9164 Jesus fuck, read the room
@@sophiap8980 ok princess
message to self: please, don’t re-watch this at 4 am...
@¡ JᴜᴀɴY ! bahaha, i hope you got through it okay.. 😳🤣
Thanks i watch it at 03.44AM
it's 5 AM why am I doing this
@@marvinlegwatts734 I came across this at 4am, let’s say I couldn’t sleep after that 😂
Okay, why do you guys do this? you’re literally making this haunt you even more at an early time of the day lmao
How everything goes back to normal and then starts to fade away is really scary
It is believed at the end stages of dementia the person in question might hum their favorite tune, and, when they forget that. It's an estimated few weeks before their life comes to an end. It's mildly depressing
@@TheMintGamers "mildly"
@@TheMintGamers Actually, no. The ending represents Terminal Lucidity, a phenomenon where some people regain consciousness/clarity shortly before their death. This happens in a couple of conditions, dementia being one of them.
@@TheMintGamers but,If you have demetia You only Don't remember or you die too?
@@soul1924 You slosly lose your memory and consciousness until you eventually die not knowing anything. Sometimes, people with dementia recover clarity a few moments before their death, which is called "Terminal Lucidity", that's why the end of EATOT is suddenly so musical and harmonical again after 2 and a half hours of unrecognizable ambience
Honestly I'd rather die than have all my memories lost.
Forgetting everyone you love, and forgetting who you are just sounds horrifying
How is this scary 🙄🙄🙄 the demon in the corner of my room says its perfectly good song
does the demon have dementia?
its not suppose to be scary
@@fayebaker2131 what demon
It’s not, it’s just depressing
Demon? No no! That's my first born son!... Wait-
POV: You’re trying to hide in the comment section
Found you
@@SakuyaRyuu Oop- 👀
hide from fucking what? the slowly zooming in picture of flowers?
You got me
im so scared please help im Not Even at the end yet
Fuck off
Lost my dad to dementia when he was only 62, a horribly fast decline too, only took about 2 years from diagnosis to the time he passed. Saw it all, the decline in short term memory, followed by long term, the vivid hallucinations and talking to people who aren't there (and in one case, his bother who had passed away quite a few years prior, when he was seemingly fully cognizant at that time). Not just passing comments or anything, full on conversations like he was on the phone with them. This 7min version hits a very personal note... Hug the people you care about while you can, y'all.
Damn this hurts
I’m sorry man, I hope you’re doing well.
Damn, this scared the shit out of me more than the video
Man that's rough Shaxx, at least you have Arcite to comfort you
My dad is 57, was just diagnosed with Parkinson's 4 months ago although I'm sure he has Alzheimer's and dementia. I am his caretaker. He has the EXACT symptoms you speak of, talks to people who are not there daily, including his father who died from Alzheimer's 10 years ago. I will be surprised if my dad makes it to 62. Please man, if you read this, please let me know if you have any advice for what I'm going through.
I know it's about dementia, but around 3 minutes in it felt like someone who was beginning to realize their reality wasn't real and they are desperately trying to wake up, with what seems like ventilators sounds and all.
music is so powerful, isn’t it? to be able to make us all feel so disturbed and sad through only sounds and songs is truly amazing.
gun grandma
Music can replicate everything, even hitler's speech can be turned into some shitty edm bullshit
Makes me feel happy
Grandma gun lol
Yeah
Smoking is an efficient way to speedrun life.
@Porsche Boxster Content i think a ketamine overdose would win
humanity speedrun using drug hack any% WR: 00:00:01.43
You ever thought about birthing from a Karen?
Three years is still quite long for a speedrun.
"hey shitass wanna see me speedrun"
the way it slowly gets reduced to just unrecognizable noise is so scary... at some points you can almost figure out what you're hearing, or you hear the music again, but it gets taken away from you so quickly and you're just in a mush and can't hear what's going on, remember what used to be playing, or when it ended.
Just enough to give everyone around you false hope for a second. Just as the fog comes rolling back in
1:14 that glimpse of terminal lucidity sent chills down my spine
stage 1: everywhere at the end of the time
stage 2: everywhere end of.. end of the...
stage 3: everywhere end..
stage 4: where is time..
stage 5: end
stage 6:
Post awareness stage 6 is without description
@@carsonmorris127 yes
@@carsonmorris127 rip 6 stage
time left you because you were boring
ㅤㅤㅤ
As French youtuber Feldup once said, “It’s incredible how we *are* our memories. All our past experiences, all our mistakes, it forms who we are. Without memories, we are not ourselves, we disappear.”
wrong. that’s our ego
@@eli-ti5um no. Your whole personality just doesn’t exist anymore. Everything is our memory, even how you act, because it’s based on your previous actions. If you never had any memories, there’d be no « You » there’d be an empty shell with no mind. A Post-Awareness Stage 6 patient. Just nothingness.
@@gambe96 that emptiness is us. that state of being and not thinking nor remembering, is a state of presence and being. our memories are our ego. our egos hold onto the past, our minds subconsciously build up a false image of ourselves that we call “ourselves”. we are not who we are by thought, but by being. the mind is always there, the centre never ends. the brain however, does affect the mind’s activity. but no matter what, the mind doesn’t fully stop.
@@gambe96 The "you" is mainly the brain
@@etn6444 Thats my interpretation of consciousness, to me existing and not being capable of thought and interaction is inexistance. The body and extremely short-term consciousness exist at stage 4-5. Stage 6 is nothing. No consciousness, a physical shell that can’t interact with or think of anything. But if your interpretation of the conscious is different that’s ok.
YOO THIS THE ADHD VERSION JUST FOR ME YEE
Lol same here
Adhd gang rise up
Wait what was that
I'm gonna stop rising up now and do that other thi- ooh what's that
LMFAO LITERALLY-
yoo bruh we're cousins... I HAVE ADD NOT ADHD
I don’t get it but YAYYYYYYY I GUESS UHHHHHH HELPPPPP
I'm more terrified by the fact that if my mom haves demetia. She wouldn't remeber me at some point of her life. All of those moments, those smiles, forgotten. My grandma haves it, my mom probably haves it and i probably have it. That's the reason why i write all my thoughts in notes, leave something in the world and take something for me, forever.
Damn that's a t e x t
Very high percentage of it isn't genetic.
my grandfather has Alzheimers and in only 2 years he lost almost all of his ability to remember things. He only remembers his childhood, his family, and University of Texas football. Day to day stuff is off the table. He can't function without my grandmother with him 24/7. He was and still is one of the smartest men I ever knew.I wish that his memory wasn't being stolen from him, not just for my sake but for my grandmother and dads sake. Once he forgets them, they will be broken.
I love how my generation can listen to this and then be like... “This is a certified hood classic”
it fucking slaps bro
Big bops, my g
Listen Mr./Ms. Jizz I like you already for this is truly a certified hood classic
this is a certified hood mov- wait.. that was a hood momen- wait no
CERTIFIED
this is a mixture of terrifying and depressing and idk how to explain it
The Fencesitters dementia
Loneliness
despair
Existential dread
HELP IM IN STAGE 6 IM SO SCARED IDK WHY HELP ME PLEASE HOW MUSIC CAN DO ALL THIS WHAT IS THIS IM SCARED TO MOVE PLEASE WHAT IS THIS FEELING
Imagine being 80 on your deathbed and not remembering a generic 2010's song but instead remembering all the generic top comments on this video
My great aunt has a form of Parkinson’s that’s progressed to be the equally tragic antithesis of dementia. Her physical body has rotted away, to the point where she can barely swallow and mostly grunts instead of speaking, but what few words she can form make perfect sense. She’s entirely lucid, but she’s trapped inside what’s essentially a corpse.
Damn, I'm really sorry to hear that. No one deserves to live that way.
I remember my grandpa I his deathbed. He somehow remembered me once and took my origami gift for his birthday.
Next was my cousin and he didn't really look at her, like he'd just passed by to get my crane and left...
Wich type of parkinson?
that sounds horrifying. I am so sorry for her
What in the actual f*** did I just read-
Stage 1: Shawty's like a melody in..
Stage 2: Shawtysy's likȨ̷̵̷̴̷̷̶̸̷̶̵̶̸̵̴̵̵̴̴̷̵̵̷̸̴̷̴̸̴̷̶̵̷̶̸̷̴̨̢̢̢̨̨̨̢̧̧̧̨̡̛̛̛̛̛̛̛̗̱͎̘̮̬̺̬͔͓͙̱̙̟͖̲̜̳̗̠̤͕͖̫̼̖͓̻͉̘̻͕͙͔̝̗̬̗̮͙̟̞̫͓̮̻͔͚͕̥͉̰̲͈̩̮̭̯͕͎̝̘̜̝̮͍̬̭̙̭͚͓̲̯̝̬͍̪̗͇̗̥̬̰̰̯͙͎͎̱̤̮͎͇̠̩͉̻͚͍̫̟̤̩̜̌̒͊̍͗͐͊̾̎͑͌̄̓͊̇͆̋͑̈̀͆̈́̒̌̏̀̋́͌̅̏̌̒̿̔̊̋͑͒͆̈̂̀͒̿̅͗̑́͐̈́̑̅̇͂̍̿͂͊̾̓̓̃̓͂̿̈́̇́̋̋́̂͌̈́̀̀͗͛̇͐̀̑̄̓̄̑̆̿̌̅̏̅̇̌̈́̋̾̑͛̀̽̈́͛̐̓́̌̈͘̕̚̚̕͜͜͝͝͝͝͝͠͠ͅͅͅͅͅͅe a melody in.. in in
Stage 3Ȩ̷̵̷̴̷̷̶̸̷̶̵̶̸̵̴̵̵̴̴̷̵̵̷̸̴̷̴̸̴̷̶̵̷̶̸̷̴̨̢̢̢̨̨̨̢̧̧̧̨̡̛̛̛̛̛̛̛̗̱͎̘̮̬̺̬͔͓͙̱̙̟͖̲̜̳̗̠̤͕͖̫̼̖͓̻͉̘̻͕͙͔̝̗̬̗̮͙̟̞̫͓̮̻͔͚͕̥͉̰̲͈̩̮̭̯͕͎̝̘̜̝̮͍̬̭̙̭͚͓̲̯̝̬͍̪̗͇̗̥̬̰̰̯͙͎͎̱̤̮͎͇̠̩͉̻͚͍̫̟̤̩̜̌̒͊̍͗͐͊̾̎͑͌̄̓͊̇͆̋͑̈̀͆̈́̒̌̏̀̋́͌̅̏̌̒̿̔̊̋͑͒͆̈̂̀͒̿̅͗̑́͐̈́̑̅̇͂̍̿͂͊̾̓̓̃̓͂̿̈́̇́̋̋́̂͌̈́̀̀͗͛̇͐̀̑̄̓̄̑̆̿̌̅̏̅̇̌̈́̋̾̑͛̀̽̈́͛̐̓́̌̈͘̕̚̚̕͜͜͝͝͝͝͝͠͠ͅͅͅͅͅͅ: Melody in, in my
Stage 3: Yes Shawty, who Ȩ̷̵̷̴̷̷̶̸̷̶̵̶̸̵̴̵̵̴̴̷̵̵̷̸̴̷̴̸̴̷̶̵̷̶̸̷̴̨̢̢̢̨̨̨̢̧̧̧̨̡̛̛̛̛̛̛̛̗̱͎̘̮̬̺̬͔͓͙̱̙̟͖̲̜̳̗̠̤͕͖̫̼̖͓̻͉̘̻͕͙͔̝̗̬̗̮͙̟̞̫͓̮̻͔͚͕̥͉̰̲͈̩̮̭̯͕͎̝̘̜̝̮͍̬̭̙̭͚͓̲̯̝̬͍̪̗͇̗̥̬̰̰̯͙͎͎̱̤̮͎͇̠̩͉̻͚͍̫̟̤̩̜̌̒͊̍͗͐͊̾̎͑͌̄̓͊̇͆̋͑̈̀͆̈́̒̌̏̀̋́͌̅̏̌̒̿̔̊̋͑͒͆̈̂̀͒̿̅͗̑́͐̈́̑̅̇͂̍̿͂͊̾̓̓̃̓͂̿̈́̇́̋̋́̂͌̈́̀̀͗͛̇͐̀̑̄̓̄̑̆̿̌̅̏̅̇̌̈́̋̾̑͛̀̽̈́͛̐̓́̌̈͘̕̚̚̕͜͜͝͝͝͝͝͠͠ͅͅͅͅͅͅis shawty?? What melody are you Melody in my?? What what MeStagȨ̷̵̷̴̷̷̶̸̷̶̵̶̸̵̴̵̵̴̴̷̵̵̷̸̴̷̴̸̴̷̶̵̷̶̸̷̴̨̢̢̢̨̨̨̢̧̧̧̨̡̛̛̛̛̛̛̛̗̱͎̘̮̬̺̬͔͓͙̱̙̟͖̲̜̳̗̠̤͕͖̫̼̖͓̻͉̘̻͕͙͔̝̗̬̗̮͙̟̞̫͓̮̻͔͚͕̥͉̰̲͈̩̮̭̯͕͎̝̘̜̝̮͍̬̭̙̭͚͓̲̯̝̬͍̪̗͇̗̥̬̰̰̯͙͎͎̱̤̮͎͇̠̩͉̻͚͍̫̟̤̩̜̌̒͊̍͗͐͊̾̎͑͌̄̓͊̇͆̋͑̈̀͆̈́̒̌̏̀̋́͌̅̏̌̒̿̔̊̋͑͒͆̈̂̀͒̿̅͗̑́͐̈́̑̅̇͂̍̿͂͊̾̓̓̃̓͂̿̈́̇́̋̋́̂͌̈́̀̀͗͛̇͐̀̑̄̓̄̑̆̿̌̅̏̅̇̌̈́̋̾̑͛̀̽̈́͛̐̓́̌̈͘̕̚̚̕͜͜͝͝͝͝͝͠͠ͅͅͅͅͅͅe3in Seantys
Stage 5: Į̵̛̛͈̫̣̞̬̮͔̳͎̦͔̞̩͚̖̦̤͉̱͓̦̊͊̈́̂͗̓͐̇͊̽̐̊͑͗͆̑̓͑̈̉͑̓͘͜͜N̷̛̼̼̱̬̘̱̫̜͈̲͚̲̹͍̹̆̃̈́̀͂̉̈́̋͌̏̀͘̕͝͝ ̷̢̢͚̦͕͇̎͆̌́̿́̾́̽̅͐̀̿̚͠M̷̨̡̮̱͇̤̜̮̟̰͚̞̳͍̻͚̤̠̲͉̜̻̏͋̊͋͑͜͠Y̵̡̛̛̙͖̼͉̺̟̫͖̠̼͔̲̻̤̏̿͌̀̀̊̅̀̆͗̿͊̌̀̄̂̾̓͌́̿̋͘̚͜ ̴̡̧̨̨̨̛̟̹̜͍̪̰̮̮̟͍͓̙̼͓̲̼͌̈́̈́̈̆͌͊̂̀̽͐̋̐̈́̇̃̍͋̂́̈́͘͜͝Ḩ̶̡̛̲̦̦͓̜̩̩̪͍͎̟̯̲̪͔͎̲͔͉̰̺̻̤̦̖͖̻̺̩͚͎̪͌͐͗́͑̎̈́̐̓̈̓͋̔̈́̌͂͊̚̚̚̕͜͠͝͠Ȩ̵̧̨̛̮̙̯̪͇̰̱̮͉͐̾͑̇͆̈̏͌̒̔̋͒̂͗͐͂͊̓̿̇̋Ą̶̢̡̛̛̱͇͙͎̞̬͇̀͂̍̈̔́̇̓̎̏͌̀́͐̍̇̎̿̄̐̿̾̉̍̈́͒̏̅̎̌̂͘͘̚͠͝͠͠D̸̨̛͕̖̖̤̯̱̦͈̟͕͚͉̺͕̻̔̐͐̾͊̉́̀̀̂͗̅̆̄͑̈́͒̑̌̒̌̄̌͛̂͒̂̑̈́̿̾̓̉̅̄͂͝
Stage 6: ▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓
█████ █: ████████
I’m pretty sure you copied and pasted this...
data is corrupted lmao
Stage 6: [DATA EXPUNGED]
Wouldn't you be dead at stage 5?
Nananana everday
This is how i imagine a video that goes along with this:
A person in a room listening to a radio that sits in the middle of the room. It is playing their favorite song. Out of nowhere an invisible force begins to pull on the shirt of the person. They gradually start being pulled away from the radio. They realize what is happening and they try to resist. They grab onto tables walls, anything to resist the force pulling them away. The song becomes fainter and fainter. They are finally pulled completely out of the room and they can no longer see the radio, but they still hear a faint, distorted reminiscent of the song. They drift down a dimly lit(with flickering lights) hallway, and there are pictures on the walls representing their memories. The flickering light makes it too hard to process the photos. They finally drift away into the darkness.
Yoo I wanna animate this tf
@@user-dq2rg5lm2h PLEASE DO I WANNA SEE IT
jesus christ Daniel calm down
@@unlimitedfor1 i completely forgot i wrote this
Edgy
5:11 As he succumbed to forgetting everything he'd ever known, his suffering was no longer. Eternal peace.
I just came lol
dat boi mfs go “no ❤️” and think they’re fuckin comedians
To Meme or Not To Meme no❤️
Im sobbing
And out of the corner of your eye, you see him... Shia LeBeouf...
To Meme or Not To Meme no❤️
even the one that's about 50 times shorter is terrifying.
I know that I'm only 15, I'm not afraid of this happening to me, yet, but my parents... Will I be in college, or off working somewhere else when this shit happens to them? Will I one day have to return home, leaving my life behind to care for my ailing mother and father? After listening to this,, I couldn't let them suffer this fate alone. Never.
Same toughts
yep
it takes a long time, years even. don't worry about being away for a few months and coming back to different people
Oh great, now I'm worried about this too.
You could save time with end of life planning. Consult with your family doctor or GP.
For the first time its:
_"Silence wench! I do not want to be sad"_
_"I just want to be horni"_
What
BAHAHHAHA NOOOOOO
🤔
I’d take horniness any day over this existisitential dread
I want to become a bull
Imagine someone in the year 2080 recreates the concept of this song but with the oldies of their generation, gonna be Drake and Travis Scott songs 💀