In the olden days, in Europe, in the mountain villages, people used to sleep 20 hours a day during winter, barely staying awake to get something to eat and take care of the necessities. Not quite hibernation, but definitely a slowing down of the metabolism.
I have been wondering about this since it got dark noticeably earlier. It rarely gets very cold where I live, which suits me, but I can’t bear the darker days and the abundant rain.
@@kellydalstok8900 I feel you. I live in Canada. Last winter we barely had snow. Everything was dark and gray. At least, snow brings a little bit of light
Those who did not hibernate spread their genes more widely, while those who hibernated were gradually removed from the gene pool, ultimately exemplifying survival of the fittest.
@@TheDennys21 this is true, also a great example of midwit brain slop, there are more potent issues on Earth than pollution. There is a war on truth and the human essence and people are too easily distracted.
@@TheDennys21bro, you literally replying to something someone wrote on a little box with a screen potentially hundreds of miles away from you. Wym we not smart? We probably the most interesting thing in the universe😂
I grew up in a sunny part of the southern hemisphere (Durban, South Africa) with basically year round sun, dry sunny winters etc... in my first UK winter, i could absolutely comfirm that without the world being the way it is (with constant external communication and expectation to be productive every singe day) i could easily have slept for 20 hours a day with the sudden perceived lack of usual daylight resources
I spent last winter (December thru to April) in the hospital on strict bed rest. I basically slept most of the time. Closest I've gotten to hibernating
I've been crusading for years to have hibernation in the winter be not only possible but socially acceptable and encouraged. Even if you're not sleeping during that time, who wants to go outside in the cold and wet? Not me!
I'm with you, but we seem to be in the minority, I mean in March 2020, the Australian government announced it was "putting the economy into hibernation for the next 6 months" & sent everyone home to sleep & do jigsaws &, well, hibernate. Across the ditch though, NZ announced they were doing only a 6 week hibernation & Australia being super competitive, especially when the Kiwis are involved, had to win & so within 4 weeks, before winter even had a chance to begin, both countries were announcing hibernation was over cause virus was wiped out. Melbourne got it back & returned to hibernation, but the rest of the country never did. The masses it seems just don't like hibernation
I love the humor in the editing ❤ Had a loud laugh a couple of times with this one, whilst joe was just explaining. But overall the way how captivating and entertaining you people make these videos is just amazing. Big thanks for that :)
Some freshwater turtles have waaaaaay more awesome way of coping with winter. Ice prevents the exchange of gasses between the water and air, thus slowly depleting the dissolved oxygen level in a pond. Therefore Painted Turtles not only slow their metabolism, but convert it into being entirely anaerobic. Specifically they use lactic acid fermentation to survive in the absence of oxygen. If that sounds familiar, it's because our own muscle cells do this when we can't deliver oxygen to them quickly enough, but in the aforementioned conditions these turtles use it for everything (well, everything that the turtle is still using with its slowed metabolism). Turtles avoid fatal acidosis by using their shell to buffer the lactic acid.
do you know any other adaptations do freshwater turtles have that enable them to live in varying environmental conditions, like in extreme seasonal changes?
I'm at my 45th winter here in Norway and do get into a kind of mental hibernation during winter. Then after 6-7 months of cold, it's like someone plug me into an electric socket and with warmth, flowers, songbirds and life everywhere again, it's like levitating weightless above ground when I'm outside, feeling a deep euphoria. The lambs, when they are let out after a long winter, they jump around with the back legs up into the air. It's called being "vårkåt" here, or "spring horny".
(not saying you have seasonal depression) but this comment reminds me of a thought I had during the video. there are many different perspectives in psychology, one approach considers the theory of human evolution. some psychologists believe anxiety disorders, for example, could be a byproduct of human evolution - a function that was once vital for our survival is now mainly defunct, and as such can cause impairment in our lives. while there are other factors that come into play, such as environmental changes, it could also be possible that perhaps seasonal depression and hibernation could potentially be linked as well, if it is allegedly a process humans could potentially genetically unlock through technology and science.
@@fleetwoodmak777 I think most people suffer from winter depression of to some degree here, specially a bit further north, where the sun don't rise above the horizon at all, they just get a hint of some blue sky at mid day and then back to black black black days with dead dead dead vegetation and silence silence silence from the birds no longer there... It's an interesting theory you have. I can trace my lineage back to the first written sources here in Norway, so perhaps there's some evolutionary things happening in me during winter, because it feels totally like things are really slowing down inside of me. I get more sleepy, don't wake up as early in the morning when the morning is still like night time. More mood sick, more depressed, less social ETC. Also I have my very blonde, almost white hair, that evolutionary I guess is meant to let sunlight give the few vitamin D it can give, with as little covering as possible, letting sunlight penetrate through the scalp and neck. Also I've read that blonde people also actually have the most hair, or the most dense hair growth of all. I guess that's because it need to keep the head warm, but also why so many men also, that are used to be outside, develop the male pattern balding, I think it's called, something that don't seem to be common at all outside of northern Europe, to give the part of the head with most access to the sun the most Vitamin D and the same time as dense "fur" as possible to isolate the rest of the head. Gladly I haven't suffered from what seem to be common in the rest of my family, but then again I've been suffering from depression too, and have had lots of suicides in my family, that often seem to happen during the dark season... Currently I'm feeling as I'm on the way into my hibernation-LIGHT. I guess that's how God have made it all. Hope you and yours have a nice weekend. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and ideas. It was very interesting. With kind regards, Alv, Norway.
@@elvenkind6072 thank you for taking the time to read my thoughts and share your own, you've given me more things to think about. & that's really awesome that your lineage traces that far back! have a nice weekend as well, and good luck through the winter :)
not sure about that, but aging is technically a metabolic process - the more the molecular machinary is used, the more likely it is to accumulate minor faults and damages. Thus, slowing metabolism down to near stop is non-surprisingly slowing down aging, no matter how long your life span is.
Humans do somewhat participate in a form of hibernation. Humans sleep an average of about an hour and 10 minutes more in the winter. Humans also eat considerably more in the winter time and fall leading into to to gather calories in order to produce a thicker layer of fat to insulate us in the winter time. Skin becomes thicker, about .58 centimeters in order to deter cold. Your hair naturally grows faster and thicker in the winter. And humans have a tendency to become extremely lazy during winter, on average 72% of humans will choose to stay inside over going out, even if theres options of going to a place that has heat. While humans dont sleep the entirity of a cold season, we do technically hibernate in an unorthodox context.
I had a major stroke and was in a coma for about a week, the thing about being in a coma is that you still age even though I didn't appearance any time lost. What good is it for space travel if you hibernate so you don't get bored only to find out you just slept your life away.
i think the point of hibernating instead of being comatose is that in a coma your metabolism keeps going at the same rate, but hibernating slows down the whole metabolism, which will slow down ageing as well, yes you’ll still lose a good chunk of life, but less than a comatose state
10:28 This is a misnomer. This planet lies in the "habitable zone" of Proxima Centauri, but the planet isn't habitable. Proxima Centrauri is a red dwarf. Planets orbiting red dwarf stars can't support life. Red dwarf are extremely violent due to their constant flares and tendency to tidally lock their planets
Anything can happen bro we don't know whether they have atmosphere or not magnetic fields can counter their flares Just like our earth does.... but it depends....
Correction- Bears enter torpor, not hibernation. While clearly similar, hence being discussed in this video, it is technically different than true hibernation.
Same! Im Canadian, so Ive got both extremes, and I've learned its easier to get warm when you're cold than cold when you're warm. One just takes a sweater, the other costs me a fortune on my power bill. Actually, Im not even sure the heat works in my apartment, I've quite literally never tried to turn it on.
I always have a hard time trying to regulate my sleep when it starts to get cold out. Not sleep-for-days but sleeping for 12 hrs (around 5pm to 5am, because i have to go to work) and on the weekends only being able to be awake for a couple hrs at a time (6am-10am, 1pm-5pm). Its some of the best sleep, that kind of heavy sleep where even if youre not the type to sweat while sleeping you find yourself doing that and its fantastic. I have to make an effort not to do it bc i find im not very good at getting household tasks done, my muscles get stiff and because i know it'll be difficult as hell not to be grumpy all the time when daylight savings time comes in the spring. But honestly winter is the only time i feel well rested so idk
I have trouble falling asleep, but, as it turns out, all I needed was to watch a video on hibernation. I'm barely 2 mins in and it feels like I am falling a
Bears: lose half their synapses in a few months of hibernation. NASA: astronauts would probably be fine hibernating for 6,000 years. It's not like colonizing a new planet or operating an interstellar craft needs cognitive function.
11:25 having sepsis didnt hurt or anything, but it wasnt fun. Especially with all the other infections that teamed up with it. However, studying in a hospital bed for a week was pretty nice.
Hibernating 6 months is very different than hibernating 6000 years. We would also have account for radiation damage - not just from the radiation in space, but also radioisotopes in our bodies. The closest potentially habitable planet is actually the moon - once we terraform it. (This is a problem of economics, not so much technology)
Addendum: The process of Hibernation for most species includes Torpor, Hummingbirds are just the best/most commonly known example of what Torpor is. (or so claim some renowned Biologists)
6:45 "i didnt know we still had that animation" I FRICKING HATE YOU FOR BRINGING IT BACK LMAOOOOO like fr why do i remember it?? it is a good animation but still 😭😭😭
I live in southern Brazil. Our houses weren't made to sustain winter because of the abnormal heat that summer inflicts on us, thus, our winters consist of temperatures that vary between 1~15°C both outside and inside. I noticed that during winter, I spend more time sleeping, but when I'm awake, I have more energy than during the summer. I wonder if that's because of slower metabolism when it's cold. When I allow my body to slow down, I get really sleepy and lazy, but when I get up and start doing stuff, I can still have energy (at the cost of a lot of food, I get so hungry in winter...)
The bloodied exomorph(yes, EXO, not xeno) at the Ripley clip was a nice touch! I wouldn't say the nearest potentially habitable, I would say the nearest extrasolar planet.
I have ME/CFS and the current research is that in the first stages of this could be a sort of hibernation mode. All I want to do is sleep, I can't eat and strangely I feel warmer 🧐
I don't know if you've addressed this Joe, but one question I have is why are some people less tolerant of heat and others less tolerant of cold? For example I can wear a T-shirt and shorts in 50° weather while my wife wears jeans and sweaters in 80° or even 90° weather
I've heard of a case where a woman was found frozen for a few hours. Her skin was so hard a needle couldn't pierce it. The doctors surrounded her body with heat packs and she woke up without any permanent damage
You mean when I work all week without sleep, and then I sleep for a day and go back to work it isn’t hibernating? That would explain why I’m always tired.
Biologolgy it would make sense for us to have a "cool down" period. After working spring through fall. However our overlords wouldn't allow us. I know for me if it was possible I would go back to having winter off. While working through spring and fall for winter prep.
I initially seen a few problems with human hibernation. But as I was typing them out, I realized there would be a solution for each one. So instead, I'll just comment to help the algorithm.
As someone who hasn’t used their brain in The past few years, humans do hibernate, thank you very much.
😂😂😂
Welcome back from the long sleep!
When I use my brain now adays I start to feel like I'm OD'ing on crazy pills so it's better for my mental health to just shut everything down
Millennial
Mental hibernation
In the olden days, in Europe, in the mountain villages, people used to sleep 20 hours a day during winter, barely staying awake to get something to eat and take care of the necessities. Not quite hibernation, but definitely a slowing down of the metabolism.
By this fact I am a European coz I also can sleep approx 16 hrs a day
I think this is called torpor
Yea wow
I biologically agree with this claim. I can definitely sleep almost that much, especially in cold winter days.
Sources please? Or at least a region name, name of the people, or something?
Live. Laugh. Fecal plug.
hello minuteearth!
You people rock just so you know 😊😊😊
😂😂
Hey, the next time you make a video on wildlife in Alaska, Russia, Canada or Greenland, put the hashtag #savewinterwildlife in the title.
Your order is all messed up. It goes fecal plug, laugh, then live.
"Nap like a fat bear among the stars" is an dream we can all get behind.
I was thinking that sounded REALLY nice, yeah :D
Better than this hellish society we've made for ourselves
The mitochondria (THE POWERHOUSE OF THE CELL *thunder*) comeback was amazing
😂
I cant even sleep through the night.
Lol, exactly
😂 This is sad, but happens to me also.
Take 2 vodka shots before sleep
The frogs that freeze through during winter are mind blowing. Anti-freeze blood they thaw and seem to just reanimate. I love it.
Frogs are amazing
I ask myself this question every day of winter
I have been wondering about this since it got dark noticeably earlier. It rarely gets very cold where I live, which suits me, but I can’t bear the darker days and the abundant rain.
Winter is great your just weak
@@Angel-xj3wf there has to be a correlation between enjoyning winter and high IQ i refuse to believe people like summer
@@kellydalstok8900 I feel you. I live in Canada. Last winter we barely had snow. Everything was dark and gray. At least, snow brings a little bit of light
@@Angel-xj3wf For real
I love the conclusion that essentially, we're too smart to hibernate lol
We're like Hillary Clinton
Those who did not hibernate spread their genes more widely, while those who hibernated were gradually removed from the gene pool, ultimately exemplifying survival of the fittest.
Considering what humans are doing to Earth i wouldn't call us smart.
@@TheDennys21 this is true, also a great example of midwit brain slop, there are more potent issues on Earth than pollution. There is a war on truth and the human essence and people are too easily distracted.
@@TheDennys21bro, you literally replying to something someone wrote on a little box with a screen potentially hundreds of miles away from you. Wym we not smart? We probably the most interesting thing in the universe😂
I grew up in a sunny part of the southern hemisphere (Durban, South Africa) with basically year round sun, dry sunny winters etc... in my first UK winter, i could absolutely comfirm that without the world being the way it is (with constant external communication and expectation to be productive every singe day) i could easily have slept for 20 hours a day with the sudden perceived lack of usual daylight resources
I spent last winter (December thru to April) in the hospital on strict bed rest. I basically slept most of the time. Closest I've gotten to hibernating
Was it refreshing and restful at least? Hope you're feeling better.
Wow.... Are you feeling better now?
@aurathedinosaurguy4378 yeah I'm pretty well now, thanks.
@@willryan8694 can i ask what happened? its ok if you dont want to talk about it.
I've been crusading for years to have hibernation in the winter be not only possible but socially acceptable and encouraged. Even if you're not sleeping during that time, who wants to go outside in the cold and wet? Not me!
I'm with you, but we seem to be in the minority, I mean in March 2020, the Australian government announced it was "putting the economy into hibernation for the next 6 months" & sent everyone home to sleep & do jigsaws &, well, hibernate. Across the ditch though, NZ announced they were doing only a 6 week hibernation & Australia being super competitive, especially when the Kiwis are involved, had to win & so within 4 weeks, before winter even had a chance to begin, both countries were announcing hibernation was over cause virus was wiped out. Melbourne got it back & returned to hibernation, but the rest of the country never did. The masses it seems just don't like hibernation
@@mehere8038we've created an evil system that stops us from enjoying real pleasures like sleep.
😊😊
I love the humor in the editing ❤
Had a loud laugh a couple of times with this one, whilst joe was just explaining.
But overall the way how captivating and entertaining you people make these videos is just amazing.
Big thanks for that :)
4:28 the Three body problem joke hits hard
Looking for someone who know that. :v
Some freshwater turtles have waaaaaay more awesome way of coping with winter. Ice prevents the exchange of gasses between the water and air, thus slowly depleting the dissolved oxygen level in a pond. Therefore Painted Turtles not only slow their metabolism, but convert it into being entirely anaerobic. Specifically they use lactic acid fermentation to survive in the absence of oxygen. If that sounds familiar, it's because our own muscle cells do this when we can't deliver oxygen to them quickly enough, but in the aforementioned conditions these turtles use it for everything (well, everything that the turtle is still using with its slowed metabolism). Turtles avoid fatal acidosis by using their shell to buffer the lactic acid.
do you know any other adaptations do freshwater turtles have that enable them to live in varying environmental conditions, like in extreme seasonal changes?
I'm at my 45th winter here in Norway and do get into a kind of mental hibernation during winter. Then after 6-7 months of cold, it's like someone plug me into an electric socket and with warmth, flowers, songbirds and life everywhere again, it's like levitating weightless above ground when I'm outside, feeling a deep euphoria. The lambs, when they are let out after a long winter, they jump around with the back legs up into the air. It's called being "vårkåt" here, or "spring horny".
(not saying you have seasonal depression) but this comment reminds me of a thought I had during the video. there are many different perspectives in psychology, one approach considers the theory of human evolution. some psychologists believe anxiety disorders, for example, could be a byproduct of human evolution - a function that was once vital for our survival is now mainly defunct, and as such can cause impairment in our lives. while there are other factors that come into play, such as environmental changes, it could also be possible that perhaps seasonal depression and hibernation could potentially be linked as well, if it is allegedly a process humans could potentially genetically unlock through technology and science.
@@fleetwoodmak777 I think most people suffer from winter depression of to some degree here, specially a bit further north, where the sun don't rise above the horizon at all, they just get a hint of some blue sky at mid day and then back to black black black days with dead dead dead vegetation and silence silence silence from the birds no longer there...
It's an interesting theory you have. I can trace my lineage back to the first written sources here in Norway, so perhaps there's some evolutionary things happening in me during winter, because it feels totally like things are really slowing down inside of me. I get more sleepy, don't wake up as early in the morning when the morning is still like night time. More mood sick, more depressed, less social ETC. Also I have my very blonde, almost white hair, that evolutionary I guess is meant to let sunlight give the few vitamin D it can give, with as little covering as possible, letting sunlight penetrate through the scalp and neck. Also I've read that blonde people also actually have the most hair, or the most dense hair growth of all. I guess that's because it need to keep the head warm, but also why so many men also, that are used to be outside, develop the male pattern balding, I think it's called, something that don't seem to be common at all outside of northern Europe, to give the part of the head with most access to the sun the most Vitamin D and the same time as dense "fur" as possible to isolate the rest of the head. Gladly I haven't suffered from what seem to be common in the rest of my family, but then again I've been suffering from depression too, and have had lots of suicides in my family, that often seem to happen during the dark season...
Currently I'm feeling as I'm on the way into my hibernation-LIGHT.
I guess that's how God have made it all.
Hope you and yours have a nice weekend. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and ideas. It was very interesting.
With kind regards, Alv, Norway.
@@elvenkind6072 thank you for taking the time to read my thoughts and share your own, you've given me more things to think about. & that's really awesome that your lineage traces that far back! have a nice weekend as well, and good luck through the winter :)
Unless ur birthday is at the beginning of winter wouldn’t it be more than 45 winters
@@aCrocodileMan Pardon? I didn't quite understand what you mean here
As a Canadian, I would love to hibernate
Only if I wouldn't need to work like crazy in the summer to make up for the lost in revenue
You're Canadian that's bad enough.
11:25 realistically, a stoma bag hooked up to a draining machine might work. Downside is either permanent stoma or a surgeon will need to be on board.
Or alternatively, the rectal version of a catheter
Sounds practical enough 😂😂😂
I have a permanent stoma, it's not hard to maintain at all but changing the bag is the only problem. Otherwise you get skin infections 😅
Human hibernation does happen occasionally. The triggers just tend to be weird and extreme.
You mention the benefit of decreased aging…but do any of the species that hibernate have especially long lifespans?
They have longer lifespans than similar animals that don't hibernate! Can't really compare mice to tortoises though, apples and oranges
not sure about that, but aging is technically a metabolic process - the more the molecular machinary is used, the more likely it is to accumulate minor faults and damages. Thus, slowing metabolism down to near stop is non-surprisingly slowing down aging, no matter how long your life span is.
The talked about turtles there, right?
@@besmart Are you saying that apples hibernate in the fridge longer than oranges?
@@TMtheScratcher what is it good for if you are basically paused? Unless its to literally skip some time period.
I live in Phoenix. I’d like to sleep through summer!
Is that because of extreme heat ? I've watched you tubes own lizard gang & heat waves can be seen on the pavements (sidewalks)
Humans do somewhat participate in a form of hibernation.
Humans sleep an average of about an hour and 10 minutes more in the winter.
Humans also eat considerably more in the winter time and fall leading into to to gather calories in order to produce a thicker layer of fat to insulate us in the winter time.
Skin becomes thicker, about .58 centimeters in order to deter cold.
Your hair naturally grows faster and thicker in the winter.
And humans have a tendency to become extremely lazy during winter, on average 72% of humans will choose to stay inside over going out, even if theres options of going to a place that has heat.
While humans dont sleep the entirity of a cold season, we do technically hibernate in an unorthodox context.
so educational.. You've just gained a new subscriber🎉
I had a major stroke and was in a coma for about a week, the thing about being in a coma is that you still age even though I didn't appearance any time lost. What good is it for space travel if you hibernate so you don't get bored only to find out you just slept your life away.
i think the point of hibernating instead of being comatose is that in a coma your metabolism keeps going at the same rate, but hibernating slows down the whole metabolism, which will slow down ageing as well, yes you’ll still lose a good chunk of life, but less than a comatose state
I hope you've been feeling better ❤
5:21 the frogs Aang got for Katara and Sokka
So, if you find a big, dry, caky scat in the woods in spring, look around for grumpy, sleep-deprived, hangry Mrs. Bear & her adorable cubs.
10:28 This is a misnomer. This planet lies in the "habitable zone" of Proxima Centauri, but the planet isn't habitable. Proxima Centrauri is a red dwarf. Planets orbiting red dwarf stars can't support life. Red dwarf are extremely violent due to their constant flares and tendency to tidally lock their planets
Anything can happen bro we don't know whether they have atmosphere or not magnetic fields can counter their flares Just like our earth does.... but it depends....
Correction-
Bears enter torpor, not hibernation. While clearly similar, hence being discussed in this video, it is technically different than true hibernation.
And it’s not Me and my friend. It is my friend and I. This show is called Be smart and they got two things wrong.
it's only logical hibernation would expand lifespan because for the same reason a car that gets driven less "lives" more..
I literally fell asleep last night thinking about this very topic. Thanks, Be Smart!
Rather hibernate through the summer. I hate the heat, i much rather deal with the cold.
Same! Im Canadian, so Ive got both extremes, and I've learned its easier to get warm when you're cold than cold when you're warm. One just takes a sweater, the other costs me a fortune on my power bill. Actually, Im not even sure the heat works in my apartment, I've quite literally never tried to turn it on.
Yea same, it’s 3 degrees right now, it’s exactly noon right now
Hell yeah
Are there places where it’s between 16 and 20 degrees centigrade all year round? Because those are the temperatures I thrive at.
@@kellydalstok8900 that's what the average temp in CT is right now 60-70F
I always have a hard time trying to regulate my sleep when it starts to get cold out. Not sleep-for-days but sleeping for 12 hrs (around 5pm to 5am, because i have to go to work) and on the weekends only being able to be awake for a couple hrs at a time (6am-10am, 1pm-5pm). Its some of the best sleep, that kind of heavy sleep where even if youre not the type to sweat while sleeping you find yourself doing that and its fantastic. I have to make an effort not to do it bc i find im not very good at getting household tasks done, my muscles get stiff and because i know it'll be difficult as hell not to be grumpy all the time when daylight savings time comes in the spring. But honestly winter is the only time i feel well rested so idk
The best Channel of the whole You tube.
I have trouble falling asleep, but, as it turns out, all I needed was to watch a video on hibernation. I'm barely 2 mins in and it feels like I am falling a
Well as with all mammals we do have the hibernation gene,it's just a matter of turning it back on.
I'd just like to call attention to the absolutely brilliant match-cut at 4:22 that the editor just kinda slipped in there like it was nothing
"feel free to add that to your self care routine" as I'm finishing up my morning face care routine 😅
THE POWER HOUSE OF THE CELL. I love that animation 😁
You KILLED with that image 😆
Autolike before watching.
8:15 oh god I’ve picked up one of those thinking it was a stick 😖
thank you for this cause this is something I've been wondering recently
Bears: lose half their synapses in a few months of hibernation.
NASA: astronauts would probably be fine hibernating for 6,000 years. It's not like colonizing a new planet or operating an interstellar craft needs cognitive function.
When did NASA say that
Yeah,that part is a dealbreaker.Our species need many connections to even leave diapers,losing half would be catastrophic.
What should we poop out if we didn't eat anything during hibernation?
The body still produces waste even if you don't eat but not as much. Mostly dead tissue cells and bacteria from the gut.
Love the Three Body Problem reference. Such a good book
I like that we're so good at problem solving yet at no point did we consider just sleeping through winter 😢
Understanding hibernation in humans could be great for space travel
11:25 having sepsis didnt hurt or anything, but it wasnt fun. Especially with all the other infections that teamed up with it.
However, studying in a hospital bed for a week was pretty nice.
"Putting my biology on slo-mo" describes a typical Sunday for me so I don't know what you're on about.
I hibernate during these up north winters!!!
“The power house of the cell” meme never get old 😂
i'm willing to translate your videos to Arabic just to be able to share your videos with my friends ❤ that's how much i love them
I would absolutely hibernate if I could get enough PTO.
Hibernating 6 months is very different than hibernating 6000 years. We would also have account for radiation damage - not just from the radiation in space, but also radioisotopes in our bodies. The closest potentially habitable planet is actually the moon - once we terraform it. (This is a problem of economics, not so much technology)
4:05 100% me
The thumbnail is hilarious, made me laugh
What you came for is here 8:50
Mark that was 2 cool of a video thx man.
I slow down during fall and winter months. I don't feel as motivated as spring and summer. I just look at it as a natural cycle.
Thank you!
Thank you
4:28 three body problem reference!!
Addendum: The process of Hibernation for most species includes Torpor, Hummingbirds are just the best/most commonly known example of what Torpor is. (or so claim some renowned Biologists)
Remote working allowed a kind of winter hibernation that's good enough for me.
6:45 "i didnt know we still had that animation" I FRICKING HATE YOU FOR BRINGING IT BACK LMAOOOOO
like fr why do i remember it?? it is a good animation but still 😭😭😭
Glad ur doing okay still boss hair looks great
Im not supposed to do that? Oh. Ok well I kinda have a whole routine now so...Ill get back to you in the spring about this
That was Deep, definitely food for thought,, thank you
1;19 Whole video is worth it just for this moment
Billions and billions..*shhh* haha live your videos
I live in southern Brazil.
Our houses weren't made to sustain winter because of the abnormal heat that summer inflicts on us, thus, our winters consist of temperatures that vary between 1~15°C both outside and inside.
I noticed that during winter, I spend more time sleeping, but when I'm awake, I have more energy than during the summer. I wonder if that's because of slower metabolism when it's cold. When I allow my body to slow down, I get really sleepy and lazy, but when I get up and start doing stuff, I can still have energy (at the cost of a lot of food, I get so hungry in winter...)
With that ending sentence im def gonna stay curious now
I like this video but its a good thing I have finished eating before I watched the part on the fecal plug.
4:26 I caught that Three body problem by Cixin Liu Reference ! Y'all ain't slick hehe
The bloodied exomorph(yes, EXO, not xeno) at the Ripley clip was a nice touch!
I wouldn't say the nearest potentially habitable, I would say the nearest extrasolar planet.
Haha, great reference to 3 body problem series
Can we get a video on quantum computing? Love the videos.
0:28 Bluey!?
Luffy!?
@@histijoe183muscleman!?
what is Zorin os😂
Australia reference😅
🔊🗣️The Powerhouse of the cell 🔊🗣️
I have ME/CFS and the current research is that in the first stages of this could be a sort of hibernation mode.
All I want to do is sleep, I can't eat and strangely I feel warmer 🧐
During the little ice age in the 17 and 18th centuries, a lot of armies would normally take breaks in the winter with a couple exceptions.
I don't know if you've addressed this Joe, but one question I have is why are some people less tolerant of heat and others less tolerant of cold?
For example I can wear a T-shirt and shorts in 50° weather while my wife wears jeans and sweaters in 80° or even 90° weather
😲😯🙂😊 Learning all the time
8:55 is when he starts talking kinda about the topic at hand
I've heard of a case where a woman was found frozen for a few hours. Her skin was so hard a needle couldn't pierce it. The doctors surrounded her body with heat packs and she woke up without any permanent damage
Can you produce Tonies for Tonie box 😊? kids would love it!
busily taking notes: "starbucks... affects ... hypothalamus....causing ... hunger..."
My 10 hours of sleep feels no different than a bear in hibernation 😂
I can't believe you pixelated the bears Wang 😅😅😅
I might have a mutation for hibernation when winter comes I just wanna stay on bed and sleep til spring 😔😔😌
As a Canadian bold of you to assume i cant hibernate all winter ! , the cold temperatures really do make me sleepy
You mean when I work all week without sleep, and then I sleep for a day and go back to work it isn’t hibernating? That would explain why I’m always tired.
Why don't humans hibernate? Because we have to go to work.
Think outside the capitalist box...
8:14 thanks very much, i was eating😅
Biologolgy it would make sense for us to have a "cool down" period. After working spring through fall. However our overlords wouldn't allow us. I know for me if it was possible I would go back to having winter off. While working through spring and fall for winter prep.
Carl... if you need help, blink three times!
I initially seen a few problems with human hibernation. But as I was typing them out, I realized there would be a solution for each one.
So instead, I'll just comment to help the algorithm.
What are the solutions to each one?
I really want to hibernate in winter 😩 worst season
That poor bear must have some serious constipation 😂
excellent 3 body problem reference
Karolina Olsson of Sweden supposedly hibernated for 32 years.