It's physically impossible to keep your eyes open while sneezing
When you sneeze, your brainstem triggers a reflex that closes your eyes — it's completely involuntary and happens too fast to override. The popular myth that your eyes would 'pop out' if you kept them open is false (your eyeballs are too firmly anchored), but the reflex itself is real. Scientists believe it exists to prevent mucus from entering the eyes via shared mucous membranes. People with certain facial nerve conditions can actually sneeze with open eyes, proving it's a reflex, not a physical impossibility.
The complete loss of voluntary control over a body part for a fraction of a second — triggered by an involuntary function — is a strange reminder of how much of our body runs on autopilot.
“You cannot keep your eyes open when you sneeze. It's a brainstem reflex so fast you can't override it. The 'eyes will pop out' myth is false — the reflex is just involuntary. 🤧 #OddlyHuman”