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Useless Factshuman body

Time really does seem to slow down during emergencies — and science explains why

🤷 This changes nothingFact Battle

In life-threatening situations, people commonly report that time seemed to slow dramatically. Research suggests this is partly a memory encoding effect: during high-arousal events, the amygdala triggers enhanced memory recording, creating denser, richer memories that feel longer in retrospect. Additionally, your sense of time is tied to information processing rate — when the brain processes more information per second (as in crisis), subjective time expands. Studies with skydivers show they can't actually perceive faster, but they remember more.

Why this is surprising

The idea that consciousness can dilate time feels almost supernatural. But it's a direct consequence of how memory and attention work — revealing that 'experienced time' is constructed, not measured.

Share this fact

Time really does seem to slow in emergencies. Your brain records more detail during high-stress moments, making memories feel longer — not because time slows, but because you're experiencing more per second. ⏱️ #OddlyHuman