@maliakcin: Soksok #keşfetttt #fypppp

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Tuesday 23 September 2025 20:49:36 GMT
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Why do we die? #FilsDFrank #Science  We spend our whole lives healing, repairing, and surviving yet at some point, the system shuts down. Your body contains 37 trillion cells, but every one of them has a built-in expiration date. They can only divide about 50–70 times before stopping forever. That limit is written into your DNA, inside the shrinking telomeres that unravel with age. By 35, your telomeres are already half as long as when you were born. That’s why wrinkles form, healing slows, and the body begins to break down. Even if you escape disease and accidents, science shows the human lifespan maxes out around 120 years. Every year, about 67 million people diethat’s 128 every minute. Most from heart disease, stroke, lung disease, cancer, and the slow unraveling of time itself. Yet in that inevitability, there’s perspective: out of 117 billion humans who’ve ever lived, you are one of the 8 billion alive today. Statistically, you are a miracle. Death isn’t just failure—it’s evolution’s design. By making room for new generations, death keeps life adapting. Some creatures escape this rule: hydra, immortal jellyfish, 400-year-old sharks, 500-year-old clams. But for us, mortality defines meaning. Science is pushing back longevity research, reprogrammed cells, drugs that clear “zombie” cells but the truth remains: we are temporary. And that’s what makes our time valuable. Knowing you will end forces every moment to matter. Life is fragile. Life is finite. And maybe that’s the point.
Why do we die? #FilsDFrank #Science We spend our whole lives healing, repairing, and surviving yet at some point, the system shuts down. Your body contains 37 trillion cells, but every one of them has a built-in expiration date. They can only divide about 50–70 times before stopping forever. That limit is written into your DNA, inside the shrinking telomeres that unravel with age. By 35, your telomeres are already half as long as when you were born. That’s why wrinkles form, healing slows, and the body begins to break down. Even if you escape disease and accidents, science shows the human lifespan maxes out around 120 years. Every year, about 67 million people diethat’s 128 every minute. Most from heart disease, stroke, lung disease, cancer, and the slow unraveling of time itself. Yet in that inevitability, there’s perspective: out of 117 billion humans who’ve ever lived, you are one of the 8 billion alive today. Statistically, you are a miracle. Death isn’t just failure—it’s evolution’s design. By making room for new generations, death keeps life adapting. Some creatures escape this rule: hydra, immortal jellyfish, 400-year-old sharks, 500-year-old clams. But for us, mortality defines meaning. Science is pushing back longevity research, reprogrammed cells, drugs that clear “zombie” cells but the truth remains: we are temporary. And that’s what makes our time valuable. Knowing you will end forces every moment to matter. Life is fragile. Life is finite. And maybe that’s the point.

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