Hey there! I am sorry if I gave you existential crisis with this video. It made me cry when I was recording it, the way it dissolves was really shocking but I thought It could give some people the awareness of the tiny life around us. Thank you for watching! instagram.com/jam_and_germs/
@@komali2 lmao, here's your gold medal 🥇 Although, if we're being pedantic about it, it was a large group of atoms. A nuclear bomb is an uncontrolled chain reaction.
@@neuronegative3864 well if you want to get technical Combined death toll from both was about 200k. It also was not an atom randomly deciding what it’s plan for the day was, it was a large and quite heavy apparatus that all functioned for the same purpose. This is a single cell with over 4 mil views lol
I think everyone feels more emotion toward it because of the little “legs” frantically moving around, making it more like an animal we’d have a connection to
It makes you sort of feel as though the organism is afraid, but seeing as it’s unicellular it’s most definitely not capable of experiencing any kind of emotion whatsoever. This was just what it was designed to do; it’s what we’re all designed to do.
@@idontcareaboutyouropinion8999 I'm not sure about them not being afraid. I remember I was looking up some microorganism videos for a project, and I came across one where an amoeba was eating a smaller microorganism and the smaller organism was BUGGING OUT. I remember being very disturbed by it and how it kept fighting to get out of the amoeba's grasp. Also, just wanted to say this since we're on the subject: Amoeba's ain't ish! Everytime I see or hear about them they're starting trouble. Eating up people's brains, swallowing up other organisms. They're just menaces!
@@matxalenc8410 well, duh... Of course a single cell organism is not gonna sit there and wait to be eaten, i'm pretty sure it's got receptors that activate some kind of response to being chased by another single cell organism trying to consume it, but don't mistake that for fear or something like that, they don't have a consciousness, they don't have feelings, they're not like us. They're more like a car, a group of components that produce and receive proteins and fuel, causing chemical reactions that produce movements.
It’s kind of harrowing how that paramecium literally just lost small chunks of itself while it’s still swimming around aimlessly struggling to life then out of nowhere it just suddenly explodes and turns completely lifeless.
Can you imagine if people bleeding out just slowly shed entire chunks of flesh and then continued to scream in agony as they wait to just explode into sludge? I’m just saying I’m glad I’m not a microbe lol
@@fcpolat2559 it's mentioned in the description that it belongs to the blephasma genus. But both paramecium and blephasma are ciliate protists so they do look similar.
I've never felt this much empathy for an animal no bigger than a strand of my own hair. How it clings to life, desperately reforming the leaks in itself while it scurries around in panic, with pieces of itself STILL hanging out of it, only for its body to just give up and collapse. absolutely heartbreaking
If I had to guess, I think the boundaries were maintained by three things: the surface tension of the cytoplasm, the cytoskeleton proteins that help shape the cytoplasm, and the polarized nature of the cell membrane's phospholipid bilayer causes the newly exposed ones to reestablish equilibrium by rearranging into a structure where their positively charged tails can avoid the water molecules and the negatively charged heads can remain exposed to water.
One cell remembered by 9 million creatures, each with trillions of cells, meaning over three hundred thirty-four quintillion and eight hundred quadrillion cells made up the amount of cells in the creatures watching this. holy cow that was hard to say
Meanwhile, the 5-dimensional being watching one of us die slowly on 5D TH-cam be like, “This is the first 3 dimensional being to be remembered by so many 5 dimensional beings.”
@@onagain2796 Yes this is true. HOWEVER, you are also a deterministic finite automata, are you not? The only difference is you have more memory in your program. It opens up the question of, where should you draw the line, and should you even draw a line at all, or should you just come to the conclusion that no one and nothing's life matters at all.
I know those are just the movements it makes, regardless of how it is doing, but I can't help but feel like it's thrashing around in panic like it's trying to stave off the inevitable.
I find it fascinating that the cell are able to mend the leaks that quickly, though it's probably a matter of perspective as for that organism these series of breakdowns takes forever.
@@romancultist6089 maybe you missed it all it was floating around like it had plenty of life to live and then out of no where all of sudden just stops and dies and then dissolve away
This is one of the most beautiful comments sections in all of TH-cam. Where are you people everyday? I hope you are spreading this beautiful light you have inside you.
This tiny creature doesn't even _know_ it's dying: it has no brain, no nervous system, no self-awareness; there's no way it can feel pain, anguish or regret. And yet, it's so sad to watch its final moments.
It looked as though the microbe basically threw up its entire innards. Life starts by bringing parts of the environment into itself and it ends turning inside out.
Thanks for uploading this. Fascinating to watch. Also fascinating to see everyone's reactions. I assume the organism is wiggling like that pretty much all the time and isn't actually fleeing it's death. I had similar feelings but I suppose it is human nature to empathize with things we can relate with and/or anthropomorphize.
maybe. As far as I know some single-celled organisms can change their pace according to the environment - I don't think it would be surprising if the dying cell felt "uncomfortable" and tried moving away, so in a sense trying to flee it's death.
@@iralol3771 It's true...It's happening countless millions of times, inside and outside of your body. Continuously!!! MOSTLY for the good of your health.
@@koichikamimura9723 True we are made of trillions of cells yet considered one organism but microbiota that live in a relationship with our bodies are organisms.
@@druiden2496 And that's the problem, isn't it? You don't think homelessness is "that bad", so you don't have enough empathy to try to help. Someone has to literally die for you to care.
If you ever feel like humans are jerks, just remember 10 million people watched this and I guarantee over 50% felt bad for the little guy. (I did. *goodnight, sweet prince. No more tears; only dreams)*
Humam Slayer No, there are different types of cells. In this case, it was a unicellular organism. A single cell that performs all of the functions of life. But as I said there are different cells for instance, the cells that compose our body are multicellular organism.
From how atoms interact, to how them makes organisms, to how organisms adapt and evolve. It's too complex, too perfect, to have come into existence randomly, it's like saying a fully functioning computer can come into existence randomly, it's impossible. Life is like organic machines, but who made it ? A higher life form obviously, but what is it exactly ? We may never know. Science is the understanding, Religion can lead to the right path, when humanity understand everything, those two will combine into simply the Truth
Adasdasda Asadasda Focusing on who made our existence is too simple minded. you are thinking too inside the box. Okay let us say we were made by a higher power, now a question must be raised “where did this power come from?” And if this higher power doesn’t believe there is higher power above him.. well then that’s no better than if humans said there wasn’t any higher power. That we humans came about through chaotic chance! If you don’t believe in a higher power, one must ask “well then how the heck did we come to be?” And on the other side of the fence, no matter how many higher powers beyond our creators there is, there HAS TO BE a random chaotic event that resulted in the birth of intelligent design somewhere along the way.
Holy cow, poor little thing just fell apart! Thanks to you for filming this, and thanks to it for giving its life in such a timely manner, and thanks to God for quardinating.
This thing, in one moment, was a living thriving being which held the miracle of life, and then in the next moment it became as lifeless as a pile of pebbles. Fascinating
The thumbnail warned that watching this would make me feel uneasy. At first I underestimated that and thought there is no way I would feel bad for a single cell organism. But watching it die, and look like as if it was scared and in pain made me sad :(
A strange feeling came over me. I just met this strange little thing, knowing it would die soon, and I still felt bad watching it do it’s best to cling to its final moments of life. Did it experience pain, did it have any sense of self awareness? All those questions hit me within this 2 minute window.
Isn't it possible for it to feel things in a different way? Maybe not everything has to have a nervous system to feel. If that's so, then I believe we are jumping to conclusions too fast.@@elementgermanium
@lowgpu1687 I get your point, but that is pure imagination. Completely natural, of course, as it's an evolved human behaviour to question things Ultimately: no. Based on everything we have verifiably observed about our world, there is simply no way for this organism to 'feel'. To imagine 'feeling' without any mechanism by which to convert an input into a signal, and without anything to decode and interpret that signal, is impossible. It would be like listening without a means to perceive soundwaves, there just isn't anything about these organisms which allows for that kind of thing to happen What's cool though is that, despite how different we are, we're distant cousins to that little cell. In a very real way, it's family, and part of our interconnected biological world
@@lowgpu1687 Not in any meaningful sense, no. Is it “possible” that there’s an invisible, intangible, inaudible unicorn standing in my room as I type this? Technically, but not in a meaningful way. Same here. A single-celled organism doesn’t have a brain. Whether you believe in an immaterial form of consciousness (a “soul”) or not, the brain is vital to cognition- either as the source of consciousness outright or the interface by which it senses and interacts with the world. (Personally, I think “souls” are nonsense, but just covering my bases here.) Even if single-celled organisms had “souls” and thus a form of consciousness, they’d be cut off from any ability to gather or process information about the outside world. They’d be in a permanent state of total sensory deprivation, so death would be a mercy. Either way- there’s no physical pain.
I really never expected this to be so unsettling, you could see after the first disintegration of part of the the cell wall and membrane it almost looked like it was trying to run away. It was just so disturbing to see it just, stop existing..
death is such a disturbing thing bro... like, in a moment you're alive, breathing and all, and then, just in a second, you're not anymore ;_; and then stops existing... man i just got an existential crisis :D
@@sherryquartzuniverse yes and we dont know whats after is there really a god or not and why did i live (Im giving the next ppl who read this an existential crisis)
That's us. Constantly running. The ego is running. Maybe it was being embodied by emptiness. Physicists will tell you we don't really exist. This is the dream we're in. That little single cell wanted to be separate until it was merged back with God. It just looks scary. 😉🙏
Seeing it scurry around then suddenly just stop and essentially dissolve was kinda heartbreaking, it looked like it was ready to chug along forever then just poof it dissolved ;-;
@@AreGeeBee No they did not lol, any evidence? When's the last time an airplane made itself? Or a phone, a car etc... you need consciousness and intelligence to create something..
We met him, were intrigued by him, felt sorry for his struggle, started rooting for him, felt his pain, were devastated by his departure, will miss him dearly, will love him forever. All of that in under 2 minutes
Just remember that this crap gives you horrible diseases. In fact diseases only exist because of crap like this. So next time you're ill, you'll be glad when it all falls apart I was actually intrigued how it continued to survive after half its organs were already out. And how there was a "line of death" that it eventually crossed, after which it was impossible to stay alive or to put humpty dumpty back together again
@@marioluigi9599 actually no, bacteria is, on average, not bad for humans, especially this kind, many of the most well known and the worst diseases are caused by viruses, such as HIV, SARS, Spanish flu, COVID, and smallpox, which couldn’t be any more unrelated to bacteria.
I remember being in science class looking at a bunch of these guys under a microscope when the air conditioner turned on and for some reason caused all of them to explode at once. It was surprisingly horrifying.
From form to formlessness, dissolving and becoming part of the whole. I can’t help but cry watching it flee from the inevitable when so many of us spend our days rushing toward it.
@@camillecirrus3977 Learn what that word means before using it. You cannot know who is a weeb if they don't say it. Nobody likes disgusting weebs, fuck weebs! But a normal person can like anime and not be a weeb, they just have to not be obsessed. Go watch filthy frank's video about this topic.
To think that we, as in ourselves, are a collection of trillions of these little dudes all going about thier business keeping us alive and who we are. Quite beautiful really.
0:41 I find it fascinating how it rcovered for a moment and the membrane closed by itself. You see the contrast of the membrane coming back. And then a few moments later life suddenly stops.
I don't think the membrane came back or recovered. I think we saw the creature at a different depth/angle which showed another, more intact version, of the membrane. The anabolic process is slower and that membrane came back too quickly to be a 'recovery'. The videographer was shifting the lens focal depth throughout, trying to capture the best one for the clearest picture.
I think it lost too much blood or whatever it is the first time. An infusion would have helped. Probably couldn't find its blood type quickly enough. RIP
Life is, at its most fundamental aspect, a chemical reaction. Atoms exchange electrons and energy. When the reagents run out, and all the atoms reach equilibrium energy, the reaction stops. Entropy comes for us all in the end.
@@fastshot5485 it can't think, but you can see the cell knows something wrong and is trying to fix the problem, all it can do is flail around and it does so faster throughout the video until it dies. it can't feel or think, but it is noticably reacting to stress from its environment
@@karmadoesmore1644 Or the "weight reduction" threw off it's weight distribution and lowered weight and drag slowly throughout the video that it got faster and faster and wasn't as stable? Or maybe they just slowly increasingly want to experience going fast as hell until one day they can't stand it anymore and take off, knowing damn well that at those speeds it will have chunks torn off and be able to go faster and faster until it blows apart completely...and they find that speed to be worth ceasing to exist.
This video shows not only how Eldritch some life is (e.g. it just straight up loses cohesion and dumps its bits everywhere and suddenly it's completely immotile), but also how strongly humans pack bond with just about anything (illustrated by the comments section).
It gets even stupid when you notice how most of these wouldn't show as much empathy to people around them. Humans just romanticize the idea of connection and empathy instead of actually empathising. It almost makes you feel bad if you didn't feel empathy for this creature. I almost thought to myself if it's abnormal to not feel anything emotional for this except fascination.
@Saloni Sharma The fact that the vast majority of us put up with each other without killing each other is pretty indicative of empathy I think but that’s just me 😂
3 years later this invisible-to-the-naked-eye single-celled organism has been able to cognitively/emotionally impact millions of people! Proves that even the smallest of us can achieve great things...
Not to be “that guy” but they achieved that by dying, and it never had a choice to impact anyone anyways, it’s the person who recorded the cell’s death who did so, then again, you can believe what you want to believe
@@Golgari213 yeah but to be fair his books were of fiction, and while I cannot say much about what his books were about since I never read them, didn’t a great wizard help the main character defeat the villain?
Ever really thought about the fact that everything in all of history has died, but you're still here right now with so much potential for so many different things? But one day, maybe in 100 years, or maybe only a minute from now, you will face your final moment like this organism and just be a part of history.
I was there when he was preparing for mitosis... Craig's death pains me but knowing that he was able to pass on his DNA successfully makes me so happy. RIP Craig, you will be missed.
Here we are watching this organism, and feeling some kind of sadness when it passed. This little guy could never fathom that a species known as humans, is watching him. Is there a species watching us, in which we’ll never be able to fathom that they even exist?
@@Tolbat Whatever begins to exist has a cause. The universe (all space, time, and matter) began to exist. Therefore: the universe has a cause. This cause is necessarily spaceless, timeless, and immaterial. Some people call him/it God.
This was unexpectedly disturbing. I found myself feeling bad for it and the moment it just stopped and dissolved my mind immediately went to how fragile every life really is. From the death of a single cell organism straight to such an intense conclusion.
Life itself is meaningless, there is no other purpose for you to exist except to exist. The pointlessness of struggling to make through another day just so you can have the opportunity to struggle through yet another day following is insanity. Humanity will be extinguished not through a calamity of violence or a biological accident but from the fact that people will evolve to the point that they realize to bear children in of itself is an act of cruelty to force life upon any sentient being.
@@chinabluewho But, we don’t live just because of that, we struggle to live to see another day where something new happens or another pleasure comes, we exist to exist, yes, but we also exist to help others and ourselves, life is not meaningless, nothing is, where something exists, it has a purpose, whether too entertain for a moment, or teach for a century, life is not meaningless, nothing ever will be.
@@coracusa2771 In the vast emptyness of space with the Universe slowly dying and ourselves doomed to perish and be forgotten in the never ending ribbon of time, life itself becomes meaningless. Long after entropy becomes the permanent state we will have become inert dust . There may very well be a rock with some strange carvings upon it after entropy claims all, that resemble a shape or form words but no one will exist to know or even see it. If you live a day longer or even a trillion years it will be but a tiny fraction of a moment when you consider how long the universe will be dead for or how small our world, galaxy or supercluster is compared to the never ending vastness of space. For any of us to consider anything we do to have a meaningful impact on history is the height of arrogance. Alien life forms in other galaxies have risen from the mud only to fade away from the understanding that creating life to exist is a crime that should be considered the worst act possible by a sentient being. We ourselves will soon come to this understanding when we become a bit more evolved enough to comprehend how insignificant and unimportant life is and how the universe does not need nor require it We are doomed to die and be forgotten , that is our allotment, wiether it happens in a day or a 99 trillion years from now it will come to pass.
This is honestly the most jaw dropping video I’ve seen in a long time. I had no clue single celled organisms perished like that. The natural world is a wonder.
What's happening in the video is Cell Lysis... which is breakdown of the cell membrane. This can be caused by a viral infection... the presence of a detergent in the environment that dissolves the membrane... or through osmosis, where the cell absorbs too much water, causing the membrane to burst from the internal pressure. My guess is the either of the later 2.
@@jetsabove3061 can still be aware of damage being done to them. Have no clue what happened in this video though but watching it run around as it slowly dissolves was saddening :(
@@jetsabove3061 let people grieve what they want , i don’t understand how you can grasp all this but not the simple fact that what may not affect YOU can affect others and cause reactions YOU wouldn’t have.
Hey there! I am sorry if I gave you existential crisis with this video. It made me cry when I was recording it, the way it dissolves was really shocking but I thought It could give some people the awareness of the tiny life around us. Thank you for watching!
instagram.com/jam_and_germs/
We're pretty much the same, the process is just a little slower.
I can't say I cried, but this video really got to me haha. Thanks for posting.
Jam's Germs what species and cell type was it? Was it a bacteria? Protist? Etc?
Sir I had like to know, was that opsonization or apoptosis? Great video!
The reaction was a little...fluid. Was an acid introduced to the slide?
Read the description.
Being missed and remembered is actually quite an accomplishment for a single-celled organism
That is kind of crazy to think about
This comment made me feel a lil better about what I just witnessed.
That makes me feel better, thank you
Imagine it being able to comprehend being recorded and watched by multi celled organisms miles away and months after the incident.
Makes you wonder
Rip lil bud
“Size to number of people impacted” ratio has never been at this level
What about japan
A very specific atom on August 9, 1945, begs to differ.
@@komali2 lmao, here's your gold medal 🥇
Although, if we're being pedantic about it, it was a large group of atoms. A nuclear bomb is an uncontrolled chain reaction.
@@neuronegative3864 well if you want to get technical
Combined death toll from both was about 200k. It also was not an atom randomly deciding what it’s plan for the day was, it was a large and quite heavy apparatus that all functioned for the same purpose.
This is a single cell with over 4 mil views lol
@@balu.92 and the first in that "chain reaction" could be considered to have caused the others. That's literally what chain reaction means lol
Nothing is certain in Life. One second you're wiggling around the petri dish, the next you're disintegrating into tiny particles.
thanos snapped
Nobody exists on purpose. Nobody belongs anywhere. Everybody's gonna die. Come watch TV
@@mooser321 MORTY! Shut the fuck up and help me clean this shloup!
sorry didnt mean to snap with all the infinity stones whoops
Death is certain
It managed to reform its walls for a bit but ended up collapsing in the end
it's a bit for us but for this cell it was quite long extra time of life
Sounds like me dealing with life 😂😮💨
:(
There’s no reforming it had already lost too much of its structure it was just a matter of time.
I think everyone feels more emotion toward it because of the little “legs” frantically moving around, making it more like an animal we’d have a connection to
It makes you sort of feel as though the organism is afraid, but seeing as it’s unicellular it’s most definitely not capable of experiencing any kind of emotion whatsoever. This was just what it was designed to do; it’s what we’re all designed to do.
@@idontcareaboutyouropinion8999 I'm not sure about them not being afraid. I remember I was looking up some microorganism videos for a project, and I came across one where an amoeba was eating a smaller microorganism and the smaller organism was BUGGING OUT. I remember being very disturbed by it and how it kept fighting to get out of the amoeba's grasp.
Also, just wanted to say this since we're on the subject: Amoeba's ain't ish! Everytime I see or hear about them they're starting trouble. Eating up people's brains, swallowing up other organisms. They're just menaces!
@@matxalenc8410 well, duh... Of course a single cell organism is not gonna sit there and wait to be eaten, i'm pretty sure it's got receptors that activate some kind of response to being chased by another single cell organism trying to consume it, but don't mistake that for fear or something like that, they don't have a consciousness, they don't have feelings, they're not like us. They're more like a car, a group of components that produce and receive proteins and fuel, causing chemical reactions that produce movements.
@@matxalenc8410 It’s just a defense mechanism/reaction.
@Ayumi Shinozaki that’s a classic sign of a being sociopath, having no feelings for humans but empathy for animals. I would get checked out dude
It’s kind of harrowing how that paramecium literally just lost small chunks of itself while it’s still swimming around aimlessly struggling to life then out of nowhere it just suddenly explodes and turns completely lifeless.
Can you imagine if people bleeding out just slowly shed entire chunks of flesh and then continued to scream in agony as they wait to just explode into sludge? I’m just saying I’m glad I’m not a microbe lol
Im not sure but i think its not a bacteria. Probably paramecium
@@fcpolat2559 it's mentioned in the description that it belongs to the blephasma genus. But both paramecium and blephasma are ciliate protists so they do look similar.
@@vaisakh_11 aah i didnt read the description sorry. Thanks for the information
My dude, you just described a hard dick.
Damm the way it just suddenly became a bunch of lifeless unmoving particles at the end was actually sad to watch for some reason lol.
adam smith more or less
@@bv657 Don't you mean "more or less lol"?
@adam smith why u gotta say it man.. imma cry now..
It really makes you think about What is life? What is death?
its cuz you have sympathy
I've never felt this much empathy for an animal no bigger than a strand of my own hair. How it clings to life, desperately reforming the leaks in itself while it scurries around in panic, with pieces of itself STILL hanging out of it, only for its body to just give up and collapse. absolutely heartbreaking
Lmao
fr
@@MonshallBr shut up
If I had to guess, I think the boundaries were maintained by three things: the surface tension of the cytoplasm, the cytoskeleton proteins that help shape the cytoplasm, and the polarized nature of the cell membrane's phospholipid bilayer causes the newly exposed ones to reestablish equilibrium by rearranging into a structure where their positively charged tails can avoid the water molecules and the negatively charged heads can remain exposed to water.
@@frostbitetheannunakiiceind6574 lmao
This has to be the first single cell organism in the history of this universe(maybe) to be remembered by so many multicellular organisms at once
One cell remembered by 9 million creatures, each with trillions of cells, meaning over three hundred thirty-four quintillion and eight hundred quadrillion cells made up the amount of cells in the creatures watching this.
holy cow that was hard to say
@@noideawhoiam3855 u really counted that?! Lmao
@@glaucolousada5502 yep
For reals
Meanwhile, the 5-dimensional being watching one of us die slowly on 5D TH-cam be like, “This is the first 3 dimensional being to be remembered by so many 5 dimensional beings.”
Rest in Peace, single-cell organism.
@@onagain2796 r/iamverysmart
He was one in a 100000000000000000
@@onagain2796 You would love Osmosis Jones or Cells at work.
@@onagain2796 Yes this is true. HOWEVER, you are also a deterministic finite automata, are you not? The only difference is you have more memory in your program. It opens up the question of, where should you draw the line, and should you even draw a line at all, or should you just come to the conclusion that no one and nothing's life matters at all.
@@onagain2796 Get a damn joke.
Shout out to the microscope operator for keeping it in frame the whole time
I do worse with my phone
Up
Yeah it's harder than it seems to keep things in frame and focus
if only that were the same with phone recordings
Not only in frame but also focused
I’m in the process of grieving a friend right now and this made me cry the hardest i have in a while. rip little buddy.
Shout out to the camera man. Can’t imagine it is easy to keep a single cell organism in centre frame.
cameraperson*
@@BlueJayGaming *cameraground
@@BlueJayGaming 🤨
The cameraman is a Corona virus holding a camera
@@BlueJayGaming *cameradeez
I know those are just the movements it makes, regardless of how it is doing, but I can't help but feel like it's thrashing around in panic like it's trying to stave off the inevitable.
It makes you wonder how aware they are.
@@Smorgasbord. 😳
@@maple_vanilla That's what people said about the now universally recognized quantum level of existence.
Frankly it looks like it will infect me given half a chance.
@@Smorgasbord. like a rumba, maybe. Like they bump into stuff and turn around.
when you aren’t part of the 0.01% of germs that Clorox doesn’t kill
Yes
Dettol😂
Lmao
*Smiles menacingly.
@@christopherd2100 Add a profile pic lol
I find it fascinating that the cell are able to mend the leaks that quickly, though it's probably a matter of perspective as for that organism these series of breakdowns takes forever.
@@TheKing-hr7uhi guess he meant that this organism's perception of time might be different from ours
The way it goes from life to death in an instant is legitimately terrifying.
You missed half of the video somehow...
Yep, get ready :)
@@romancultist6089 maybe you missed it all it was floating around like it had plenty of life to live and then out of no where all of sudden just stops and dies and then dissolve away
@@demETXboyz
In the beginning a piece breaks away and it starts swimming funny 🙄 it's obvious the whole time what's about to happen.
thats how life works. here then not. death itself occurs quickly, its the lead up thats painful and slow.
Never thought in a million years I'd ever feel sadness and empathy for a single celled organism, but I do now.
I did not
Oof
yeah, how the fuck exactly is this sad? you single brain-celled tool?
@@greenderp it's never that serious
@@greenderp dunno bout him but someone definitely hurt you 🤔
TH-cam recommendations out here actually making me sad
Don't feel sad the single organism just took a dump💩
@@freaknastycreep2737 his but fell apart, then his face, then his his legs. Old age gets us all eventually.
It's a collection of chemicals lol
@@knockzy9091 his!? Uhm sexist much?
They're called "sister cells" for a reason you bih
This is one of the most beautiful comments sections in all of TH-cam. Where are you people everyday? I hope you are spreading this beautiful light you have inside you.
going to school coming back home do some studies life is good
This tiny creature doesn't even _know_ it's dying: it has no brain, no nervous system, no self-awareness; there's no way it can feel pain, anguish or regret. And yet, it's so sad to watch its final moments.
How about the panicked running away
@@KoopaShellzz that's just you anthropomorphising
@@-morrow probably
@@KoopaShellzz That's just how it moves
@@-morrow what does that mean
Why am I feeling sad for a cell?
Maybe because you're made of cells.
Also means you have empathy for even the tiniest of creatures. That's a good thing in my book ;)
it's good feeling empathy, bitches love empathy
Your skin is a dead cell
You're not the only one
The moment you realize a single cell organism gets more love and attention than you
Yeah but it's dead and not me so jokes on the cell lmao
That's for reminding me that I'm alone and have depression to kill myself
:(
*_OOF..._*
stay hydrathed
Oh my! I kept watching those teeny tiny legs (?) and then suddenly it dissolves. I feel very touched by this tiny life and death.
in a way they are like legs, they are called flagellum.
Okay, the second time his membrane dissolved, man that was violent...
In first time, I believe it released food to facilitate escape
Yeah that looked so visceral
It looked as though the microbe basically threw up its entire innards. Life starts by bringing parts of the environment into itself and it ends turning inside out.
@@toafloast1883 r/woosh
@Reunite The British Empire
Asshole
aww poor guy turned into one of those colorblind tests
LUL
@Verix L toxic
@Verix L whats your problem buddy
I still can't see the damn numbers in his dots 😢
that made me chuckle
Now this calls for the world's smallest violin.
Nice one
Heheheh
Nice dude
This means nothing
@@franciscomelendez5906 but its a joke, try to appreciate those more
Thanks for uploading this. Fascinating to watch. Also fascinating to see everyone's reactions. I assume the organism is wiggling like that pretty much all the time and isn't actually fleeing it's death.
I had similar feelings but I suppose it is human nature to empathize with things we can relate with and/or anthropomorphize.
maybe. As far as I know some single-celled organisms can change their pace according to the environment - I don't think it would be surprising if the dying cell felt "uncomfortable" and tried moving away, so in a sense trying to flee it's death.
Yes, hence why some people are vegan; because they anthropomorphize animals they should be eating
@Ruktiet so you eat a bunch of squirrel and dog?
@@Nick-o-time if it were commercially available, or if we would live in a hunter-gatherer society, sure.
my man thinks a cow is analogous to a single celled prokaryote
I'm not even vegan but that is dumb lmao
It's amazingly profound to consider that this is continuously happening countless millions of times, all over your body.
wait what
The cells in our body are not organisms tho
@@iralol3771 It's true...It's happening countless millions of times, inside and outside of your body. Continuously!!! MOSTLY for the good of your health.
@@bostjules6176 u mean apoptosis?
@@koichikamimura9723 True we are made of trillions of cells yet considered one organism but microbiota that live in a relationship with our bodies are organisms.
A cell was harmed in the making of this video.
Lmao
actually no one did harm to the cell, it just died
NOOOOOOO
@@pelufaz8435 It still got harmed tho, didn't it?
@@MedK001 implying dying is being harmed semantics
Reaper: It's time to go.
Cell: Am i a good cell?
Reaper: No, you're just like any other cell, but that's the best part. Rest well, little guy.
ugly cries
So sad :c
This was strangely wholesome
Did it die because of old age or what?
(Cries heavily)
RIP Little fella. You will be missed.
Dont cry because he is gone...
smile because he was here.
Rip Harambe
BakonDonutty kek
f
@@bakondonutty7645 o shid so sry
Jack Lowe yeah dude you better watch out for the gender nazis
Me: "oh god this is so sad"
All the cells on my body that is dying every second
"Am I a joke to you?"
Yes, yuo are a jokes to me
Now go get replaced by a fresh cell who will dyings into next week
Hahahahhahahahhahahaa
English teacher: am i a joke to you?
Polandball: Yes, yuo are of jokings to my opinion
English teacher: Am I a joke to you?
It's amazing to see that human empathy is so intense to a point that it makes us feel for a mere single cell organism.
And still we barely feel anything when we pass by a homeless person daily
@@luisphelipecarvalho5990 thats because the homeless person isnt dying, I wouldnt compare imminent death to homelessness is all I'm saying
@@druiden2496 you speaking facts bro,I mean I think we all feel sympathy for a homeless person but not empathy to where we try and help them
@@druiden2496 And that's the problem, isn't it? You don't think homelessness is "that bad", so you don't have enough empathy to try to help. Someone has to literally die for you to care.
Except if it's in the womb, for like 50% of the population
If you ever feel like humans are jerks, just remember 10 million people watched this and I guarantee over 50% felt bad for the little guy. (I did. *goodnight, sweet prince. No more tears; only dreams)*
My last brain cell during an exam
...and the first of many followed by heavy drinking
lmao
@@tooiiiootbunny5800 oh yeah yeah
@@tooiiiootbunny5800 @AVI 7 Praise the holy Paint Army
Hate to be a joke killer, but that's a prokaryote.
Rip cell thing
2019-2019
John Ruggiero. Holy shit that funny!
However the video was made in 2018
Unicellular organism*
@@blanche1935 is that the scientific name of a cell ?
Humam Slayer No, there are different types of cells. In this case, it was a unicellular organism. A single cell that performs all of the functions of life. But as I said there are different cells for instance, the cells that compose our body are multicellular organism.
Rest In Particles.
Adi This comment deserves more likes.
best one yet
From how atoms interact, to how them makes organisms, to how organisms adapt and evolve. It's too complex, too perfect, to have come into existence randomly, it's like saying a fully functioning computer can come into existence randomly, it's impossible. Life is like organic machines, but who made it ? A higher life form obviously, but what is it exactly ? We may never know.
Science is the understanding, Religion can lead to the right path, when humanity understand everything, those two will combine into simply the Truth
Adasdasda Asadasda Focusing on who made our existence is too simple minded. you are thinking too inside the box. Okay let us say we were made by a higher power, now a question must be raised “where did this power come from?”
And if this higher power doesn’t believe there is higher power above him.. well then that’s no better than if humans said there wasn’t any higher power. That we humans came about through chaotic chance!
If you don’t believe in a higher power, one must ask “well then how the heck did we come to be?” And on the other side of the fence, no matter how many higher powers beyond our creators there is, there HAS TO BE a random chaotic event that resulted in the birth of intelligent design somewhere along the way.
Rest in vacuoles?
Holy cow, poor little thing just fell apart!
Thanks to you for filming this, and thanks to it for giving its life in such a timely manner, and thanks to God for quardinating.
No fuck god. God is the one who made it so that the cell would die.
RIP Single-celled Organism, you'll be missed and dearly remembered.
The crazy thing is it literally will be remembered being on youtube
It was a legend, 🥺😢
Remembered forever. Poor guy wont ever know it.
666 likes when I saw this 😂😂😂
Omg 666 likes
This thing, in one moment, was a living thriving being which held the miracle of life, and then in the next moment it became as lifeless as a pile of pebbles. Fascinating
It really puts all life into perspective, doesn't it, Dad Pounder 420?
The fact that u included his name like that makes this comment perfect
Thats kinda how it always works
I feel like "held" implies that something other than the physical components is alive y'know?
I dont see the miracle. fascinating nonetheless.
*Demonetized for Graphic content*
Lol thats literally them right now
This single-celled organism will truly and be forever, missed.
1. Why was this in my recommended 2. Rip little cell guy
Same question...
He's gone to cell heaven. It's a little different to human heaven.
@@mryan4452 Cellular heaven is much more populated than the human paradise, and more diverse too.
Same lmao
@@samuelsol786it must be. They're probably there with other microbes. It's great though to know single cell organisms have a heaven to go to too.
The thumbnail warned that watching this would make me feel uneasy. At first I underestimated that and thought there is no way I would feel bad for a single cell organism.
But watching it die, and look like as if it was scared and in pain made me sad :(
They don’t have nervous systems and thus cannot feel pain
@@bleach8776 lol
@@bleach8776 This is just what "big bleach" wants us to think!
Same, watching it running around was hard. :/
grow up
*multi cellular organism laughs at unicellular organism*
*top ten jokes only kids from the 90s will remember*
@@plscometomychannel1007 whats the joke?
@@jasjay873 we are made of many cells and that thing is made out of one cell
@@jasjay873 r/woosh
@@jasjay873 cell division
A strange feeling came over me.
I just met this strange little thing, knowing it would die soon, and I still felt bad watching it do it’s best to cling to its final moments of life.
Did it experience pain, did it have any sense of self awareness?
All those questions hit me within this 2 minute window.
If it makes you feel better, it didn’t. Multicellularity is required for a nervous system, which is needed for self-awareness. It didn’t suffer.
@@elementgermanium That’s good to know. Strange beings single celled organisms are.
Isn't it possible for it to feel things in a different way? Maybe not everything has to have a nervous system to feel. If that's so, then I believe we are jumping to conclusions too fast.@@elementgermanium
@lowgpu1687 I get your point, but that is pure imagination. Completely natural, of course, as it's an evolved human behaviour to question things
Ultimately: no. Based on everything we have verifiably observed about our world, there is simply no way for this organism to 'feel'. To imagine 'feeling' without any mechanism by which to convert an input into a signal, and without anything to decode and interpret that signal, is impossible. It would be like listening without a means to perceive soundwaves, there just isn't anything about these organisms which allows for that kind of thing to happen
What's cool though is that, despite how different we are, we're distant cousins to that little cell. In a very real way, it's family, and part of our interconnected biological world
@@lowgpu1687 Not in any meaningful sense, no.
Is it “possible” that there’s an invisible, intangible, inaudible unicorn standing in my room as I type this? Technically, but not in a meaningful way.
Same here. A single-celled organism doesn’t have a brain. Whether you believe in an immaterial form of consciousness (a “soul”) or not, the brain is vital to cognition- either as the source of consciousness outright or the interface by which it senses and interacts with the world. (Personally, I think “souls” are nonsense, but just covering my bases here.)
Even if single-celled organisms had “souls” and thus a form of consciousness, they’d be cut off from any ability to gather or process information about the outside world. They’d be in a permanent state of total sensory deprivation, so death would be a mercy. Either way- there’s no physical pain.
I really never expected this to be so unsettling, you could see after the first disintegration of part of the the cell wall and membrane it almost looked like it was trying to run away. It was just so disturbing to see it just, stop existing..
death is such a disturbing thing bro... like, in a moment you're alive, breathing and all, and then, just in a second, you're not anymore ;_; and then stops existing... man i just got an existential crisis :D
@@sherryquartzuniverse Yeah, don't get me started 😂
@@sherryquartzuniverse yes and we dont know whats after is there really a god or not and why did i live (Im giving the next ppl who read this an existential crisis)
That's us. Constantly running. The ego is running. Maybe it was being embodied by emptiness. Physicists will tell you we don't really exist. This is the dream we're in.
That little single cell wanted to be separate until it was merged back with God. It just looks scary. 😉🙏
@@yvonnepeters1914 Damn dude.
Seeing it scurry around then suddenly just stop and essentially dissolve was kinda heartbreaking, it looked like it was ready to chug along forever then just poof it dissolved ;-;
"It was ready to chug along forever then just poof it dissolved". Everyone of us felt that.
That’s life really you go along and one day Poof
Professor Slughorn HP 6
@@all-caps3927 my friend and i used to say this all the time. "Poof! That's life!"
It kept chugging along until the end tho!!!
It’s a fucking cell
Shame.. it was such a talented cell.. and always nice to people..
Im gonna miss him.
Don't worry, it has a million children that live on in the sandwich you just ate.
@@jaweeedyyyy yeah.. weird.. who does that..?
Did you just assume the organism’s gender!?
omg are you *assuming the cell's gender*
Nobody
J.K Rowling:
The cell was gay
i'm not a biologist, but i think that's the human equivalent of having your organs spill out everywhere
Human death:
*Gets old and dies peacefully*
Cell death:
*d i s i n t i g r a t e s*
Wolfy_677 2 humans have 2 options; die violently (murder, heart attack, etc) or watch yourself waste away (age, cancer, etc). Doesn't seem very peaceful.
Oh yeah....
Oof, i guess?
Shoulda gone for the head
Well actually when you die your body desintegrates, slowly but surely
Wolfy_677 same
Dude i just saw him yesterday!!! I can't believe this, he was such a nice guy. You'll be missed little buddy.
LOL, you're a sweetheart, can't hide IT...
😘💕👌
When a three year old cracks a joke.
Literally little guy
@@Ryuuthegreat when a steve doesn't understand deadpan humour.
@@canadianradiochemist4465 *2 years ago*
It's weird how nicely structured it was at the start then dissolves into basic materials which once held life...
Basic materials can't create life blindly by chance btw
@@lilyoyo77 And yet, they did
@@AreGeeBee depends what is HIS definition of life
@@AreGeeBee No they did not lol, any evidence? When's the last time an airplane made itself? Or a phone, a car etc... you need consciousness and intelligence to create something..
@@lilyoyo77 archaea
It was sad. It started decomposing even while alive and clearly couldn't do anything about that.
We met him, were intrigued by him, felt sorry for his struggle, started rooting for him, felt his pain, were devastated by his departure, will miss him dearly, will love him forever. All of that in under 2 minutes
I don't know what sick motive propelled you to assume it has a gender
Better plot than most movies
Tbh it’s a single cell. It doesn’t have the ability to even feel pain.
@@Icannothandleany I knew there is gonna be a person like you who's gonna bring gender on topic and ruin everything
@@Icannothandleany lmao. That's pretty funny
Me: *Watches a single-celled organism die*
Dad: Why are you crying so damn loud?
ur grammar is actually villain of my brain cells atm. pls fuck off
I hate when a comment with bad grammar gets a lot of likes. I assume most people insert the missing words without noticing though.
@@jsquaredm an obvious mistake. Hating a comment for a mistake is rather strange
It's actually watch, not watches
My god this isn't school
Someone needs to make a full scale documentary on this
th-cam.com/video/ibpdNqrtar0/w-d-xo.html
Here mr verified.
Actually This Is What Happens to Cells Under Radiation, So, Stop Smoking Weed, Thank You
@@GameDevAraz what?
Just leave it die in peace no need for documentary
@@ytuberesident5234 it was a joke but ok
"Mr Stark, I dont feel so good,,
This made me feel the 5 stages of grief within the span of 2 minutes
Just remember that this crap gives you horrible diseases. In fact diseases only exist because of crap like this. So next time you're ill, you'll be glad when it all falls apart
I was actually intrigued how it continued to survive after half its organs were already out. And how there was a "line of death" that it eventually crossed, after which it was impossible to stay alive or to put humpty dumpty back together again
@@marioluigi9599 what's this thingy actually
@@marioluigi9599 actually no, bacteria is, on average, not bad for humans, especially this kind, many of the most well known and the worst diseases are caused by viruses, such as HIV, SARS, Spanish flu, COVID, and smallpox, which couldn’t be any more unrelated to bacteria.
@@OoiYunKai blepharisma. Regular single celled organism. Does not have hostility like flu virus or whatever else. It’s found in salt water
Pansy
I remember being in science class looking at a bunch of these guys under a microscope when the air conditioner turned on and for some reason caused all of them to explode at once. It was surprisingly horrifying.
F. Genuently F.
Paramecium
@@vswild7005 maybe it's one of those air conditioners producing ozone, O3, which is a heavy oxidizer.
Probably died from immediate exposure to Legionnaires disease. (Legionella pneumophila bacteria)
I'm guessing a rapid change in humidity caused it.
I now feel weird knowing that everyday, cells are dying inside me
@Pooh Xi yikes
Pooh Xi wow that’s deep
SAME!
If you think that's weird, then get a load of this. The human body has a 1:1 ratio of bacteria and your own cells.
Maybe that's what I feel crawling on me
From form to formlessness, dissolving and becoming part of the whole. I can’t help but cry watching it flee from the inevitable when so many of us spend our days rushing toward it.
I don’t feel so good
LemonOVA oh ok
Mr. Stark... I don't feel so good.
God dammit you beat me to it
K
@@camillecirrus3977 Learn what that word means before using it. You cannot know who is a weeb if they don't say it. Nobody likes disgusting weebs, fuck weebs! But a normal person can like anime and not be a weeb, they just have to not be obsessed. Go watch filthy frank's video about this topic.
"Mr. Microbiologist, I don't feel so good..."
*Lipid bilayer has left the chat*
underrated comment.
YES another Biology nerd!!
Now THATS A COMMENT ........... I deem you WORTHY , OF A GAZILION LIKES
*hydrophilic head, hydrophobic tails*
Exocytosis put on max. All materials are out lmao
To think that we, as in ourselves, are a collection of trillions of these little dudes all going about thier business keeping us alive and who we are. Quite beautiful really.
"What did it cost?"
"Everything"
Oof 420nd like
@@Sakonetatar1 "420nd"
@@NomTheDom no u
Dwight K. Schrute omg lol, I see other people had the same idea for jokes.
Mr. Stark... I don't feel so good.
0:41 I find it fascinating how it rcovered for a moment and the membrane closed by itself. You see the contrast of the membrane coming back. And then a few moments later life suddenly stops.
When your time comes, it will just happen, nothing can save you.
It's like a sick person getting better and then dying.
I don't think the membrane came back or recovered. I think we saw the creature at a different depth/angle which showed another, more intact version, of the membrane. The anabolic process is slower and that membrane came back too quickly to be a 'recovery'. The videographer was shifting the lens focal depth throughout, trying to capture the best one for the clearest picture.
I think it lost too much blood or whatever it is the first time. An infusion would have helped. Probably couldn't find its blood type quickly enough. RIP
@@gabesegun7966 We should open the Cell Blood Donors Centre
People crying for 1 single cell organisms death, they don't realise millions of cells died while watching this video.
Trillions 😫
Yea but they didnt SEE them die.
I feel like theres something worthy of consideration there
You mean brain cells?
And people too
They don't realize thousands of animals die every minute so you can have your bacon next to your eggs in the morning. 😫
Life is, at its most fundamental aspect, a chemical reaction. Atoms exchange electrons and energy. When the reagents run out, and all the atoms reach equilibrium energy, the reaction stops. Entropy comes for us all in the end.
It's crazy how you can feel its sence of urgency as it tries to fight the inevitable.
Na it can’t think. I wonder if it dies because of electricity or age?
@@fastshot5485 it can't think, but you can see the cell knows something wrong and is trying to fix the problem, all it can do is flail around and it does so faster throughout the video until it dies. it can't feel or think, but it is noticably reacting to stress from its environment
@@karmadoesmore1644 Or the "weight reduction" threw off it's weight distribution and lowered weight and drag slowly throughout the video that it got faster and faster and wasn't as stable? Or maybe they just slowly increasingly want to experience going fast as hell until one day they can't stand it anymore and take off, knowing damn well that at those speeds it will have chunks torn off and be able to go faster and faster until it blows apart completely...and they find that speed to be worth ceasing to exist.
@@fastshot5485 if it cant think or feel then why doee it react in a panic. As you would
@@graysonguinane6813 It has a soul...? maybe souls exist
This video shows not only how Eldritch some life is (e.g. it just straight up loses cohesion and dumps its bits everywhere and suddenly it's completely immotile), but also how strongly humans pack bond with just about anything (illustrated by the comments section).
...
It gets even stupid when you notice how most of these wouldn't show as much empathy to people around them.
Humans just romanticize the idea of connection and empathy instead of actually empathising.
It almost makes you feel bad if you didn't feel empathy for this creature. I almost thought to myself if it's abnormal to not feel anything emotional for this except fascination.
Pack bond. I like that term.
@Saloni Sharma
The fact that the vast majority of us put up with each other without killing each other is pretty indicative of empathy I think but that’s just me 😂
@@Jenacide yup it is just you. People do kill people everyday anyway so that doesn't checks out either.
It ain't over til' the flagella stops swingin'
Devin Roberts *cilia
A flagellum is a tail bud
The flagella stopped though.
Thats a cilia
Seeing it's walls explode like that is heartbreaking
3 years later this invisible-to-the-naked-eye single-celled organism has been able to cognitively/emotionally impact millions of people! Proves that even the smallest of us can achieve great things...
Not to be “that guy” but they achieved that by dying, and it never had a choice to impact anyone anyways, it’s the person who recorded the cell’s death who did so, then again, you can believe what you want to believe
@@abdulrahmanalmojil3574 "not to be that guy" followed by unnecessary being that guy
@@cfitzhark1140 ‘tis the way the cookie crumbles
Even the smallest person can change the course of the world.
-J.R.R. Tolkien.
@@Golgari213 yeah but to be fair his books were of fiction, and while I cannot say much about what his books were about since I never read them, didn’t a great wizard help the main character defeat the villain?
I've never thought that I'll be so emotionally attached to a single celled organism
Lmaoo you’re made up of a ton of them though 😂 isn’t that crazy? Tiny cells work hard to make organisms like you and me 🥲
And some people marry them! Lol. Jk
You should look into getting a therapist
Same 😭
Damn
The secret formula is safe at last.
Yespacito RUJBCSUIO LMAO
Verix L it’s not like you knew the organism
Verix L well fuck you too lmao
U are literally turnig into Justin Y
F
It’s harrowing the way it seems to be frantically trying to get away while disintegrating. Life is hard.
Arguably the most famous death of a single cell organism ever.
Great.
Was this video from inside Biden’s skull?
Until Zuckerberg dies that is
@@mattbrew11 nope! it was from that orange orangutan brain cell.
@@RajinderYadav haha...good comeback....then again maybe not!
Its because he’s always on that damn phone
This literally made me LOL.
It made me ROFL
Most "parent" thing to say ever! 😅😅😅
IM DEAD hahahaha
Hahaha
“Where’s the single-celled organism?!”
“Gone… reduced to atoms.”
Literally
this is the peak comedy i come here for
Actually it's molecules and atoms, but good joke, man.
Oh, and some other chemical compounds that in chemistry can't be defined molecules, of course.
@@riccardomorgagni5181 ad esempio?
Ever really thought about the fact that everything in all of history has died, but you're still here right now with so much potential for so many different things?
But one day, maybe in 100 years, or maybe only a minute from now, you will face your final moment like this organism and just be a part of history.
And to think I was at his baby shower 6 hours ago, he grew up so fast and lived the life he wanted though. You will be missed Craig. Rest in paradise
I remember when he went through his first Meiosis cycle, time really flys… RIP Craig
SADSAD
I was there when he was preparing for mitosis... Craig's death pains me but knowing that he was able to pass on his DNA successfully makes me so happy. RIP Craig, you will be missed.
Rest in particals.
I remember when he was first born, R.I.P Craig
Guess it wasn't part of the 0.1% that survives a soap commercial.
Soap doesn't kill, it just causes that bacteria to lose their grip and go away.
@@gameslayer404 Yep. Disinfecting products kill
jayvee sara Lmao you got me weak with that
@Jim lastname it kills the microbes inside the tube
jayvee sara only part is this isn’t even a bacteria lol
Here we are watching this organism, and feeling some kind of sadness when it passed. This little guy could never fathom that a species known as humans, is watching him. Is there a species watching us, in which we’ll never be able to fathom that they even exist?
God
@@Tolbat Whatever begins to exist has a cause. The universe (all space, time, and matter) began to exist. Therefore: the universe has a cause. This cause is necessarily spaceless, timeless, and immaterial. Some people call him/it God.
@@Tolbat the devil watches too....
@@Tolbat Yep, unironically.
Christians call it God, Muslims call it Allah, Jews call it Moloch, and Hindus call it Vishnu.
remember, something similar to this is happening billions of billions of times every second
RIP lil homie. he ran as fast as he could but nobody escapes fate
We all will soon join him
Dread it...
defenitely a void player.
Fate got a strap
Run from it...
People spend billions of dollars every year making sad movies that aren't 1/10th as emotionally impactful as this little cell's final moments
Movies are fiction, this is real life bruh 😥
RIP my little protist nigga
@@DnBeParadise it's depressing
@@DnBeParadise Your friends must think it's super cool that you don't feel things bro
@@DnBeParadise did you ever stop to consider that maybe it's not a good thing to do that
This was unexpectedly disturbing. I found myself feeling bad for it and the moment it just stopped and dissolved my mind immediately went to how fragile every life really is. From the death of a single cell organism straight to such an intense conclusion.
Life itself is meaningless, there is no other purpose for you to exist except to exist.
The pointlessness of struggling to make through another day just so you can have the opportunity to struggle through yet another day following is insanity.
Humanity will be extinguished not through a calamity of violence or a biological accident but from the fact that people will evolve to the point that they realize to bear children in of itself is an act of cruelty to force life upon any sentient being.
@@chinabluewho wtf lol
@@chinabluewho But, we don’t live just because of that, we struggle to live to see another day where something new happens or another pleasure comes, we exist to exist, yes, but we also exist to help others and ourselves, life is not meaningless, nothing is, where something exists, it has a purpose, whether too entertain for a moment, or teach for a century, life is not meaningless, nothing ever will be.
@@coracusa2771 In the vast emptyness of space with the Universe slowly dying and ourselves doomed to perish and be forgotten in the never ending ribbon of time, life itself becomes meaningless.
Long after entropy becomes the permanent state we will have become inert dust .
There may very well be a rock with some strange carvings upon it after entropy claims all, that resemble a shape or form words but no one will exist to know or even see it.
If you live a day longer or even a trillion years it will be but a tiny fraction of a moment when you consider how long the universe will be dead for or how small our world, galaxy or supercluster is compared to the never ending vastness of space.
For any of us to consider anything we do to have a meaningful impact on history is the height of arrogance.
Alien life forms in other galaxies have risen from the mud only to fade away from the understanding that creating life to exist is a crime that should be considered the worst act possible by a sentient being.
We ourselves will soon come to this understanding when we become a bit more evolved enough to comprehend how insignificant and unimportant life is and how the universe does not need nor require it
We are doomed to die and be forgotten , that is our allotment, wiether it happens in a day or a 99 trillion years from now it will come to pass.
@@chinabluewho energie and information never dies my guy. You need God for sure
It's 5 years and I still think it is most painful truth ....this organism taught me a lot....
Rip single cell organism 5:00pm-5:30pm
or 00:00 - 01:54
Acam_Inc it wasnt born when the video began
@@lemonke8132 we clearly didnt watch the same video
Hahaha
@@lemonke8132 r/whoooosh
Amazing how life slowly disintegrates to 144p in it's end.
Lol
They just lost focus on the cell
This is honestly the most jaw dropping video I’ve seen in a long time. I had no clue single celled organisms perished like that. The natural world is a wonder.
Same! I sat in silence, stunned after viewing it.
*a horror
*Everything* perishes like that. You just have to watch a little bit longer to see the dissassembly process in larger life forms.
It was honestly sad
😪
What's happening in the video is Cell Lysis... which is breakdown of the cell membrane.
This can be caused by a viral infection...
the presence of a detergent in the environment that dissolves the membrane...
or through osmosis, where the cell absorbs too much water, causing the membrane to burst from the internal pressure.
My guess is the either of the later 2.
R.I.P.
Rest
In
Petri
his name was petri dish
GENIUS
Hahahahaha
Good one 😂 rip
The way he just scurried as he was hurt.. Classic Single Cell Organism.
Single cell, yet has nerve endings. Fascinating hypothesis doctor
@@jetsabove3061 can still be aware of damage being done to them. Have no clue what happened in this video though but watching it run around as it slowly dissolves was saddening :(
@@jetsabove3061 agreed
@@jetsabove3061 you sound like you get no pussy
@@jetsabove3061 let people grieve what they want , i don’t understand how you can grasp all this but not the simple fact that what may not affect YOU can affect others and cause reactions YOU wouldn’t have.
My dude just blew up
He was a single cell Muslim
Dakota like my fish
That’s what happens when I fart
Then acted like he don’t know nobody
@@P-Bass_Pete only if he was Buddhist he would have achieved rainbow body.