This suggests that even after brain death is declared or during the final moments in intensive care, the phenomenon of ‘one’s life flashing before their eyes’ is triggered by this mechanism. These surges are detected by brain-monitoring machines. My theory is that this is driven by fear and scent. When the brain faces the ultimate fear, it desperately seeks the ‘safe code’ established between ages 0-2—the ‘string-like’ neural pathways formed by the scent and enzymes of milk. This scent acts as a biological key, unlocking the entire visual archive and playing it back like a film strip as the brain retreats to its most foundational, most ‘maternal’ memories.”

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