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In 1962, French speleologist Michel Siffre descended into total darkness with a radical plan: to live underground for two months with no clocks, no sunlight, and no contact with the outside world.
His goal? To find out if the human brain can still track time without the day-night cycle we take for granted. What he discovered helped lay the foundation for circadian rhythm research—and changed what we know about how our bodies keep time.
Over decades and multiple cave experiments, Siffre became a pioneer of chronobiology, revealing that even when we disconnect from the surface world, our bodies still tick to a hidden internal beat—just not always a steady one.
NASA, the military, and sleep scientists all took notice. But Siffre also faced disorientation, memory lapses, hallucinations, and a profound breakdown of time perception. This is the strange, incredible story of what happens to your brain when you completely lose track of time.
Perfect for fans of science, psychology, isolation experiments, astronaut training, and the limits of human perception.
Sources:
Siffre, M. (1963). Beyond Time. Paris: Éditions Flammarion.
Siffre, M. (2008). “Living in the Dark.” Chronobiology International, 25(5), 795–808.
Czeisler, C.A. et al. (1999). “Stability, Precision, and Near-24-Hour Period of the Human Circadian Pacemaker.” Science, 284(5423), 2177–2181.
BBC Future. (2014). “The Man Who Time Forgot.”
National Sleep Foundation. (2021). “Circadian Rhythms and Sleep.” https://www.sleepfoundation.org/circadian-rhythm
#BrainScience #CircadianRhythm #MichelSiffre #SleepResearch #TimePerception #SmartestYearEver #DailyFacts #ScienceExplained #experiments #psychologyfacts
Music thanks to Zapsplat.
In 1962, French speleologist Michel Siffre descended into total darkness with a radical plan: to live underground for two months with no clocks, no sunlight, and no contact with the outside world.
His goal? To find out if the human brain can still track time without the day-night cycle we take for granted. What he discovered helped lay the foundation for circadian rhythm research—and changed what we know about how our bodies keep time.
Over decades and multiple cave experiments, Siffre became a pioneer of chronobiology, revealing that even when we disconnect from the surface world, our bodies still tick to a hidden internal beat—just not always a steady one.
NASA, the military, and sleep scientists all took notice. But Siffre also faced disorientation, memory lapses, hallucinations, and a profound breakdown of time perception. This is the strange, incredible story of what happens to your brain when you completely lose track of time.
Perfect for fans of science, psychology, isolation experiments, astronaut training, and the limits of human perception.
Sources:
Siffre, M. (1963). Beyond Time. Paris: Éditions Flammarion.
Siffre, M. (2008). “Living in the Dark.” Chronobiology International, 25(5), 795–808.
Czeisler, C.A. et al. (1999). “Stability, Precision, and Near-24-Hour Period of the Human Circadian Pacemaker.” Science, 284(5423), 2177–2181.
BBC Future. (2014). “The Man Who Time Forgot.”
National Sleep Foundation. (2021). “Circadian Rhythms and Sleep.” https://www.sleepfoundation.org/circadian-rhythm
#BrainScience #CircadianRhythm #MichelSiffre #SleepResearch #TimePerception #SmartestYearEver #DailyFacts #ScienceExplained #experiments #psychologyfacts
Music thanks to Zapsplat.