It begins not with a violent rip, but with an inescapable, gentle pull. The universe's silence becomes absolute, broken only by the thunder of your own heartbeat. You are in the grip of something that has re-written the rules of reality itself: a black hole.
At first, you feel nothing but a profound sense of wrongness. The stellar winds and cosmic dust that once painted the void are gone, replaced by an oppressive darkness that seems to drink the light from your very eyes. This is the event horizon, the point of no return. There is no going back, not even for a photon of light, and certainly not for you.
Then, the tidal forces begin their work.
It starts as a strange, stretching sensation. The gravity at your feet, pulled a fraction of a meter closer to the abyss, is exponentially stronger than the gravity at your head. You are no longer a person, but an object subjected to differential calculus. Your body is drawn out into a long, thin strand—a process scientists call, with chilling accuracy, spaghettification.
There is no pain at first, only a surreal and horrifying elongation. Your arms, reaching instinctively for a salvation that does not exist, stretch like warm taffy. Your vision blurs and doubles as your eyes are pulled apart. You are a string of atoms being unwound by the universe's most powerful spindle.
As you cross the threshold, time and space trade places. The "future" is no longer a measure of seconds, but a direction in space: downward, toward the singularity. To look "out" is to see the entire future history of the universe play out in a blink—stars dying, galaxies colliding, epochs flashing by in a torrent of blue-shifted light. It is a view of eternity granted only to the damned.
The physical process accelerates with brutal efficiency. Molecular bonds, the very things that hold you together, begin to snap. Your body, now a stream of organic particles, mingles with the vaporized remains of asteroids and long-dead stars. You are being pureed into your most fundamental components, added to the swirling, superheated accretion disk—a funeral pyre of incandescent plasma that circles the void.
What enters the black hole’s maw is not a human being, but a screaming chorus of subatomic particles. All that you were—your memories, your loves, your fears—is scrambled into quantum information and added to the entropy of the singularity. You become a part of the black hole's mass, a permanent entry on its ledger of consumed things, your story erased from the spacetime you once knew.
In the end, there is only the fall: an infinite descent toward an infinitely dense point, where all the laws of physics break down. You are unmade, not with a bang, but with the silent, indifferent pull of gravity’s final victory.
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