Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 14
Batthyany's Grandmother Regained 10 Minutes of Lucidity Before Death
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 14

Batthyany's Grandmother Regained 10 Minutes of Lucidity Before Death

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 14

Summary

  • Several days before she died in 2000, Alexander Batthyany’s grandmother — who had vascular dementia and had barely spoken for a year — suddenly called and held a coherent 10-minute conversation.
  • Refined German, detailed memories and affectionate remarks convinced Batthyany she had briefly returned to her pre-illness self, describing herself as having been “very, very, very tired” for months.
  • The episode remained a private mystery until 2009, when Batthyany found academic work describing “terminal lucidity” — rare reports of unexpected mental clarity in gravely ill patients near death.
  • The New York Times report says such cases have been noted since antiquity but were largely forgotten after the 19th century, leaving the phenomenon without a settled scientific explanation.

Insights

Does a dying brain's final surge of clarity hint that consciousness exists beyond it?
If a damaged brain cannot support consciousness, what powers these lucid final moments?