Oh, dude, let me grab my calculator real quick! So, the average person blinks about 15-20 times per minute, which means around 20 blinks a minute, right? So, if you do the math, it would take approximately 50,000 minutes to blink a million times. That's like 34 days of non-stop blinking! But who's counting, right?
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The normal blinking rate varies greatly between people so it is difficult to answer the question in terms of normal blinks.
If you try to blink rapidly, the muscles that control the blink will tire quite rapidly and the blink rate will drop dramatically. So again it is difficult to say.
If you manage an average of 1 blink per second, then it will take just under 11.6 days - non-stop. Your eyes may get damaged in the process.
If you can blink ten times each minute, you would blink 600 times in an hour (10 blinks/minute x 60 minutes). To reach one million blinks, it would take approximately 1666.67 hours (1,000,000 blinks ÷ 600 blinks/hour). This is equivalent to about 69.44 days (1666.67 hours ÷ 24 hours/day).
4543 days
Human babies breath very rapidly and the respiratory rate slows as they age. Also, there considerable variation between individuals. As an approximation, an adults will breathe a million times in around 45 days, with a range of 35 to 60 days.
a million seconds
No. To get (1 million), you have to take (100 thousand) ten times.