At 117 years old, the world’s oldest person passed away. They bid adieu to everyone of them with their most melancholy goodbyes.
Maria Branyas Morera, a Spanish grandma, passed away “peacefully and without pain.” She had survived two pandemics and two world wars.
Her family announced her death to everyone on X, saying, “Maria Branyas has left us.” She wanted to pass away peacefully, without suffering.
“We will always be grateful to her for her kindness and guidance.”
Maria was an avid user of social media, posting content on X once a week for her 16,000 followers.
In her final, depressing letter on Tuesday, the elderly woman wrote that she was feeling “weak” and that “time is near.”
The post stated, “The time is near.” Don’t cry; I don’t enjoy crying. Above everything, please do not suffer for me.
“I’ll be happy wherever I go.”
After French nun Louise Randon passed away in January of last year at the age of 118, Maria became the oldest person alive.
She claimed that the reason she was so old was that she had never associated with “toxic people” and had always lived in “order” and “tranquility.”
In 1907, Maria was born in San Francisco amid a devastating outbreak of the bubonic plague.
She dealt with the Spanish flu pandemic and the Spanish Civil War while she was a resident of Spain during both world wars.
Even though Brave Maria contracted Covid-19 just a few weeks after turning 113, she somehow survived it.
After being admitted to the hospital, she recovered swiftly, returning to her regular life in a nursing home in a matter of days.
In 1931, she wed Joan Moret, a physician from Catalonia, and the two of them had three kids.
Maria’s husband passed away in 1976, but she survived longer than their only son August, who, at the age of 86, lost his life in a horrific tractor accident.
She passed away in the northeastern Spanish nursing home Santa Maria del Tura, surrounded by her daughters, eleven grandchildren, and thirteen great-grandchildren.
Maria played the piano from childhood until she was 108 years old, or until she was too old to do so.
To be healthy, she worked out every morning until her heart rate hit 105.
Maria consented to be tested scientifically before she passed away since researchers were interested in finding out more about how to live a long life.
Samples of Maria’s blood, urine, and saliva have been collected, and they will be compared to those of her 80-year-old daughter.
Researchers are hoping that by examining Maria’s genes, they may be able to create medications that can combat age-related disorders.
As of right now, she is the oldest living human. Tomika Itooka is her name, and she was born on May 23, 1908, in Japan.
It follows the tragic demise of the oldest man in the world in April.
Juan Vicente Perez Mora “met with God” and entered paradise two months before his 115th birthday.
Eleven children, forty-one grandchildren, eighteen great-grandchildren, and twelve great-great-grandchildren all cherished him.
It is stated that Juan’s daily consumption of the Spanish alcoholic beverage aguardiente was his key to never growing old.
The oldest person in history was a Frenchwoman named Jeanne Calment. Her lifespan was 122 years, 164 days.
She remains the only individual to have survived past the age of 120.