Life Stats Analyzer

How many heartbeats, breaths, and hours have you lived? Real math on your real life — just for fun.

⚠️ For fun and curiosity only — not medical advice. All numbers are estimates based on global averages.

7h
3h (very low)7-8h (recommended)12h (a lot)
5h
0h4h (balanced)16h (max)

Zero data stored · Everything runs in your browser · 100% private

The question my cousin Hamza asked

My younger cousin Hamza called me one evening during Ramadan. He was 19, scrolling through his phone, and he asked me something that stopped me mid-bite. "Bhai, how many times has my heart beaten since I was born?"

I laughed. Then I thought about it. I could not answer. I am a developer. I build calculators for a living. I had never once thought to calculate something so basic about my own existence. We sat there after iftar and did the math together on a notepad. 19 years old. Around 10 million minutes of life. At 72 beats per minute. We came to roughly 720 million heartbeats.

Hamza stared at that number and said, "That is a lot of work for something I never once thought about." That conversation is why I built this tool. Not for science. Just to answer the kind of question a curious 19-year-old asks when he wonders what his existence looks like in numbers.

How the math actually works — not tukka

Every number this tool produces comes from published biological averages. No mystery, no black box. Here is exactly where each stat comes from:

StatSource averageFormula
Heartbeats72 bpm (WHO reference)Days × 24 × 60 × 72
Breaths16/min (clinical standard)Days × 24 × 60 × 16
Blinks15/min (National Eye Institute)Days × 24 × 60 × 15
Steps6,000/day (global average)Days × 6,000
Words spoken16,000/day (published research)Days × 16,000
Water consumed6 glasses × 0.25LDays × 1.5L
Sleep hoursYour inputDays × your hours/24
Screen hoursYour inputDays × your hours/24

Is this tool Islamically acceptable?

I want to address this directly. As a Muslim developer building tools for a largely Muslim audience in Pakistan, this matters to me personally.

Tools that predict the future, assign fate, or claim to reveal hidden truths about a person based on birth date, star signs, or numerology are not acceptable in Islam. This tool does none of those things.

Every number this tool produces is the result of straightforward arithmetic. There is no mysticism. There is no prediction. There is no claim about your fate or destiny.

The personality label is a logical description of the habits you yourself reported. If you told the tool you sleep 8 hours and limit screen time, it calls you The Balanced Machine — because those are literally the habits you entered. That is not a prediction. It is a mirror.

✅ 100% Halal — pure arithmetic and habit reflection. Zero astrology, zero fortune telling, zero predictions.

Frequently asked questions

How many heartbeats does a person have since birth?

At 72 beats per minute, a 25-year-old has had approximately 946 million heartbeats. By age 70 this reaches about 2.6 billion. The exact number varies with fitness level — athletes with lower resting rates have fewer total beats, which is actually a sign of better cardiovascular health.

How many breaths has a person taken since birth?

At the clinical standard of 16 breaths per minute, a 25-year-old has taken approximately 210 million breaths. By age 70 this reaches around 590 million. These numbers vary with activity level, altitude, age, and health.

Are the personality types based on astrology or birth date?

No. The personality label is based entirely on the sleep hours, screen time, and morning preference you enter. The tool looks at those inputs, finds a matching pattern, and gives it a name. Your birth date only affects the quantity calculations. There is no astrology, no star signs, and no fortune telling anywhere in this tool.

Why are there only a few input fields?

The first version had eleven fields. When I showed it to a friend he filled four, found more fields below, said "yaar yeh toh pura form hai" and closed the tab. He was right. Most life stat numbers use biological averages accurate enough without your personal data. Sleep and screen time directly change the most interesting numbers. Everything else uses defaults so you get real results without filling a government form.

How accurate are these numbers?

They are estimates — good ones, based on published averages, but estimates. Your actual heartbeat count is not measurable without continuous monitoring from birth. What the tool gives you is in the correct order of magnitude. Use the numbers to feel something and reflect. Not to file a medical claim.

Does this tool store my birth date or data?

No. Everything runs in your browser using JavaScript. Nothing is sent to any server. Nothing is stored. When you close the tab everything is gone. There is no account, no login, and no data collection of any kind.

What is the most surprising number for most people?

For people under 30, the screen time expressed as years of life is consistently the most impactful. Seeing six or seven years of your life spent on devices in one figure hits differently than "I use my phone a lot." For older users, the heartbeat figure tends to produce more quiet reflection.

Can I use this on mobile?

Yes. The tool is fully responsive and works on all phones and tablets. The sliders, dropdowns, and share card all work correctly on mobile browsers including Safari on iPhone and Chrome on Android.

Why this tool is different from personality tests

Most personality test tools give you a type based on abstract questions about preferences. "Do you prefer logic or feelings?" "Are you more cat or dog?" The results feel personal but they are built on vague pattern matching that could fit almost anyone.

This tool does something different. It starts with your actual biological numbers — the heartbeats, the breaths, the hours sleeping — and then adds a habit layer based on what you actually do each day. The result is grounded in something real: your age, your sleep, your screen time.

You cannot argue with the heartbeat count. It is arithmetic. You can reflect on it, feel surprised by it, share it with a friend, or ignore it. But it is real in a way that "you are a Type B personality" never is.

Sharing on Pinterest, WhatsApp and Instagram

The share card this tool generates is designed for WhatsApp and Pinterest specifically. Life stats content performs well on both platforms because the numbers create an instant "wait, what is mine?" reaction in anyone who sees them.

When you share your heartbeat count in a family WhatsApp group, someone always responds by calculating their own. When you pin your stats card on Pinterest with a caption like "I have taken 198 million breaths and I still get nervous before presentations," that is the kind of content that gets saved.

The copy button formats everything into a ready-to-paste message. One tap, then paste wherever you want to share it.