>>12078916Very nearas photons from all directions are curved, you'd probably end up seeing light from all directions, effectively seeing the whole 360 degrees around you, instead if what you just have ahead of you. Long before that, even before crossing the event horizon, extreme gravity would kill you and make you an atom spaghetti, so for practical reasons let's say your body behaves like a particle, say, an electron, as in that it cannot be destroyed and is always put together. You are industructible. As you travel faster towards the event horizon, you start to see the outside universe move faster. That is because the black hole is accelerating you, and a higher velocity means your time is slower, so as the rest of the universe is unchanged and keeps its normal time, its time is faster relative to you. While an outside observer would see you falling slower and slower, you light more and more redshifted and eventually disappearing, you'd eventually reach a point at which your time is effectively stopped, so the outside universe's time is infinite in relation to you. Now, you are massive. Objects with mass cannot travel at the speed of light, so you'd approach c but never reach it, gradually seeing the outside universe go faster and faster, forever. The outside universe would reach the Dark Era (around 10^30 years from now) of the universe pretty quick so it would pretty boring onwards, because it's a literal eternity of darkness. Now, let's imagine you are massless, like a photon. As you approach c, you would see the universe end (time of the outise universe reaches infinity) just before time stops (for you) when you reach the speed of light and, well, that ends your trip. Time not moving means you can't be counscious. Nothing more would happen.
As a note, the sensation of time for you has always been the same since you started falling into the black hole. Your sensation of 1 second now would be the same there, as an example.