Pukharam, a man from Rajasthan, India, suffers from an extremely rare condition often described as Axis Hypersomnia — a disorder that causes him to fall into deep, prolonged sleep cycles lasting 20–25 days at a time. When one of these episodes begins, he can sleep through almost the entire month. His family has to feed him, bathe him, and help him with basic care while he remains unconscious. In total, he reportedly sleeps nearly 300 days a year, waking only for short periods before slipping back into another long sleep. The condition has made normal life nearly impossible. He can’t maintain a job, manage his daily routine, or live independently. Even the simplest tasks — eating, talking, working — depend on whether he’s awake in that small window of time. Doctors say his disorder is a rare form of hypersomnia that severely disrupts the brain’s sleep–wake cycle, leaving the body trapped in extreme fatigue.