Falling into a Black Hole
Since tidal forces change as the cube of distance, they get extreme near the hole. You are stretched because your feet are nearer than your head, and you are compressed because your shoulders are converging on the singularity. An outside observer sees you getting dimmer and redder, and your watch looks like it runs more slowly. Finally your fading image freezes just outside the event horizon.
You, on the other hand, seem to fall into the hole in a few more milliseconds. The outside Universe gets pinched into a smaller and smaller angle above your head, and time appears to speed up in it. Of course, you don’t actually survive to see this…