it would feel like an explosion in front of you the force of gravity would push you back and would likely break some bones
No, unless they are near a body with enough mass to have gravitational pull. For example, standing on the moon they would feel gravity (although it's a lot less than Earth's gravity ) but floating in space technically there is still gravity but it is such a small force that an astronaut would not feel it.
The gravity would crush us.
You would feel heavier. The acceleration due to gravity on Uranus is 10.72, while the acceleration due to gravity of Earth is 9.8 m/s2 (or 9.81, it depends on who you ask.).
You will not have any feelings when you are dead.
That would be "blow by". Some blow by is normal. It is the amount of combustion that bypasses the rings. If the amount is enough to actually feel you may have an internal engine problem.
They don't. The moon has gravity but not as much as earth so they feel that they have less weight. In outer space a person would feel weightless because no gravity that they could notice is acting upon them.
Yes, the gravity on Venus is about 91% of the gravity on Earth. So, a human on Venus would not be significantly squashed by the gravity, but they would feel heavier than on Earth due to the increased gravitational force.
he would feel like he weighed nothing
You are asleep? When you walk, do you feel the ground? That's gravity.
it is one sixth the gravity of earth-example : 60 pound on earth would be 10 pounds on the moon
They would be dead because of extreme cold and lack of oxygen and crushed from the gravity.
Humans will feel lighter on Mars compared to Earth because Mars has less gravity. The gravity on Mars is about 38% of Earth's gravity, so a person who weighs 100 pounds on Earth would weigh only 38 pounds on Mars.