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Yeah I don’t plan on finding out either, but I can only hope if I’m involuntarily in such a situation, I can get it done and get back home where I belong
And you won't need to know, if you keep yourself out of risky situations. Most life-or-death situations, like the one featured in this video, are completely avoidable.
Remnds me of another case, mike turner, who had gone on a hike in Wyoming with his dog. Instead of arm, his foot got stuck. he kept a diary and write in it. His writing began with positive thoughts to finally being upset that no help came for him. in the end he died of dehydration two weeks after. his dog luckily survived and lived to old age. Not all have the guts to cut their own limb like Ralston, and I'm amazed by his determination.
to me the thing is not cutting my limb, what would make me lose time is to know if i really need to do it or if it is avoidable, think you cut your limb and rescue arrive soon it would be so bad
@@theflashgirl2057 in the original telling of this I know he had at least one nerve that was extremely painful, there’s a full length movie about this accident
I remember watching "127 hours" many times years ago and the moment Brew showed a man with his hand stuck under a boulder, I knew everything he's going to say.
I watched it once as a kid and had nightmares from it. My mom showed it to us as an "educational film" but I think 9 was too young to see something that heavy. Or not, it definitely made me super aware of outdoor safety, so much so that I became an outdoor safety educator 😅
This just goes to show that you should never do this kind of thing on your own; if you think there's any chance you could end up in a dangerous situation, you should take someone with you, so that if things go wrong, someone will be there to help you or at least call someone who can.
a dude from russia i think got stuck in a deep cave and died in there after several days probably. he went alone and didn't even tell anyone. alone in total darkness hundreds of meters from the surface
@@drewt1717once your mind is worn, there's a wild instinct that takes over, it was his physical strength that kept him going and nothing else, when he himself couldn't make a decision, his most primal part did, and that's something that is inside all of us, and we should all hope NEVER to need it. Either way luck always plays a part on theese situations, without the tourists he would've never made it, the rotten flesh could've caused him a crazy infection and taken him earlyer through blood poisoning, and i don't know what wildlife is around but more than likely there could be something out there looking for a meal. Either way he deserves some insane respect for keeping himself toghether and still climbing, i don't think i would want to after that...
@@drewt1717 What I mean by that is that what used to be his arm became rotting tissue. The act of cutting off what used to be his arm is no less harrowing, but after it rot he had to get rid of it one way or another. It wasn't his arm anymore.
@@Zeldon567 well it was still important enough that they went back and collected it. Can you imagine what the taxidermist who had to stuff and mount THAT trophy was thinking?!?! 🤣🤣☠️💀
I’m born and raised in Colorado, this story was so huge for us. It was a reality check of the fun times we have here in the mountains. The mountains will easily take your life like the ocean can
I knew a man who enjoyed skydiving. Then, he had a bad skydiving accident, but got patched up by a skilled surgeon. Less than a year later, he resumed skydiving, and had another, much worse, accident which REALLY messed him up. He has never been the same since. I think he became addicted to painkillers at one point. Some people just have that need for an adrenaline rush. Driving a car on public roads is more than enough risk for me.
Speaking of addiction, I think some of these men (not to denigrate men, but I seem to only hear of men getting involved in these situations) are addicted to the adrenaline rush. I totally get it though, the first time you feel it, and you feel you cheated death, it's a thrill. But the issue is that the threshold keeps going up and up. After that skiing incident that Aaron had, you'd think that would scare him off, but it seems he only doubled down on it; each time you get away with things, you feel tempted to up the ante.
Reminds me somewhat of Utah's Nutty Putty Cave tragedy. I cannot imagine how unbearable it must be to be stuck, helpless for so many days. Truly an experience out of nightmares. I'm glad he got out and returned to his family. And also, a great video, Brew, you make amazing content!
Aaron is an incredible tough dude. Idk if I'd have that strong enough will to do what he did. I watched 127 hours because of him even though I don't care for James Franco.
Two morals of the story: 1:No matter how hard your situation is you must never give up. 2: When going on a dangerous trip always be patient and travel with a group.
Or at the very least with a fully charged phone and more powersticks, lest it run out of charge. They really should leave nowhere without cell reception.
And tell people where you're going. This whole thing could have been avoided if he let people know exactly what park he was going to. I'm shocked he didn't have a cell phone with him. I know in 2003 cell phones weren't as common but I know my parents both had cell phones back then. I'm glad he survived but this definitely could have been avoided with more preparation.
@@ionasan I'm honestly wondering if he'd actually had any real chance of keeping the arm after the boulder fell on it. Assuming he'd somehow managed to lift the boulder away from it, what condition was his arm in? I'm guessing that it would have been not merely broken but smashed and shattered, about as functional as an empty rubber glove, and that elective amputation would have been chosen, since at least a prosthetic limb would be useful.
Theres a story from where I am from in Indiana. Lots of cave systems that are unexplored and even more back when this story took place. I believe it was the 1930s and these cavers went into what is now known as Crystal Caverns. Some dozens of miles of small and large caves. A group of 5 guys went into the cave and about 2 hours in decided to split up as there were a few off shoots from the main cave system. One guy goes alone, the most veteran from what i remember, and gets lost. He cant find his group and knows that calling for help wont work because its too loud and will echo. A search team is sent in when the other 4 guys cant find him and it takes like 36 hours for them to find him. They apparently are able to find him because at one point he had gotten so bored of being in the dark and quiet that he picked up a rock and just started banging it on the ground besides him. Since the sound isnt as loud as a yell it made locating him easier. I used to go caving but after hearing that I decided that it wasnt really for me lol.
I don't think any of us could ever imagine what that guy went through trapped in that place like that, and what he had to do to escape, an amazing story of survival...
I mean the old wives tales are "you get what you put out into the universe" and either through divine ordainement, or simply subconsciously putting yourself in more risk than necessary on those journeys, you should be careful what you wish for.
Correct me if I’m wrong, but wasn’t part of the reason they moved the boulder and got his arm out of there because people started treating it as some kind of tourist location?
I feel like after being trapped for almost 100 hours he deserves to escape and no one deserves what happened to him and I think it’s inspiring with the fact that he managed to escape that situation that a lot of people would not have been able to
Jigsaw would be proud of this man. 😂😅 But seriously, that's an incredible story. I'm just so glad he made it out of there and didn't let that experience stop him from fulfilling his goal of climbing all of the mountains. Definitely an inspiring story. ❤
@@blindmanflamingfishdafeesh id also imagine he had a ton of adrenaline in him then, thats not something a normal person can do without surgical equipment or as said, adrenaline.
I've seen more extensive documentaries about this, and from what is said about it, he said the most painful part was cutting through the last major nerve going to his dead arm. It's absolutely amazing he survived at all.
I don't think it was, at least not for more than a few minutes after being pinned under the rock. He only realized that it was a lost cause once it started to rot, but really the arm was already gone by the first hour. Waiting accomplished two things: one, it made it psychologically easier to part with the arm once obvious decay set in, and two, it made it physically easier to part with the arm once decay had tenderized it. Once the boulder fell, though, there was no other possible outcome except becoming an amputee.
@@maryfreebed9886 That's what I got out of the video too. What I meant was that other explanations of the story I've seen never mentioned his arm was dead, so I assumed he could feel the pain of cutting his arm off. Still a crazy story, though.
@@marcopohl4875 I'm wondering if the portion of the tape that's unreleased and in the safety deposit box is the part that features him actually doing the deed and taking his own arm off. Did he film that too? If so, it makes sense that they'd keep that to themselves.
The morals of the story: never go alone never fail to leave detailed trail plans - or, if the trail is more spontaneous (which it should never be, unless you've ended up in a survival situation!), leave caches and accompanying trail blazes, with directions to your next intended location never travel without at least some additional resources, because you never know what's going to happen along the way. It sucks carrying extra rations and water and gear, but it sucks even more not having them when you need them.
The climber that decide to cut of his arm is inspired to be a climber because of the news that 8 people dies from it. probably most in-character crisis reaction.
When he was arguing with hinself about having to cut his arm , if your narrated timeline is accurate - I would imagine it was his subconscious mind warning him that he was wrecking the blade of the longer knife, dulling it & that it would be much more effectively saved to cut his arm off when the time came. His brain warning him he should have used the small blade to bash the rock.
His will to live is truly astounding. That voice he was talking to was his higher self, the one who is always watching, the part of ourselves that is a flowing conduit to the Divine.
Always amazes me how indomitable the human spirit is. I think it's quite underrated or not given enough attention; we humans are capable of great things in terrible times.
Heard this story when I was younger. Still can't believe bro didn't leave a proper note of where he was gonna go. Suprised it took him days to get around to getting his arm off. He got it done though props to him....yeah id probably have bled out good thing he waited till the arm was dead
Who knows. Remember, he tried everything except what would most likely free him first. He wasn't able to cut through, break, and rip off his own arm until he was basically delirious and half feral.
Ive had several life or death situations (I've clinically died twice before having my heart restarted, too). i would very much like to never have one ever again. I'll never understand seeking them out.
Video sounded intriguing and literally seconds into it, I said, “Oh! It’s the ‘127 Hours’ story!” Someone told me to watch that years ago when it was out on one of the movie channels, so I did. I was horrified! Truly more frightening than any horror movie I’ve ever watched. Could I do what Aaron did…? Well… if were to assume that I was physically capable of climbing (which I never was, I’ve always had bad knees) and that I was that motivated (that’s funny)… I don’t know. I don’t think I could cut off my own arm even if it meant my survival. But, then again, I would have never taken off on a trip like that without telling someone where I was going just in case something DID happen. I realize it was spontaneous, but it takes a few seconds to leave a note, make a call… His irresponsibly in that area could have cost him more than his arm. Hopefully he’s smarter now and tells people where he’s going.
This is why you should always carry a Personal Locater Beacon (PLB) when you go out into the wilderness. It costs a couple hundred dollars plus a small monthly subscription and can signal for help from any location on earth (besides underground), regardless of coverage since it operates on a satellite network
As terrible as this situation is, it could have been worse. It could have been raining. Slot canyons like this are really tall and narrow, and when it rains, flash floods will fill those canyons quickly, and the currents would be fast. He would have been battered against either side of the walls he was pinned between, if the current didn't rip his arm off for him first.
would you win? "the rocks and boulders trapping me might cause me some trouble but nah, i'd win. throughout rocks and climbing, i alone am the armless one"
Odd... *VERY ODD* ... This isn't the 1st time that i have heard of someone trapped in a survival situation where they • always go alone • Always leave a systematically detailed itinerary Then suddenly one day, they just leave nothing or a completely useless note like : *"UTAH"* .... I didnt think anything of it the first time around... but the second time it occurs to me that it is kind of suspicious... Were they deeply perturbed and finally gathered their courage aka convinced themselves to.... Or Did he just have a complete lack of respect for a hike in comparison to his usual activities ??? Odd... Also *a Freaking Winch AND A jack ?¿?* I didnt imagine his predicament with enough respect for the precariousness of the situation. For some reason i foolishly thought there must have been a way to deadlift the rock if he could get in position.... wrong, dead wrong ! Anyway folks remember to always pack a small mechanics tool kit full of crow bars and all types of implements that theoretivally could prove not just useful but life saving.
absolutely nauseating story, but its incredible what a person can do in such a desperate survival situation. hope the life he has now more than makes up for the horrific experience. wish more tragic accidents turned out like this one; an unlucky fall and unluckier boulder beaten by sheer determination, luck, and the life-saving assistance of pure strangers.
I think there was an episode of "I Shouldn't Be Alive" about this. That particular episode scarred me a little i think. And yet here i am almost a decade later lol. That show was good in the sense that i couldn't stop watching it. But it was awful
I've known about this story for a long time, probably within a year or two of when it happened at the outside. It's the kind of thing I hope never to have to find out about myself.
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I WANT TO BE FIRST!
Second
I'm early this time 🤩 Brew, I want to write you an intro song to use. Legitimately. Loved this!
@@MightyxFro bros first
Fourt aye that’s pretty good
biggest fears:
1. Being in a brew’s episode
2.dying
Number two is not necessary 😅
1 and 2 dont have to be separate
2 is definitely more likely
Well that's inspirational @@gzenko3408
or succumbing to a fear in a Brew episode
I am perfectly fine with never knowing how I will perform in a life or death situation. In fact I don't want to ever know.
leaving it to the last moment as a surprise, aren't you ?
An attitude I respect and I am sure, rescue teams, volunteers, doctors and authorities will appreciate a lot.
Yeah I don’t plan on finding out either, but I can only hope if I’m involuntarily in such a situation, I can get it done and get back home where I belong
@@monad_tcp well from today I love surprises
And you won't need to know, if you keep yourself out of risky situations. Most life-or-death situations, like the one featured in this video, are completely avoidable.
Remnds me of another case, mike turner, who had gone on a hike in Wyoming with his dog. Instead of arm, his foot got stuck. he kept a diary and write in it. His writing began with positive thoughts to finally being upset that no help came for him. in the end he died of dehydration two weeks after. his dog luckily survived and lived to old age. Not all have the guts to cut their own limb like Ralston, and I'm amazed by his determination.
to me the thing is not cutting my limb, what would make me lose time is to know if i really need to do it or if it is avoidable, think you cut your limb and rescue arrive soon it would be so bad
You forgot a detail about cutting his arm off. Cutting through the nerves was excruciating pain for him and probably the hardest part getting free.
I think he cut though the rotten part of the arm? So the nerves were already dead
@@theflashgirl2057 in the original telling of this I know he had at least one nerve that was extremely painful, there’s a full length movie about this accident
@ChrisRobba and a long form documentary before that.
I watched the documentary in school years before the movie was made.
@@ofox716 yeah pretty sure I saw both it’s just been a long time ago already
@@ofox716 oh I think I watched the movie a few years ago I believe james Franco played the role!
I remember watching "127 hours" many times years ago and the moment Brew showed a man with his hand stuck under a boulder, I knew everything he's going to say.
I watched it once as a kid and had nightmares from it. My mom showed it to us as an "educational film" but I think 9 was too young to see something that heavy. Or not, it definitely made me super aware of outdoor safety, so much so that I became an outdoor safety educator 😅
yea why is he saying it was 121 hours ...this story is well known its 127 lol
This just goes to show that you should never do this kind of thing on your own; if you think there's any chance you could end up in a dangerous situation, you should take someone with you, so that if things go wrong, someone will be there to help you or at least call someone who can.
But there are still some accidents that happend even still you have many people, just like the accidents in the video
Also take an emergency gps tracker with you. Even with another person, there are spots with no cell service.
@@Dinmc123yea there’s not a 100% chance of safety ever. Doesn’t mean it doesn’t help
a dude from russia i think got stuck in a deep cave and died in there after several days probably. he went alone and didn't even tell anyone. alone in total darkness hundreds of meters from the surface
I like the use of the vegetable to not get demonitized
Smart thinking
Respect to Aaron- Dude had to be SUPER clever and determined to CUT OFF HIS OWN ARM-
When it started to rot, it wasn't his arm anymore.
@@Zeldon567ngl, that's still some brutal and manly determination.. I can't confidently say I would have done the same...
@@drewt1717once your mind is worn, there's a wild instinct that takes over, it was his physical strength that kept him going and nothing else, when he himself couldn't make a decision, his most primal part did, and that's something that is inside all of us, and we should all hope NEVER to need it. Either way luck always plays a part on theese situations, without the tourists he would've never made it, the rotten flesh could've caused him a crazy infection and taken him earlyer through blood poisoning, and i don't know what wildlife is around but more than likely there could be something out there looking for a meal. Either way he deserves some insane respect for keeping himself toghether and still climbing, i don't think i would want to after that...
@@drewt1717 What I mean by that is that what used to be his arm became rotting tissue. The act of cutting off what used to be his arm is no less harrowing, but after it rot he had to get rid of it one way or another. It wasn't his arm anymore.
@@Zeldon567 well it was still important enough that they went back and collected it. Can you imagine what the taxidermist who had to stuff and mount THAT trophy was thinking?!?! 🤣🤣☠️💀
I’m born and raised in Colorado, this story was so huge for us. It was a reality check of the fun times we have here in the mountains. The mountains will easily take your life like the ocean can
I knew a man who enjoyed skydiving. Then, he had a bad skydiving accident, but got patched up by a skilled surgeon. Less than a year later, he resumed skydiving, and had another, much worse, accident which REALLY messed him up. He has never been the same since. I think he became addicted to painkillers at one point. Some people just have that need for an adrenaline rush. Driving a car on public roads is more than enough risk for me.
Driving a car on German unlimited speed roads is enough adrenaline for me as well.
Speaking of addiction, I think some of these men (not to denigrate men, but I seem to only hear of men getting involved in these situations) are addicted to the adrenaline rush. I totally get it though, the first time you feel it, and you feel you cheated death, it's a thrill. But the issue is that the threshold keeps going up and up. After that skiing incident that Aaron had, you'd think that would scare him off, but it seems he only doubled down on it; each time you get away with things, you feel tempted to up the ante.
@@applefoodieA lot of these men have unresolved trauma and won't go to therapy.
Reminds me somewhat of Utah's Nutty Putty Cave tragedy. I cannot imagine how unbearable it must be to be stuck, helpless for so many days. Truly an experience out of nightmares. I'm glad he got out and returned to his family. And also, a great video, Brew, you make amazing content!
😢😢😢
nutty putty exists?
@@Randomly_Existing743 if you plan to watch it then better prepare, its gruesome
it was closed later, so it exists but it's impossible to get into it@@Randomly_Existing743
It's always Utah man
Utah claimed one of my friends lives. He was hiking with a friend and fell. 20 years old, gone in a flash.
I’m sorry😢
that sucks, I’m sorry for your loss 🕊️🕊️🕊️🕊️
He disarmed himself.
Ok nice one 😂😂😂
Rendered himself 'armless
Ba-dum-dum-dum tsss 😂
He let his melee weapon go
Wow a traumatic experience is funny haha very funny
imagine you're going on a hike, walk by a stuck rock and see an amputated arm
edit: thanks for the likes guys
umm I'm going back home
@@ryanclemons1 lol
The severed arm was later removed from the boulder and cremated, then the ashes were returned to the site of the incident to be spread there
@@mr.o3062 ik its a joke
@@mr.o3062 To be fair, it was sitting there for awhile... but it was in the middle of nowhere so i doubt anyone saw it lol
If this guy had watched the movie '127 Hours' before the trip, he could have avoided the entire situation.
Isn't the movie based on his story?
@@FlywithCat Yes it is
@@FlywithCatlol zing!
@@FlywithCat r/woosh
@ScxriaaI don't think you realized this was a joke
The good ending to this is so touching😭 This proves that humanity is not a species that gives up so easily.
I miss the old video format, with brew talks while sipping the coffee
I will always be amazed that so many men read the cautionary tale of Into the Wild and thought, wow, that should be ME.
Aaron is an incredible tough dude. Idk if I'd have that strong enough will to do what he did. I watched 127 hours because of him even though I don't care for James Franco.
I've heard this story several times and it never gets easier to listen to, but it's an incredible story. What an impossible decision to have to make.
Two morals of the story:
1:No matter how hard your situation is you must never give up.
2: When going on a dangerous trip always be patient and travel with a group.
Or at the very least with a fully charged phone and more powersticks, lest it run out of charge. They really should leave nowhere without cell reception.
And tell people where you're going. This whole thing could have been avoided if he let people know exactly what park he was going to. I'm shocked he didn't have a cell phone with him. I know in 2003 cell phones weren't as common but I know my parents both had cell phones back then. I'm glad he survived but this definitely could have been avoided with more preparation.
@@ionasan I'm honestly wondering if he'd actually had any real chance of keeping the arm after the boulder fell on it. Assuming he'd somehow managed to lift the boulder away from it, what condition was his arm in? I'm guessing that it would have been not merely broken but smashed and shattered, about as functional as an empty rubber glove, and that elective amputation would have been chosen, since at least a prosthetic limb would be useful.
3. buy the encapment module for new smart phone to talk on the satellite parts in order to be savable
This is why you keep at least an emergency whistle with you if you're out like this.
This is to show that you should allways tell people where your going and for how long
saw the post about this vid earlier today, you do awesome work, brew!
Theres a story from where I am from in Indiana. Lots of cave systems that are unexplored and even more back when this story took place. I believe it was the 1930s and these cavers went into what is now known as Crystal Caverns. Some dozens of miles of small and large caves. A group of 5 guys went into the cave and about 2 hours in decided to split up as there were a few off shoots from the main cave system. One guy goes alone, the most veteran from what i remember, and gets lost. He cant find his group and knows that calling for help wont work because its too loud and will echo. A search team is sent in when the other 4 guys cant find him and it takes like 36 hours for them to find him. They apparently are able to find him because at one point he had gotten so bored of being in the dark and quiet that he picked up a rock and just started banging it on the ground besides him. Since the sound isnt as loud as a yell it made locating him easier. I used to go caving but after hearing that I decided that it wasnt really for me lol.
I don't think any of us could ever imagine what that guy went through trapped in that place like that, and what he had to do to escape, an amazing story of survival...
Even rarer than a lottery winner... a survivor of a Brew video!
I mean the old wives tales are "you get what you put out into the universe" and either through divine ordainement, or simply subconsciously putting yourself in more risk than necessary on those journeys, you should be careful what you wish for.
Okay watching this while cutting into a croissant might not have been the best idea... But wow this is so inspiring.
Moral of the story: bring a one handed pickaxe with you when you go climbing.
Oh, I kind of forgot that 127 Hours movie was based on an actual incident. Yeah, I watched it.
This video is SO much better than the movie.
Correct me if I’m wrong, but wasn’t part of the reason they moved the boulder and got his arm out of there because people started treating it as some kind of tourist location?
probs bruv
I got to meet Aron once. He came to my university and gave a lecture on his ordeal. Really personable guy. Inspirational.
i dont even have the courage to continue watching as you describe in detail how he felt when he cuts his arm
This is why you always bring someone with you when you go hiking/climbing/skiing/any outdoor sport that can be dangerous.
I feel like after being trapped for almost 100 hours he deserves to escape and no one deserves what happened to him and I think it’s inspiring with the fact that he managed to escape that situation that a lot of people would not have been able to
What a legend. His kid will grow up a proud one, with high self confidence in what they’re made of. 😊 Good job Poppa Aaron!
We miss the animated brew.😂
Why did he stop doing that style?
I loved the old style videos where you showed yourself
I do too. It was unique and brought life to his vids. I feel like I can watch his new content anywhere.
I have never 😬😬😬 more at a video than this. But also wow 👏
Watch 127 hours. It's so much
It's just keeps getting more and more painful
Jigsaw would be proud of this man. 😂😅 But seriously, that's an incredible story. I'm just so glad he made it out of there and didn't let that experience stop him from fulfilling his goal of climbing all of the mountains. Definitely an inspiring story. ❤
That would hurt
NAHHHH 🙏😭🗣🔥💯
REALLL
He used a tourniquet, so his arm was "dead." It had no circulation and he probably couldn't feel it.
@@blindmanflamingfishdafeesh id also imagine he had a ton of adrenaline in him then, thats not something a normal person can do without surgical equipment or as said, adrenaline.
I've seen more extensive documentaries about this, and from what is said about it, he said the most painful part was cutting through the last major nerve going to his dead arm.
It's absolutely amazing he survived at all.
I always thought his arm was still alive when he cut it off, but his will to survive is still insane!
I don't think it was, at least not for more than a few minutes after being pinned under the rock. He only realized that it was a lost cause once it started to rot, but really the arm was already gone by the first hour. Waiting accomplished two things: one, it made it psychologically easier to part with the arm once obvious decay set in, and two, it made it physically easier to part with the arm once decay had tenderized it. Once the boulder fell, though, there was no other possible outcome except becoming an amputee.
@@maryfreebed9886 That's what I got out of the video too. What I meant was that other explanations of the story I've seen never mentioned his arm was dead, so I assumed he could feel the pain of cutting his arm off. Still a crazy story, though.
@@marcopohl4875 I'm wondering if the portion of the tape that's unreleased and in the safety deposit box is the part that features him actually doing the deed and taking his own arm off. Did he film that too? If so, it makes sense that they'd keep that to themselves.
@@maryfreebed9886 I kinda want to see it if that’s true
The morals of the story:
never go alone
never fail to leave detailed trail plans - or, if the trail is more spontaneous (which it should never be, unless you've ended up in a survival situation!), leave caches and accompanying trail blazes, with directions to your next intended location
never travel without at least some additional resources, because you never know what's going to happen along the way. It sucks carrying extra rations and water and gear, but it sucks even more not having them when you need them.
I got an early notification .
That was handy.
Hahaha, you get it?
now THIS is a brew video. lovely visuals as well
2:19 End if Sponser
Saw this as soon as it ended😭
@@Soo_kloverzSAME😂
The climber that decide to cut of his arm is inspired to be a climber because of the news that 8 people dies from it. probably most in-character crisis reaction.
That is one hell of a story, the fight in this man in strong.
when i tried to test my strength i once punched a nail into wood using my hand like a hammer
When he was arguing with hinself about having to cut his arm , if your narrated timeline is accurate -
I would imagine it was his subconscious mind warning him that he was wrecking the blade of the longer knife, dulling it & that it would be much more effectively saved to cut his arm off when the time came.
His brain warning him he should have used the small blade to bash the rock.
Woman Wanted to Test her Strength… Ends up successfully.
His will to live is truly astounding. That voice he was talking to was his higher self, the one who is always watching, the part of ourselves that is a flowing conduit to the Divine.
And yet most of us ignore it
I miss the way the videos used to be DX but these are still good too
What a Resilient Guy!
There are no instantaneous friends.
Those are called acquaintances.
Always amazes me how indomitable the human spirit is. I think it's quite underrated or not given enough attention; we humans are capable of great things in terrible times.
Great video 👍
It's amazing how a small mix of probability, timing, and will power can make all the difference.
He definitely found out he is very strong.
Heard this story when I was younger. Still can't believe bro didn't leave a proper note of where he was gonna go. Suprised it took him days to get around to getting his arm off. He got it done though props to him....yeah id probably have bled out good thing he waited till the arm was dead
"oh well, been stuck here 2 hours, guess no one is coming, time to chop off my primary arm"
Yeah... I don't want to find out if I have what it takes to survive, thank you. I probably don't.
Who knows. Remember, he tried everything except what would most likely free him first. He wasn't able to cut through, break, and rip off his own arm until he was basically delirious and half feral.
Ive had several life or death situations (I've clinically died twice before having my heart restarted, too). i would very much like to never have one ever again. I'll never understand seeking them out.
I’m so glad this one had a good ending, I was about to be really sad. What a badass.
I remember seeing this on the news when I was a kid, and not understanding what at all was going on.
The pain of getting cut your finger imagine having to cut your arm 💀 sjdhcyxsbsdbj sjejjsxxhxiiejsjsj he definitely said that 20000 times
i think all the senses and pain receptors died by the time he cut the arm
This is why you tell others where you’re going and when to be expect to be back and who to tell if you’re not back in time.
The movie is also pretty great
I think it’s called 120 hours or something
@@random_person_z
127 hours
@@Pankaw o ok mb
@@random_person_z
na you're good, i was just adding
His guardian Angel is looking at him going
"What did we learn?"
Then there’s the farmer whose corn shucker caught his arm and caught fire. He had to do the same thing but quickly.
Never ever ever ever go hiking/camping ALONE
BRING BACK THE CHARACTERS💔💔
Video sounded intriguing and literally seconds into it, I said, “Oh! It’s the ‘127 Hours’ story!” Someone told me to watch that years ago when it was out on one of the movie channels, so I did. I was horrified! Truly more frightening than any horror movie I’ve ever watched. Could I do what Aaron did…? Well… if were to assume that I was physically capable of climbing (which I never was, I’ve always had bad knees) and that I was that motivated (that’s funny)… I don’t know. I don’t think I could cut off my own arm even if it meant my survival. But, then again, I would have never taken off on a trip like that without telling someone where I was going just in case something DID happen. I realize it was spontaneous, but it takes a few seconds to leave a note, make a call… His irresponsibly in that area could have cost him more than his arm. Hopefully he’s smarter now and tells people where he’s going.
This is why you should always carry a Personal Locater Beacon (PLB) when you go out into the wilderness. It costs a couple hundred dollars plus a small monthly subscription and can signal for help from any location on earth (besides underground), regardless of coverage since it operates on a satellite network
This guy became the Hash Slinging Slasher
😂
Brew's videos are S+ teir.
The movie 127 hours was amazing, but the story he lived was horrible
I saw this 9 months ago in @brew ‘s vid btw good edit
As terrible as this situation is, it could have been worse. It could have been raining.
Slot canyons like this are really tall and narrow, and when it rains, flash floods will fill those canyons quickly, and the currents would be fast. He would have been battered against either side of the walls he was pinned between, if the current didn't rip his arm off for him first.
would you win?
"the rocks and boulders trapping me might cause me some trouble but nah, i'd win.
throughout rocks and climbing, i alone am the armless one"
Some people really have death wishes
NGL, I'd die for sure. That's not an ordeal most could find the will to get past
Odd... *VERY ODD* ...
This isn't the 1st time that i have heard of someone trapped in a survival situation where they
• always go alone
• Always leave a systematically detailed itinerary
Then suddenly one day, they just leave nothing or a completely useless note like :
*"UTAH"* ....
I didnt think anything of it the first time around... but the second time it occurs to me that it is kind of suspicious...
Were they deeply perturbed and finally gathered their courage aka convinced themselves to....
Or
Did he just have a complete lack of respect for a hike in comparison to his usual activities ???
Odd...
Also *a Freaking Winch AND A jack ?¿?*
I didnt imagine his predicament with enough respect for the precariousness of the situation.
For some reason i foolishly thought there must have been a way to deadlift the rock if he could get in position.... wrong, dead wrong !
Anyway folks remember to always pack a small mechanics tool kit full of crow bars and all types of implements that theoretivally could prove not just useful but life saving.
0:06 Tf2 scout ahh looking guy 💀💀💀
thats foul
Very very *foul*
No way Aron went back to climb again.
absolutely nauseating story, but its incredible what a person can do in such a desperate survival situation. hope the life he has now more than makes up for the horrific experience. wish more tragic accidents turned out like this one; an unlucky fall and unluckier boulder beaten by sheer determination, luck, and the life-saving assistance of pure strangers.
Call me crazy, but if a rock I was standing on was starting to fall, I would not jump down into a hole where that same rock is going to be falling.
Omg this is crazy.
I can't believe scout from TF2 had to go through all of that
Fr❤
15:37 I literally went “HOLY *ING S*T” at this bcs I’m listening to it while drawing
I DID IT!!!!
Great animation!
He RIPPED his own hand off!? That's horrific!
I think there was an episode of "I Shouldn't Be Alive" about this. That particular episode scarred me a little i think. And yet here i am almost a decade later lol. That show was good in the sense that i couldn't stop watching it. But it was awful
I've known about this story for a long time, probably within a year or two of when it happened at the outside. It's the kind of thing I hope never to have to find out about myself.
Hi! Love your videos!
I saw the movie and while it’s no match for the true story it’s a great movie. I’m excited to see this video telling the story
If you’re wary of helping a stranger, remember that he was pretty ‘armless
People nees to be more careful in our state hpw many have died already in accidents like this