Subtitles are automatic for the most part. UA-cam can do them for you, or Adobe premiere pro can also do it. You just have to go through and check they're correct. Not had them transcribe laughter before, but in theory it could do it :/ @@KeksimusMaximus
I appreciate this vid a lot! So, for the haters, Re: 'He only held his breath for '@1:45 minutes'- try that while filming a vid underwater: no pressure, eh? (pun intended!). I tried it just now, and, though I'm a middle-age, outta-shape smoker, I found that I can easily hold twice as long (3:47- big deal :-\), BUT: I don't think I could've made the same level of improvement (NO way, I'd def fold first) that the poster did for this vid:. THAT is what I find impressive!
@@SalesmanWave I found the comment interesting. Should I not respond to comments, but, rather, only respond to the video? Edit- oh, I get it now- Is that such a big deal, such that you'd be a nit about it, and, what, try to score some interweb points? OK, ya got me! Zing! Score one for the poster police! 🤔 (I looked for a 'rolling eyes' emoji, but didn't see one- you'll have to imagine that I ended my post with that.)
Seriously. It's rare to see somebody so accomplished, with such a keen ability, that's also able to describe the mechanics of what they're doing, as well as the mental process, in a really useful, detailed way.
As a free diver and spearfisherman, this was a lovely watch. Breath training and holding is a meditation. It's as much a physical practice as it is a psychological one.
@@alexanderharris539 Yeah. Especially when I was a kid/teen: my brother and I and our friends were competitive swimmers, and we would compete to see who could stay underwater the longest, and who could swim the farthest distance underwater without a breath. (And we'd hold our breath whenever we went through a tunnel, of course! I think all kids do that, eh?) One coach once did a lap underwater in a 50 meter Olympic size pool, so 100 meters, in about two minutes or a bit more (I think) I couldn't ever do that, but I can still hold for 3-1/2 minutes pretty easily (after prepping/packing and while staying still (no exertion)... I doubt I could do four, without my life depending it (or maybe with straight O2 before... or if I wasn't a former smoker). Cheers!
@@bholdr----0 did smoking really affect the performance of hold? i mean how? i mean i am an active smoker and can hold my breath for 4 maybe 5 if im not smoking lol
That's funny. As a free diver I always find myself holding my breath when I see people under the water. It's a strange to realize that you haven't been breathing for some time just because you are watching other people not breathing.. Cheers, Chris
@@no3ironman11100 that doesnt work on me anymore, but when youre having a panic attack its like youre manually breathing while never catching your breath, even though physically youre fine and do have enough oxygen your heart start beating out of control which increases your need for oxygen. is terrifying. i dont think anyone has ever died from a panic attack, unless they had a heart condition i guess, but it feels like you are going to which just feeds into the self reinforcing cycle
i hate when i concentrate on breathing and then i can't stop and have that weird paranoia that i need to keep focussing on it or i'll accidenatally stop...but it takes the littlest distraction and it's gone. but it's so weird sometimes. glad i never learned how to control my hearts muscle. xD
Very impressive yes but I promise you could do it too! I freedive and you could hit a 3 min breath hold just after a couple of days of training. It feels really surreal when you reach a point of total relaxation wherein not breathing feels just as comfortable as breathing.
I went an extra minute on top of his time. I don't exercise at all, which doesn't help. Also I was in bed but in a state of intense anxiety which probably cancels out. But also slightly drunk. IDK if v that helps
I remember learning lung packing from Bear Grylls. I'd sit at the bottom of the pool as a kid for 3 or 4 minutes at a time. It was one of the most euphoric, meditative things to just be floating in silent weightlessness. There was a point halfway through where you just felt like you could stay down there for another hour as long as you didn't move.
Can relate. Sitting down by the ladder, watching the pool or just closing my eyes, enjoying the cool water and the calmness... Probably one of the only things I did as a kid that even came close to meditation and deliberate relaxation.
Same here. I'd sometimes compete against others and would enjoy watching them breath in and dive again several times while I remained underwater unmoving.
that's partly why i can't swim. when my school would take us for swimming lessons i'd spend the time chilling underwater as long as i could because it was the most peace i ever got. the quiet was nice but i worry my brain might have been shutting down as well because of lack of oxygen
I love the explanation of how hyperventilating before holding breath is actually bad in very concise way as well as teaching us how to do it properly through other techniques. Thanks for the awesome video Veritasium!
I used to do that while swimming. Didn't notice a difference. However I do remember a news story of a girl who unexpectedly blacked out during swim class while they were doing breathing exercises. Going back realizing I could've died because the adults weren't strong enough to pull me out, how terrifying. God's grace is real!
It's so concise that it's not so clear. How would the amount of oxygen in your blood not being increasable because it's limited by the concentration of oxygen in the air while at the same time the amount of CO2 its controllable because it's expellable?
@@mmark300All you’re doing by hyperventilating is suppressing the natural urge to breathe. That can be very dangerous as that can lead to you becoming unconscious and breathing in water. As the video explains holding your breath is to a large extent depending on psychological aspects. As a lifeguard I increased my diving time significantly with similar techniques to what Brandon mentions.
This is fascinating. I live at high altitude (around 6500 ft) so i was waiting for him to bring it up. Genuinely, the increase of how long i can hold my breath at Sea level is amazing
Yeah! I'm a former ski bum, and have lived in the mountains at 6k-ish feet, and when I would go down to sea level, it felt like breathing soup... I'd bet a person could train at altitude and then be able to hold a lot longer... Though it's the CO2 buildup that makes one feel like they need to breathe. There is a lot more O2 in a breath than people think (like how rebreathers don't take more air than normal scuba, but, rather chemically purge the CO2 to massively increase diving times... Still, it couldn't hurt. (Imagine what high altitude mountaieers or Nepalese Sherpas, acclimated to 12-16k feet could do? (I also recall reading that pearl/sponge/oyster divers can routinely hold for four, five, plus minutes while diving for their living, and like Sherpas, I wonder how much is training, and how much is genitic... Anyway, cheers!
@@meepmonstare Yup... I don't live in the mountains anymore, but it would be informative to, say, run a half marathon (or other simaler hard- for me- endurance exercise) while living at sea level, and then live at 6k ft. for a few months (as a ski bum again?) and then do another half-marathon at se level, and note the changes. (Same goes for breath holding.) Very interesting. Cheees!
I do not want to diminish anyone's personal achievements. But I believe almost everyone can do 2.5 min. It's very likely you can too with a little training and practice in a pool. Give it a try with some friends. Enjoy and be proud of your personal achievements pushing your self beyond what you thought you could do.
That was actually crazy how effective going through the alphabet and pausing between each letter was. I watched once through, and my first breath hold with you on the bed was about 40 seconds. My second one while you were in the pool was just over 2 minutes.
I tried once while sitting up and kind of tense, and went a bit over a minute before I started feeling weird. I didn't try a second time, but I think I might try tonight in bed.
As a teacher, I really hope people can appreciate how brilliantly Brandon creates a positive learning environment WHILE also pushing someone to exceed their limits - both physically and psychologically
While I have only used one flight instructor so far, but this is my experience so far in learning how to flight. Very relaxing and positive. The guy even knows that I'm prior military, and an athlete, and is still super calm with me.
david blaine taught me this same trick. i've learned a lot from you guys too. well done. my longest was a little over 3:30, i thought i was something special, this dude just completely blew my little elementry school training into a full blown career. i knew it was possible. extremely inspiring. ANYONE can learn to hold their breath longer. just like anything else practice makes us progress. great video man!
I used to do this as a kid in the bathtub... I would totally relax and stay as still as possible. I was pretty impressed with myself when I made it to over 2 minutes.. I can't imagine holding my breath for this long. Insane!
I used to do this at the bottom of our backyard pool. I'd swim down there and just lay on the bottom. How my Mom didn't freak out is beyond me... GenX stuff I guess!
@@fprintf I did the same at the city pool as a kid (before the internet, heh). Freaked lifeguards out a few times, but my parents were always telling them "No, he's just a good swimmer."
Really interesting video, and very well explained. As someone with a background as rescue swimmer, I had the "fortune" to experience a pool blackout under controlled and supervised conditions. The really dangerous thing is, as mentioned in the video, when hyperventilating, is the feeling of sensation and happiness while actually passing out. You are (without help from others) dying without noticing.
Once when I was 16 ish, I tried to see how far I could swim doing under water laps in a pool. I hyperventillated first then took off. Lucky for me I had a friend walking along beside me in the pool. He said he noticed me moving erratically for a bit so he reached down and pulled me up, then took me to the pool edge or got me out of the pool. They say the life guard came over and got mad because I was laughing. I don't remember any of it. But it could have been deadly if I had not been supervised.
Everyone that has ever breathed will die, ergo breathing causes death. Thus, not breathing is how these people are able to not die. They’re cheating death and that is why I am calling the police.
Please be careful with the breath holding. During my teen years, I was a lifeguard. While interviewing for a second lifeguarding position at an indoor pool that also taught scuba diving, there was an emergency. While my future boss was giving me a tour of the pool, we heard yelling at the diving well. We ran over, we dove in and pulled a boy out of the 16’ diving well. A group of kids were doing a breath holding competition. The boy hyperventilated before holding his breath. He passed out while holding his breath. We had to do chest compressions, and we got a regular pulse, but he died on the way to the hospital. 😢😢😢. It’s amazing what the human body can do and the things we’ve learned, but I see this as a pointless activity/competition. Whether in or out of the water, I don’t allow people (especially kids) to partake in breath holding competitions. That was the first time I ever had to put my cpr training into practice…and the kid died. Thank goodness we had a lot of highly trained people show up and they were appreciative that I acted quickly, but that experience messed me up for a while. 30 years later, I’m still haunted by that event. Please, be cautious of this and do NOT have children attempt this!
Thanks for drawing attention to this It’s called ‘shallow water blackout’ and almost no one knows about it unless they’ve experienced it first hand like you
@@Flashv28 I realize that, but not doing anything the survival rate is basically 0%. Yet an AED survival rate is nearly 75%, but their chances drop nearly 10% every minute…unless CPR can be administered. CPR helps to maintain their time and success of revival when an AED is enroute.
I remember finding a random article about this when I was like 15, giving some exercises to do. Got me from 60s to around 3.30, then about 4 after learning the urge to breath can be ignored more or less safely. Still not recommended to do this without someone nearby just in case, but it's super interesting stuff. I'm willing to bet the people who do this are at least a little bit addicted to the feeling of relaxation/euphoria associated with it, it's very meditative especially when submerged. I totally get it.
i agree. my favorite thing to do any time my family goes out to swimming resorts (assuming water slides are out of the question) is just finding a nice spot and holding my breath for as long as possible and imagine I'm in one of those sensory deprivation chambers. I nearly drowned once as a kid when I accidentally found myself stuck under a floaty filled with people once and couldn't swim away from them, so perhaps fhere's some adrenaline rush in it for me whenever I do it. Challenging and overcoming that trauma or something.
I remember getting to about 2 minutes within days after reading Ganesh for school (In the book, they use meditative techniques to hold their breath) . It was surprising how quickly my breath holding improved at that age (13 years old). Eventually I got to about 3:30 if I remember correctly. I just got 1:30 which surprised me as I smoked for 30 years and only quit 3 years ago. I reckon I can get back to 2 minutes by tomorrow 😁
@@influentialnobody8960 I think it's pretty rare, though, because the moment you black out your body _typically_ goes autobreath mode, even after breath holding training. Still, probably best to not do this in a pool with no one else around.
This video has VERY strong “The Tenet” vibes. The way Brandon describes the technique and walks us through the mental journey with such preciseness is like a master training a new person, both physically and mentally, for an epic fight.
I've been freediving since about the age of 7. Whenever I dive, music will start to play in my head, as I go longer and longer the more it becomes noticeable. It's kinda like the mantra that Brandon talked about, after a while, my mind would be completely clear and the only thing left was a wordless song. It's actually extremely therapeutic, I reckon everyone should make a habit of holding their breath underwater.
Im a Professional scuba diver, occasionally doing free dives and I can 100% relate to your description (ok maybe 95%). It’s just, when your alone and hear nothing but some tides, it feels indescribably calming and relaxing .
@@Eierkrauler420_ Even more so when you dive in a lake. I live in Fiordland New Zealand and almost exclusively dive in fresh water. There is very little to see, and even less to hear. Literally just your own heartbeat
1:53 Hyperventilation was a common trick amongst freedivers to extend the time spent underwater but as explained in the video, it is very dangerous as it only delays the urge to breathe, but doesn't provide more oxygen at all. It is so risky that the many incidents coined the term "shallow water blackout" for losing consciousness as a consequence of voluntary hyperventilation before the dive, differentiating it from ascent blackout, which is due to lowered oxygen partial pressure caused by a reduction in ambient pressure. The most fun way to push your limits is to throw a ball into a diving pool and start playing rugby with your friends. The average length of a dive in UWR is somewhere between 10 and 20 seconds, but these are very intense seconds, you'll be trying to take air in through your body's every hole :) It's a different way of taming the urge to breathe and making your body work more efficiently, but it does allow UWR players longer static apneas.
There's a TED talk from David Blaine where he talks about his personal record (17 min iirc), starting all the way from him wanting to do it as a magic trick to him realizing that doing it for real is easier and performing it, I highly recommend it.
Thank you! We had so much filming this, when I watched it with CC on it said maniacal laughter when I was laughing and I nearly spit my drink. Glad you enjoyed, we are so grateful for Derek having us on this episode!
Yes I agree, I get a sense he has reached some euphoric state through this work. A very powerful mind. The ability to turn off thoughts is just amazing
My best over the summer in the pool after trial-and-error was 2:13 so that's impressive how quickly you got to 2:30+! I learned right away that hyperventilating was counter-productive. I learned to relax the muscles and get into a trance state. I didn't consider lung-packing, but I tell you what worked for me to extend my time: I would slowly trickle out the air in my lungs after the first minute or so after. I would sink to the bottom of the pool. Then, when the CO2 sensors are screaming at me to surface to breathe, I try to fool myself by acting like I'm slowly coming up and then hold a little while longer before finally surfacing.
I can get 2 min laying in bed and start breathing after that, I'm scared of damaging my brain if I push it any harder. Haven't tried in water and frankly think that's a bit more scary seeing how you can drown if you black out
@@Zuignap Yeah understandable! Definitely not the safest thing lol. Just to note, the body has sufficient oxygen for the brain generally for about 4-5 minutes. As the video notes, what you're feeling is the buildup of CO2.
Yeah-practice, conditioning, etc, like everything. I used to swim competively, and climb (at mid altitude) recreationally, and when I just now tried to hold, economic attempt, I got to @3:30+ (am 45, a smoker, 5'8, 175, in barely 1/2 decent shape...). Probably could have done more if it was consequential, maybe. Thoughts?
I remember teaching myself how to extend my breath hold in a swimming pool as a kid. Figured out breath packing, and counting time really slow so that by the time I reached a count of 100 I'd been down about 2.5 minutes, eventually breaking 3-3.5 minutes by counting even slower. Developed the capacity to swim from one end of the pool to the other, back, and over again on one breath. The water has to be at a comfortable temperature to get a better time. I live in a colder climate now and pools are chillier, so my body consumes more oxygen to stay warm and I have trouble holding my breath so long.
same story here. my slowed thought was always running a sports play in extreme slow motion. a batter running to first base. Now can do that 0.25× on youtube. ⚾😎🙏
Same here on every count! I think my record was just over 3 minutes, and I was also able to cross my parents' pool multiple times on a single breath. I did use hyperventilating as well because, at the time, I believed that it oxygenated my blood. This video is the first time that I heard it only removes carbon dioxide! I was happy to find I was pretty easily able to hold my breath for about a minute forty during this video, just sitting here at my desk, and that's without breath packing or really getting my heart rate down.
@SSJ3Tim I like to see how far I can swim underwater and always swim further after hyperventilating, so this part of the video confuses me. Maybe it becomes more detrimental after a longer period of time than I am able to hold my breath and swim.
@@mmark300how far, or how long? If you're measuring distance then your variables are all over the place. How could you possibly control speed while hyperventilating? You have to measure time under while in motion.
Hey Derek, if you're reading this, thank you so much for inspiring me each and every time I watch your videos. I am 17 year old boy with seemingly impossible dreams, but you change my perspective every single time. For example here, til this date, I thought largest breath holding record was max 4 or 5 minutes, never Googled it, but 24+ minutes?!! That's crazy! That was new example for me that nothing is impossible if done with determination, thank you so much again for doing what you are, I hope to meet you in future.
The gimmick of keeping Brandon on the right side of the screen the whole time just to drive in that yes, he actually is holding his breath for this long, is such a fun choice.
These are the mantras at 7:39 Come what may Seek a direction not a location Think free, live wild Fear is a waste of imagination Rest before productivity does Worthless shapes of self pity, go! We are all museums of fear Don't learn to sail boats upside down all concepts begin on trial Pretend. Enjoy Rest before progress does [rest]. Focus on the process Disarm yourself first Complete what is next Be brave: do it afraid Scuttle the lead Do not hide what you seek
I’m glad you enjoyed these! I have them up in my lab/work space to keep me mindful of my intentions and they’re so helpful when I do these long breath holds!
This goes to show that he has a great peace of mind that helps him to focus and meditate without having the urge to breathe. He is always happy throughout the video with Direk. Good job! 17 minutes is nuts
There is a channel I watch that ends their videos 'peace in every breath'. The one phase has increased my length of breath holds from the 1 min 30 to somewhere 2-3 mins. Focusing on the light and peace, nothing else matters
I tried again today with some of the simple techniques mentioned in this video and got 2 min 30 seconds! I’m not sure if there’s any real reason to try getting better if I’m not regularly swimming/diving, but it’s fun being able to hold my breath longer I guess.
I learned in yoga to take the sensation of closing my eyes, and do that over and over again (with my eyes closed) and that is the deep relaxation method I used. I was a breath holder as a kid, and would lie in the tub practicing holding my breath. I remember getting a stopwatch for my 12th birthday and using that to time my breath holds. I got up to 120 seconds and was super excited. Hadn't tried again recently, but got to 100 seconds when trying to keep up with Derek's longest hold.
I do Qi Gong, and we are taught that holding your breath is very bad. In fact there is one unscrupulous cult (which I won't mention) that uses a modified corruption of Qi Gong to make their victims more susceptible to brainwashing. Holding your breath is really not a good thing to do.
As a swimmer an addition i would add is when the body starts to suggest that you need a breath start to breahe out. Only do the smallest "bubbles" possible and only one "bubble" per second. This helps me get past the wall for the last 30 or more.
I remember David Blaine talked about the sense of time vanishing while he was encased in ice. He said he was heavily hallucinating and it felt like hours had passed and he should be done soon. When he asked the time it was only a minute since the last. This is probably where the legend of your “life flashing before your eyes” comes from, very cool
@TheToboLow because it's a scam. They use therapists with little or no certification. It sucks for literally everyone from the patient to the unqualified therapist.
On the one hand: this skill can be an *incredibly* dangerous thing to practice. I feel like you should never do it without a spotter. On the other hand, for some survival situations where you may be trapped in an environment with no fresh air flow its a skill that might help tremendously to buy time until you can be saved. 😮
I really enjoy breathing. This really does give me a new appreciation for breathing. When praticed effectively, just deep breathing exercises is better then any anti-anxiety meds available.
When I was a kid my brother and I would do holding breath competitions all the time. I definitely remember getting past 2 min. Trying the initial test with Derek I got 2:03 and then doing the alphabet thing (thanks Edward Lear) brought me up to 3 min. I am not really the body type mentioned but it was very interesting to hear about packing. I have never heard the term but my mom once described a similar breathing exercise to get to sleep that has kind of stuck with me and I have done a lot since childhood. You breathe in as much as you possibly can, making sure you do it over 10 seconds. Hold for 5 second, and then take in even more in 5 one second breaths. Hold for 5, then breath out for 25 seconds continuously, literally emptying out as much as you possibly can. I guess it was probably doing that all the time that helped me hold my breath longer.
Anecdotally it seems to help me get to sleep when I am tired but just cannot turn my brain off. Who knows if it really helps though; maybe it is just the counting that helps turn off the brain, like counting sheep.
This is fascinating. Do we know if there are long term impacts doing this on a regular basis, benefits as well as negative health issues? The obvious benefits that stand out would probably be ability to control breathing, endurance. But are there other subtle benefits. And what about the negative health issues like damage to brain cells? What do the health studies suggest? As always, another outstanding topic and video.
I was wondering about damaging brain cells, also. On the other hand, 4 oz of alcohol kills about a million brain cells, so it's probably less of an issue holding your breath than knocking back a few drinks after work.
@@karlrovey With all due respect, passing out seems to me like short term impact. I was wondering about studies that track people who do this over a long period of time. I can imagine that changes to body chemistry and biology would be subtle and not noticeable in the short term. But over a long period of time, years for example, the effects could accumulate.
I was far more curious about this than the method behind building the skill. We know there are long term affects associated with a lot of endurance pursuits that I would think this would mimic.
There have been studies that indicate breath holding can cause brain damage. Search for: breath holding brain damage, That said in some cases involving actual diving the brain injuries might be due to "decompression sickness" (the dissolved air in the the blood "fizzing" out) or similar. But for other cases, it's already a fact that a human brain requires quite a lot of oxygen. If the brain didn't need that much oxygen there would be fewer stroke victims in the world... So. don't over do it - go look up the number of minutes human brains can go without oxygen and stick to below the lower number.
I loved this video, it feels very therapeutic to hold the breath. My personal record by just breathing a lot before holding is approximately 5 minutes now I just want to see how much more I can achieve with these advices.
Try and watch an engaging UA-cam video on your next attempt. I honestly feel like distracting your mind without expending calories to engage it by trying to distract it with your own imagination is super beneficial.
in my 20s I used to swim several times a week, after relaxing my body and breathing in a rhythmic way I could hold my breath for 4 minutes, my friends would not believe me until I did it in front of them, I now know that besides swimming under water often, being tall (6'2") also helps, I'm now 50 years old and have smoked for most of my life so my estimate of holding my breath now is probably 1 minute on a good day, thanks for the great video
There is a weird mental state you get into while doing long breath holds underwater that can't really be explained but its very tranquil and I found having my eyes open helped a lot.
I have sleep apnea so I basically sleep in a hyperbaric chamber every night. I suspect its one of the reasons that despite being a bit on the heavier side 170 lbs at 5'8" I have decent breath holding ability. I also used to swim and play French horn in middle school into high school and practiced breathing technique and breath holding.
That's... not how it works. CPAP/APAP isn't anything like a hyperbaric chamber, and neither a hyperbaric chamber nor CPAP/APAP is going to increase your capacity to hold your breath. It's literally just some air at reasonably low pressure for most people (usually not more than about the pressure it takes to blow bubbles through a straw into a tall glass of water) stenting open your airway so it doesn't get blocked (think of one of those wacky inflatable wavy arm things, or a bouncy castle - the constant flow of air blows it out and keeps the tubes expanded, but when the flow of air drops, they collapse in on themselves). That's assuming that you have OSA, of course, and not central sleep apnea like I have - where my brain literally just forgets to breathe, and I have to be ventilated and on oxygen at night because otherwise I spend 90% of the night with precipitously low oxygen levels and stop breathing over 100 times an hour, for up to 90 seconds at a time. Unfortunately, because the pressure and type of ventilation I need are more complex, the ventilation causes my alveoli to collapse if I come off the ventilator too fast when I wake up, and let me tell you, THAT is not fun at all.
@@JustAnotherBuckyLover I don't use a CPAP. I meant to say my dad has sleep apnea and he tells me my snoring sounds just like his sleep apnea snoring. Like I stop breathing multiple times during the night. I am not medically sure that I have it. But from the accounts of friends and family, I probably will take a sleep study soon. The hyperbaric chamber was referring to my snoring reducing my air intake.
As a national level swimmer,this video taught me quite a few ways to understand my breaths. while swimming even 1 wasted movement could decide if u are going take extra breaths while swimming or not which would heavily affect the position u are going to be at those wasted movement and extra breaths can take your rank from 1st to 3rd or even below.Every movement has to be precise.Thank you for this video😭💖
Hard not to be amazed. It probably has some benefits in learning body control and strengthening your willpower because that translates to so many other situations in life. Sort of like learning to tolerate cold showers. Relatively safe ways to practice not panicking when things get uncomfortable, which is a useful skill to have. When taken to these extremes though I would be seriously worried about damage to the brain - even if only minor.
I wish you kept the timer going when you invited us to breathe together! I retimed and hit 1 minutes 58 seconds, but I'm in that tall/skinny camp and also played trumpet in competitive marching band for years which is basically exhaling consistently while running for 15 minutes straight (granted, that was over a decade and a half ago). I have a naturally high resting heart rate - I'd be curious if that comes into play.
and you didn't think of checking the seconds in the video and subtracting o.o I also held it for straight 2 minutes easily until it was like, yeah I would need to breathe in soon 189cm 76kg I am surprised, I don't do any sports for past 15 years. I sit at my PC daily for more than 10h and I don't eat healthy. And I think I do very shallow breathing (maybe that even helped it)
Blissfulness, clarity, and focus come as a direct result of learning to calm and control the mind and body. Imagine if schools taught this before reading, writing, and arithmetic!
I was a lifeguard for several years as a teenager and breath holding became almost a meditative way to pass the time. They were all small pools so scanning wasnt difficult to keep up with and I needed something to keep myself occupied. For about 3 months a year, 3 ish good long breath holds per 15 minute seat rotation, 3 seat rotations per hour, 8-12 hours per shift. I think my longest got up to 6 or 7 minutes, but pretty much every one of the techniques he mentions were super helpful. Getting up to 2:30 within what looks to be like an hour is really good. Also crazy to see just how much pure O2 can push it
I remember seeing a ted talk(?) years ago about this and the top comment has lived rent-free inside my brain ever since: "man holds breath for 17 minutes, talks about it for 18"
Same, once other teen had the idea to do a contest of who would hold longer. Little did they know I was good. I was the first to go. After my performance, they all gave up to beat my time. Just like that the contest was over😂
Amazing episode Derek! Never thought I would watch someone hold his breath for 17 minutes. I took the test with you at the start and needed to breathe at the same time as you, for 40 seconds. I am not good at holding it, so it was so impressive to see you go from 40 sec to over 2.5 minutes. Incredible how much the body can take, it is usually the mind that gives up first, your brain that tells you to stop, but it is doing it to protect you, right? Or does the brain think you are out of oxygen, or does it really know you can keep going, but are just telling you to breathe?
Interesting video. I experimented with breathholding for a while, because I aimed to solve the most Rubik's cubes underwater with one breath. My relaxed breath hold record was only 4 minutes, and managed to do 7 cubes in 2:30 (video on my channel), which sadly wasn't enough to beat the WR. Now I feel like I should try again. 😅
I wonder, based on this video, if it might be more beneficial to solve in "stupid" ways that require a small set of algos and very little thinking to go on complete autopilot
Good thought, but not really. The professional method I use needed years to get really good at, but at this point it's just as automatic for me (all the algorithms required are in "muscle memory".).@@CDolph296
I really enjoyed this one, being a freediver myself. One word of caution though: do never, ever, attempt to practice breatholds in the water alone: Shallow water blackout is no joke. One moment you are totally fine, a second later you're in critical danger and a minute later you're dead. Take a class! Freediving can be super fun and safe.
Thanks for this video, Derek. Funny that I'm "diving" in this matter a lot is the past week. Last wednesday I held my breath for 3m15s in the pool. My record is still 5m02s but that one was on dry land 😁. If you have some time, please make a video over the mammalian divers, especially sperm whales! Their biology is fascinating as well. There are some birds too.
@@OEclecticismO For most people yes, they usually get relaxed in water and can perform better. But not for me, holding my breath in water makes me a bit nervous lol
my personal record is 3 min 40 sec when i was in highschool.. submerged in water... cool water really helps.. my normal record while seating was exactly 1 min shorter at 2min 40sec when
I remember seeing David Blaine do this at some point. Then I was discussing this with my partner a week ago, and I wasn't sure what the correct term for "mammalian dive reflex" was. I just remembered that humans can technically survive without inhalation for a bit of time.
What i think as the hardest part along with distracting your mind while holding breath is the point of time where you should finally give up. The urge to breath vs the urge to hold for some more time is somewhat very intresting😅. Great Video👍🏻
Very interesting video. I went scuba diving a few years ago. I did the first 2 qualifications. It was noted by my instructor that I was using such little air during dives, he was bewildered and switched me to half a tank for the rest of the dives (less cumbersome). Even then I had spare air. I was breathing 1 breath a minute, counting 30 for in and 30 for out. I breathed less than the dive masters who had been diving for decades. I put it down to focusing my mind, and pacing/minimising my movements.... I would love to know why I used such little air. Yet, I've never held my breath for over 2 minutes!
I know that when you're at a high pressure, you get a lot more oxygen molecules per breath. Does your body still use the same amount of oxygen no matter the pressure? I've honestly never thought about it, but it would make sense. When you see scuba divers breathe at a normal rate, they're probably wasting a ton of oxygen that's in the tank. The only thing is that CO2 would also build up at the same rate, making you want to breathe more. I know rebreathers are also a thing. I wonder if any scuba systems use rebreathers with CO2 scrubbers to extend dive times?
@iankrasnow5383 Oh that's very true! I think you hit the nail on the coffin with that. I was diving at around 20-30 metres, therefore I am inhaling 3-4x times the oxygen as on the surface... which means CO2 exchange is gonna take so much more CO2 out from your blood per breath. You've actually reminded me that I think I may have thought of this at the time (it was years ago). Your blood and body tissues, and the air in your lungs will have a much higher concentration of oxygen as a result of the depth. I'm sure that excess oxygen floating around in you (ready for exchange with CO2) + the relaxed nature of diving + the fact that you must focus on air preservation and breathing while diving accounts for my experience.. Maybe my dive masters just never realised how much air they were wasting exhaling so much exces oxygen 🤔 I was very comfortable breathing 1 breath a minute, then when we had to swim faster the urge to breath kicked in, I would count 20 seconds instead. But even then, felt like I was wasting/didn't need it.
@@iankrasnow5383 Like he said in the video, as mammals we have bultin under water reflexes to reduce our need for breathing when underwater. It doesn't have to do with pressure, it mostly has to do with temperature, specially face temperature. There isn't any change in the way cells consume oxygen. Like the guy said, the problem is the breathing reflex. Your body pressures you to breath way before it really needs more oxygen. In other words, is all in your head. Well, your brain.
@@TheInternetcordOne thing that you should remember is that while scuba diving you should never hold your breath. That is one of the first things they teach you so surely you know this. So perhaps one of the reasons the dive masters use more air is that they keep on breathing even if they do not need to. I mean it is of course good that you can be under water longer but the results of holding your breath have so dire consequences (ruptured lung) that it is not worth it.
4:40 The 'Lungs packing' technique, combined with holding my breath at the end when I feel I can't take in more air, is what I do to get rid of hiccups. It works for me every time within seconds. I believe it's effective because it compresses my diaphragm. I hope this comment will be helpful to someone dealing with hiccups. They can be quite annoying and frustrating when they persist.
The scariest part about this is how he's implying he could just let it overtake him and he'd still be comfortable. That is quite an enlightening thought.
I once took NO2 and had a similar lack of "feeling the needed to breath" after taking it. Glad I had friends around to remind me to breathe, otherwise I have no doubt I would have just held my breath until I passed out.
I've been able to do this quite well since I was young, I was fascinated with holding my breath. I used to get into a mental state where I became calmer than I have ever been and I just kept trying to improve it Damn this really validates my experience, I thought I was either miscounting or actually harming myself. I can't wait to go swimming again. I think the most I ever got to was like 5 minutes
Did you ever try heroin or fentanyl? I know it's illegal but it really works for holding your breath. One time I held my breath for about 10 minutes without even realizing it so imagine if I really tried really hard! All my entire body felt like when you sit on your leg for too long, you know what I mean? lol
@@rackneh Do you know if we're allowed to use H during a Guinness world record? I'm not sure if it's really that dangerous but I do know I can beat this record VERY EASILY!
I was a swimmer, and a distance swimmer at that so I had a very efficient stroke without a lot of kick. At age 20 I made it 75 yards (3 laps of a 25y pool with flip turns between laps) without breathing, and had only heard tales of people who could do 100 yards, never met anyone. In high school I held my breath 3 minutes because I was bored in art class. But I always saw these 10+ minute holds as just unbelievable. It's great to hear some of the details from someone who is really that good. I suppose while I was used to the physiological aspects (convulsions from urge to breathe), I never got as far as deliberately relaxing mentally, it just happened or it didn't depending on other circumstances.
"Breathing is so important, it happens without conscious thought"
GREAT, THANKS A LOT DEREK
As someone with ADHD who forgets to breathe when doing anything requiring physical coordination, I contest this statement.
SAME GODDAMNIT
manual breathing activated
Also, you just lost The Game.
Same about blinking your eyes. If you don't think about it, it just happens naturally, like totally.
I enjoy the fact that the subtitles describe Brandon's laughter as maniacal.
thought i was the only one who noticed lol
It's not wrong tbh
Subtitles are automatic for the most part. UA-cam can do them for you, or Adobe premiere pro can also do it. You just have to go through and check they're correct. Not had them transcribe laughter before, but in theory it could do it :/ @@KeksimusMaximus
@@KeksimusMaximus what do you suppose comment means? he's saying he enjoys it. tweaking on this guy for no reason.
Brandon here - This cracked me up too, don’t know what to tell you 😂
Cannot believe that this man went through so much trouble just to remind me to manually breathe
Lmfao
I feel like that wasn’t even a message in this video. It is probably something you have unconsciously in your mind
@@davidzwitserever heard of a joke?
Bippity Boppity, your breathing is now a conscious activity!
@@davidzwitser woooooooosh
The end of his breath was so intense. His neck and chest convulsing and he is losing track of time. Such a great edit with him explaining it as well.
I appreciate this vid a lot! So, for the haters, Re: 'He only held his breath for '@1:45 minutes'- try that while filming a vid underwater: no pressure, eh? (pun intended!).
I tried it just now, and, though I'm a middle-age, outta-shape smoker, I found that I can easily hold twice as long (3:47- big deal :-\), BUT:
I don't think I could've made the same level of improvement (NO way, I'd def fold first) that the poster did for this vid:. THAT is what I find impressive!
@@bholdr----0 Why did you reply to this comment and not the video?
@@SalesmanWave
I found the comment interesting. Should I not respond to comments, but, rather, only respond to the video?
Edit- oh, I get it now- Is that such a big deal, such that you'd be a nit about it, and, what, try to score some interweb points? OK, ya got me! Zing! Score one for the poster police!
🤔 (I looked for a 'rolling eyes' emoji, but didn't see one- you'll have to imagine that I ended my post with that.)
@@bholdr----0 what a personality, wowzers
@@bholdr----0 Did you try it underwater? You cant compare holding your breath above water to under water...
This is breath taking
YOURE breath taking
Just…. Just dont
Badum tsss....
*This...... is Elon Musk*
Sadly, the professional isn't breath taking enough
Brandon seems like such a nice and kind person, so much endearing and motivation from him. Incredible teacher.
Seriously. It's rare to see somebody so accomplished, with such a keen ability, that's also able to describe the mechanics of what they're doing, as well as the mental process, in a really useful, detailed way.
He is very passionate about science
Very gay too!
@@user-os7ec4dm8x I don't think he's gay unless you're joking 15:15
@@user-os7ec4dm8x
Are... you being serious?
"Stretching can help expand what you've got"
- Veritasium 2024
Thanks that will be noted for future endeavours
Jelquin explained
Me when I’m jorquin and jelquin it
that was back in 2023 im afraid
2023*
i been stretching my penis for years, i see no expansion.
As a free diver and spearfisherman, this was a lovely watch. Breath training and holding is a meditation. It's as much a physical practice as it is a psychological one.
Agreed. I was self taught and its really fascinating to see the methods I "devolped" are actually used by everyone else as well. Stay safe down there!
@@alexanderharris539
Yeah. Especially when I was a kid/teen: my brother and I and our friends were competitive swimmers, and we would compete to see who could stay underwater the longest, and who could swim the farthest distance underwater without a breath. (And we'd hold our breath whenever we went through a tunnel, of course! I think all kids do that, eh?)
One coach once did a lap underwater in a 50 meter Olympic size pool, so 100 meters, in about two minutes or a bit more (I think) I couldn't ever do that, but I can still hold for 3-1/2 minutes pretty easily (after prepping/packing and while staying still (no exertion)... I doubt I could do four, without my life depending it (or maybe with straight O2 before... or if I wasn't a former smoker).
Cheers!
@@bholdr----0 did smoking really affect the performance of hold? i mean how? i mean i am an active smoker and can hold my breath for 4 maybe 5 if im not smoking lol
how long can u hold ur breath
@@udontseemeiseeuuseemeiseeu about 7.5 minutes
I've been consciously breathing the whole video, which is arguably more torture than what Brandon's doing.
You are now thinking of your breath again. You are now manually breathing.
That's funny. As a free diver I always find myself holding my breath when I see people under the water. It's a strange to realize that you haven't been breathing for some time just because you are watching other people not breathing..
Cheers,
Chris
@@no3ironman11100 that doesnt work on me anymore, but when youre having a panic attack its like youre manually breathing while never catching your breath, even though physically youre fine and do have enough oxygen your heart start beating out of control which increases your need for oxygen. is terrifying. i dont think anyone has ever died from a panic attack, unless they had a heart condition i guess, but it feels like you are going to which just feeds into the self reinforcing cycle
i hate when i concentrate on breathing and then i can't stop and have that weird paranoia that i need to keep focussing on it or i'll accidenatally stop...but it takes the littlest distraction and it's gone. but it's so weird sometimes. glad i never learned how to control my hearts muscle. xD
Haha yeah ive been eating for this video i feel like im suffocating
Learning how to hold your breath that long in that short of a period of time is honestly very impressive.
Very impressive yes but I promise you could do it too! I freedive and you could hit a 3 min breath hold just after a couple of days of training. It feels really surreal when you reach a point of total relaxation wherein not breathing feels just as comfortable as breathing.
I went an extra minute on top of his time. I don't exercise at all, which doesn't help. Also I was in bed but in a state of intense anxiety which probably cancels out. But also slightly drunk. IDK if v that helps
@@KNR90something I noticed is that your entire body breathes through the skin, so immersing is important in this case
@@KNR90 So you passed out. Does it count if you use chemicals (alcohol)? LOL
and not honestly what do you think?
I remember learning lung packing from Bear Grylls. I'd sit at the bottom of the pool as a kid for 3 or 4 minutes at a time. It was one of the most euphoric, meditative things to just be floating in silent weightlessness. There was a point halfway through where you just felt like you could stay down there for another hour as long as you didn't move.
Sounds not entirely safe
@fredriksvard2603 after watching this video I now think I was playing with death lmao.
Can relate. Sitting down by the ladder, watching the pool or just closing my eyes, enjoying the cool water and the calmness... Probably one of the only things I did as a kid that even came close to meditation and deliberate relaxation.
Same here. I'd sometimes compete against others and would enjoy watching them breath in and dive again several times while I remained underwater unmoving.
that's partly why i can't swim. when my school would take us for swimming lessons i'd spend the time chilling underwater as long as i could because it was the most peace i ever got. the quiet was nice but i worry my brain might have been shutting down as well because of lack of oxygen
as a doctor, i was pretty darn impressed with the explanation of the physiology of breathing. expertly done, as per usual
Hi
This is fascinating.
👍
Good brockcast
Nice❤
👍👍
👍
I love the explanation of how hyperventilating before holding breath is actually bad in very concise way as well as teaching us how to do it properly through other techniques.
Thanks for the awesome video Veritasium!
I used to do that while swimming. Didn't notice a difference. However I do remember a news story of a girl who unexpectedly blacked out during swim class while they were doing breathing exercises. Going back realizing I could've died because the adults weren't strong enough to pull me out, how terrifying. God's grace is real!
I like to see how far I can swim underwater and I always swim further after hyperventilating, so this really confuses me
It's so concise that it's not so clear. How would the amount of oxygen in your blood not being increasable because it's limited by the concentration of oxygen in the air while at the same time the amount of CO2 its controllable because it's expellable?
@@mmark300 Hyperventilating reduces the urge to breathe, but doesn't give more oxygen. Makes it much easier to lose consciousness.
@@mmark300All you’re doing by hyperventilating is suppressing the natural urge to breathe. That can be very dangerous as that can lead to you becoming unconscious and breathing in water. As the video explains holding your breath is to a large extent depending on psychological aspects. As a lifeguard I increased my diving time significantly with similar techniques to what Brandon mentions.
I fast forwarded through the ad to help Brandon out
I'm doing the exact opposite, I've been paused for like 10 minutes😂
everyones doing it on any video that sponser pays to youtuber
I came to the comments during the ad (like right now) 😂
I put it in 2x speed
This is fascinating. I live at high altitude (around 6500 ft) so i was waiting for him to bring it up. Genuinely, the increase of how long i can hold my breath at Sea level is amazing
Yeah! I'm a former ski bum, and have lived in the mountains at 6k-ish feet, and when I would go down to sea level, it felt like breathing soup... I'd bet a person could train at altitude and then be able to hold a lot longer...
Though it's the CO2 buildup that makes one feel like they need to breathe. There is a lot more O2 in a breath than people think (like how rebreathers don't take more air than normal scuba, but, rather chemically purge the CO2 to massively increase diving times... Still, it couldn't hurt.
(Imagine what high altitude mountaieers or Nepalese Sherpas, acclimated to 12-16k feet could do? (I also recall reading that pearl/sponge/oyster divers can routinely hold for four, five, plus minutes while diving for their living, and like Sherpas, I wonder how much is training, and how much is genitic...
Anyway, cheers!
I agree. I'd love to research how much altitude adjustment plays into breath holding
@@meepmonstare
Yup... I don't live in the mountains anymore, but it would be informative to, say, run a half marathon (or other simaler hard- for me- endurance exercise) while living at sea level, and then live at 6k ft. for a few months (as a ski bum again?) and then do another half-marathon at se level, and note the changes. (Same goes for breath holding.)
Very interesting. Cheees!
Actually so proud of Derek to last 2 and a half minutes!
But, my God, 17 minutes is just WILD
And it's still nowhere near the record.
Thats what she said
That's with pure oxygen, though
I do not want to diminish anyone's personal achievements. But I believe almost everyone can do 2.5 min. It's very likely you can too with a little training and practice in a pool.
Give it a try with some friends. Enjoy and be proud of your personal achievements pushing your self beyond what you thought you could do.
@@kreynolds1123 No, do not practice in a pool, that's how people die. Practice on your couch instead.
That was actually crazy how effective going through the alphabet and pausing between each letter was. I watched once through, and my first breath hold with you on the bed was about 40 seconds. My second one while you were in the pool was just over 2 minutes.
Same here
So glad you like this strategy!!! - Brandon
I tried once while sitting up and kind of tense, and went a bit over a minute before I started feeling weird. I didn't try a second time, but I think I might try tonight in bed.
Going against the body's natural mechanisms isn't healthy. They're there for a reason.
Same here, impressive.
As a teacher, I really hope people can appreciate how brilliantly Brandon creates a positive learning environment WHILE also pushing someone to exceed their limits - both physically and psychologically
Thank you for noticing this, I think it's really important in any sport but rarely noticed or discussed
"Be brave, do it afraid", I liked this
While I have only used one flight instructor so far, but this is my experience so far in learning how to flight. Very relaxing and positive.
The guy even knows that I'm prior military, and an athlete, and is still super calm with me.
david blaine taught me this same trick. i've learned a lot from you guys too. well done. my longest was a little over 3:30, i thought i was something special, this dude just completely blew my little elementry school training into a full blown career. i knew it was possible. extremely inspiring. ANYONE can learn to hold their breath longer. just like anything else practice makes us progress. great video man!
Same I got 2:30 and then realized how long it had been and lost it 😂
What a useless talent lol
Brandon was genuinely so encouraging and charismatic
I’m glad you enjoyed, we had so much fun shooting this video and we’re so grateful to Dr. Muller for having us on to share our fun!
This should be expected by everyone
Yes, 100% this. You recognize people with a positive attitude to live and people right away, that's the way to go!
I'll have to say, his ability was breathtaking
And, tanks to his method, it holds water.
.. except that he wasn't taking breaths.
I used to do this as a kid in the bathtub... I would totally relax and stay as still as possible. I was pretty impressed with myself when I made it to over 2 minutes.. I can't imagine holding my breath for this long. Insane!
Bro i'm just imagining your mom walking in on you and freaking out thinking you've drowned
I used to do this at the bottom of our backyard pool. I'd swim down there and just lay on the bottom. How my Mom didn't freak out is beyond me... GenX stuff I guess!
@@fprintf I did the same at the city pool as a kid (before the internet, heh). Freaked lifeguards out a few times, but my parents were always telling them "No, he's just a good swimmer."
tried this at home. worked like a charm, now i can hear colors and see sounds
😂
Brandon is a legend! loved seeing him holding his breath the whole video
That was insane.
Thanks Dave, we love you too!!!
Only downside is that I garantee this video is gonna make a bunch of idiots hurt themselves lmfao
Why is he dead sill in the tank but the water is making waves at the top?
@@blah204 doubt it. I'm sure plenty of us tested how long we could hold our breath, and that's all people will do.
I used to be able to go about 4 minutes. I can't imagine how he's able to manage this long. Pretty amazing.
He takes heroin before performing this act.
with breathing 100 percent oksijen tank before static apnea and it is like doping so it is against the sport spirit
@@onurarabac7111 10+ mins with normal sir isn't bad.
@@physco4641 what do you mean with normal
@@onurarabac7111maybe the performer in the video did 10min with normal air. At least, that's what his comment imply
Really interesting video, and very well explained. As someone with a background as rescue swimmer, I had the "fortune" to experience a pool blackout under controlled and supervised conditions. The really dangerous thing is, as mentioned in the video, when hyperventilating, is the feeling of sensation and happiness while actually passing out. You are (without help from others) dying without noticing.
Once when I was 16 ish, I tried to see how far I could swim doing under water laps in a pool. I hyperventillated first then took off. Lucky for me I had a friend walking along beside me in the pool. He said he noticed me moving erratically for a bit so he reached down and pulled me up, then took me to the pool edge or got me out of the pool. They say the life guard came over and got mad because I was laughing. I don't remember any of it. But it could have been deadly if I had not been supervised.
I like that you got into the scary drowning stuff right towards the end when you can see him getting uncomfortable. really nice tension
These people have the will power to reduce their breathing addiction, it's amazing
Everyone that has ever breathed will die, ergo breathing causes death. Thus, not breathing is how these people are able to not die. They’re cheating death and that is why I am calling the police.
life gives us beathing and lemons.....we need to throw both of those away🤣
I can’t just hold for 2 minutes. This guy is a superhuman
It probably isn't very healthy for you anyway
@@ocoolwow imma caution you hold your opinion on things you dont know anything about, cause no. its not unhealthy
Try Whim Hoff. You’ll be able to do 4 mins in a few weeks no problem. Plus you feel great after.
I held for just over 4 minutes my first try
@@ocoolwow It isn't unhealthy either; it literally does no damage to you
Please be careful with the breath holding. During my teen years, I was a lifeguard. While interviewing for a second lifeguarding position at an indoor pool that also taught scuba diving, there was an emergency. While my future boss was giving me a tour of the pool, we heard yelling at the diving well. We ran over, we dove in and pulled a boy out of the 16’ diving well. A group of kids were doing a breath holding competition. The boy hyperventilated before holding his breath. He passed out while holding his breath. We had to do chest compressions, and we got a regular pulse, but he died on the way to the hospital. 😢😢😢. It’s amazing what the human body can do and the things we’ve learned, but I see this as a pointless activity/competition. Whether in or out of the water, I don’t allow people (especially kids) to partake in breath holding competitions. That was the first time I ever had to put my cpr training into practice…and the kid died. Thank goodness we had a lot of highly trained people show up and they were appreciative that I acted quickly, but that experience messed me up for a while. 30 years later, I’m still haunted by that event. Please, be cautious of this and do NOT have children attempt this!
I normally call it quits after the urge to breath dies down, because at that point it's just scary.
Thanks for drawing attention to this
It’s called ‘shallow water blackout’ and almost no one knows about it unless they’ve experienced it first hand like you
Dont tell this dude the % of people surviving cpr in hospital is ≈ 15 %
Very good points. I hope people take them seriously.
@@Flashv28 I realize that, but not doing anything the survival rate is basically 0%. Yet an AED survival rate is nearly 75%, but their chances drop nearly 10% every minute…unless CPR can be administered. CPR helps to maintain their time and success of revival when an AED is enroute.
0:42 he hit my record
I remember finding a random article about this when I was like 15, giving some exercises to do. Got me from 60s to around 3.30, then about 4 after learning the urge to breath can be ignored more or less safely. Still not recommended to do this without someone nearby just in case, but it's super interesting stuff. I'm willing to bet the people who do this are at least a little bit addicted to the feeling of relaxation/euphoria associated with it, it's very meditative especially when submerged. I totally get it.
i agree. my favorite thing to do any time my family goes out to swimming resorts (assuming water slides are out of the question) is just finding a nice spot and holding my breath for as long as possible and imagine I'm in one of those sensory deprivation chambers.
I nearly drowned once as a kid when I accidentally found myself stuck under a floaty filled with people once and couldn't swim away from them, so perhaps fhere's some adrenaline rush in it for me whenever I do it. Challenging and overcoming that trauma or something.
Ive heard people just die , since the breathe reflex is ignored if they go too far they just blackout and die
I remember getting to about 2 minutes within days after reading Ganesh for school (In the book, they use meditative techniques to hold their breath) . It was surprising how quickly my breath holding improved at that age (13 years old). Eventually I got to about 3:30 if I remember correctly.
I just got 1:30 which surprised me as I smoked for 30 years and only quit 3 years ago. I reckon I can get back to 2 minutes by tomorrow 😁
@@influentialnobody8960 I think it's pretty rare, though, because the moment you black out your body _typically_ goes autobreath mode, even after breath holding training.
Still, probably best to not do this in a pool with no one else around.
This video has VERY strong “The Tenet” vibes. The way Brandon describes the technique and walks us through the mental journey with such preciseness is like a master training a new person, both physically and mentally, for an epic fight.
Also the prestige vibes
fck your vibes
The secret to this magic trick is... IT'S REAL
I've been freediving since about the age of 7. Whenever I dive, music will start to play in my head, as I go longer and longer the more it becomes noticeable. It's kinda like the mantra that Brandon talked about, after a while, my mind would be completely clear and the only thing left was a wordless song. It's actually extremely therapeutic, I reckon everyone should make a habit of holding their breath underwater.
as opposed to breathing underwater?
Im a Professional scuba diver, occasionally doing free dives and I can 100% relate to your description (ok maybe 95%). It’s just, when your alone and hear nothing but some tides, it feels indescribably calming and relaxing .
@@BeatisMcScoots Although I do enjoy SCUBA diving, I find the silence of free diving more calming and enjoyable.
@@Eierkrauler420_ Even more so when you dive in a lake. I live in Fiordland New Zealand and almost exclusively dive in fresh water. There is very little to see, and even less to hear. Literally just your own heartbeat
JESUS AND GOD LOVES EVERYONE SO MUCH TURN TO THEM BEFORE ITS TO LATE
1:53 Hyperventilation was a common trick amongst freedivers to extend the time spent underwater but as explained in the video, it is very dangerous as it only delays the urge to breathe, but doesn't provide more oxygen at all. It is so risky that the many incidents coined the term "shallow water blackout" for losing consciousness as a consequence of voluntary hyperventilation before the dive, differentiating it from ascent blackout, which is due to lowered oxygen partial pressure caused by a reduction in ambient pressure.
The most fun way to push your limits is to throw a ball into a diving pool and start playing rugby with your friends. The average length of a dive in UWR is somewhere between 10 and 20 seconds, but these are very intense seconds, you'll be trying to take air in through your body's every hole :) It's a different way of taming the urge to breathe and making your body work more efficiently, but it does allow UWR players longer static apneas.
Brandon is just a guy that loves what he can do, smiling all the time
Thank you I’m so glad you enjoyed the video, I really do love what I do and I hope others can feel the same joy and excitement!
There's a TED talk from David Blaine where he talks about his personal record (17 min iirc), starting all the way from him wanting to do it as a magic trick to him realizing that doing it for real is easier and performing it, I highly recommend it.
I love his laughter. So energetic. So prositive.
Thank you! We had so much filming this, when I watched it with CC on it said maniacal laughter when I was laughing and I nearly spit my drink. Glad you enjoyed, we are so grateful for Derek having us on this episode!
😂 I absolutely love Brandon's laugh, it's fantastically crazy sounding and catchy lol if I would've seen maniacal laughter in CCs I'd have died omg 😆
Yes I agree, I get a sense he has reached some euphoric state through this work. A very powerful mind. The ability to turn off thoughts is just amazing
I paused the video for an hour because I was on another tab scrolling, I was relieved to see he still survived at the end of the video.
Watch at 2x speed to save brandon
My best over the summer in the pool after trial-and-error was 2:13 so that's impressive how quickly you got to 2:30+! I learned right away that hyperventilating was counter-productive. I learned to relax the muscles and get into a trance state. I didn't consider lung-packing, but I tell you what worked for me to extend my time: I would slowly trickle out the air in my lungs after the first minute or so after. I would sink to the bottom of the pool. Then, when the CO2 sensors are screaming at me to surface to breathe, I try to fool myself by acting like I'm slowly coming up and then hold a little while longer before finally surfacing.
Oh man this is so scary, I can't even try it! I just do some ice bucket
I can get 2 min laying in bed and start breathing after that, I'm scared of damaging my brain if I push it any harder. Haven't tried in water and frankly think that's a bit more scary seeing how you can drown if you black out
@@Zuignap Yeah understandable! Definitely not the safest thing lol. Just to note, the body has sufficient oxygen for the brain generally for about 4-5 minutes. As the video notes, what you're feeling is the buildup of CO2.
Yeah-practice, conditioning, etc, like everything.
I used to swim competively, and climb (at mid altitude) recreationally, and when I just now tried to hold, economic attempt, I got to @3:30+ (am 45, a smoker, 5'8, 175, in barely 1/2 decent shape...). Probably could have done more if it was consequential, maybe. Thoughts?
@@Zuignaphavent watched the video, but isnt it easier to hold your breath for longer underwater?
I remember teaching myself how to extend my breath hold in a swimming pool as a kid. Figured out breath packing, and counting time really slow so that by the time I reached a count of 100 I'd been down about 2.5 minutes, eventually breaking 3-3.5 minutes by counting even slower. Developed the capacity to swim from one end of the pool to the other, back, and over again on one breath.
The water has to be at a comfortable temperature to get a better time. I live in a colder climate now and pools are chillier, so my body consumes more oxygen to stay warm and I have trouble holding my breath so long.
same story here. my slowed thought was always running a sports play in extreme slow motion. a batter running to first base. Now can do that 0.25× on youtube. ⚾😎🙏
Same here on every count! I think my record was just over 3 minutes, and I was also able to cross my parents' pool multiple times on a single breath. I did use hyperventilating as well because, at the time, I believed that it oxygenated my blood. This video is the first time that I heard it only removes carbon dioxide!
I was happy to find I was pretty easily able to hold my breath for about a minute forty during this video, just sitting here at my desk, and that's without breath packing or really getting my heart rate down.
@SSJ3Tim I like to see how far I can swim underwater and always swim further after hyperventilating, so this part of the video confuses me. Maybe it becomes more detrimental after a longer period of time than I am able to hold my breath and swim.
Have you tried peeing? That's how I stay warm in my friends pool.
@@mmark300how far, or how long? If you're measuring distance then your variables are all over the place. How could you possibly control speed while hyperventilating? You have to measure time under while in motion.
Hey Derek, if you're reading this, thank you so much for inspiring me each and every time I watch your videos. I am 17 year old boy with seemingly impossible dreams, but you change my perspective every single time. For example here, til this date, I thought largest breath holding record was max 4 or 5 minutes, never Googled it, but 24+ minutes?!! That's crazy! That was new example for me that nothing is impossible if done with determination, thank you so much again for doing what you are, I hope to meet you in future.
Mantapp
The gimmick of keeping Brandon on the right side of the screen the whole time just to drive in that yes, he actually is holding his breath for this long, is such a fun choice.
These are the mantras at 7:39
Come what may
Seek a direction not a location
Think free, live wild
Fear is a waste of imagination
Rest before productivity does
Worthless shapes of self pity, go!
We are all museums of fear
Don't learn to sail boats upside down
all concepts begin on trial
Pretend. Enjoy
Rest before progress does [rest].
Focus on the process
Disarm yourself first
Complete what is next
Be brave: do it afraid
Scuttle the lead
Do not hide what you seek
I’m glad you enjoyed these! I have them up in my lab/work space to keep me mindful of my intentions and they’re so helpful when I do these long breath holds!
This goes to show that he has a great peace of mind that helps him to focus and meditate without having the urge to breathe. He is always happy throughout the video with Direk. Good job! 17 minutes is nuts
I paused the video and came back 30 minutes later, and he was still holding his breath! Incredible!
There is a channel I watch that ends their videos 'peace in every breath'.
The one phase has increased my length of breath holds from the 1 min 30 to somewhere 2-3 mins.
Focusing on the light and peace, nothing else matters
I did the test with Derek and got 1 min 40 seconds. Another great video! Thanks so much for sharing with us.
i guess i am a natural as well. i can hold at least 95 seconds without much effort and without any prior training.
I tried again today with some of the simple techniques mentioned in this video and got 2 min 30 seconds!
I’m not sure if there’s any real reason to try getting better if I’m not regularly swimming/diving, but it’s fun being able to hold my breath longer I guess.
I learned in yoga to take the sensation of closing my eyes, and do that over and over again (with my eyes closed) and that is the deep relaxation method I used. I was a breath holder as a kid, and would lie in the tub practicing holding my breath. I remember getting a stopwatch for my 12th birthday and using that to time my breath holds. I got up to 120 seconds and was super excited. Hadn't tried again recently, but got to 100 seconds when trying to keep up with Derek's longest hold.
I do Qi Gong, and we are taught that holding your breath is very bad. In fact there is one unscrupulous cult (which I won't mention) that uses a modified corruption of Qi Gong to make their victims more susceptible to brainwashing. Holding your breath is really not a good thing to do.
I hope you had some adult supervision while you held your breath in the bathtub :/
You should do much better as an adult with bigger lungs. I am out of shape and have no practice and on first attempt I got a minute and a half.
As a swimmer an addition i would add is when the body starts to suggest that you need a breath start to breahe out. Only do the smallest "bubbles" possible and only one "bubble" per second. This helps me get past the wall for the last 30 or more.
I remember David Blaine talked about the sense of time vanishing while he was encased in ice. He said he was heavily hallucinating and it felt like hours had passed and he should be done soon. When he asked the time it was only a minute since the last. This is probably where the legend of your “life flashing before your eyes” comes from, very cool
I have nothing to say but "WOW".
I am just amazed by the thing you manage to do
Don't Take Sponsorships From Better Help..!
Why
@TheToboLow because it's a scam. They use therapists with little or no certification. It sucks for literally everyone from the patient to the unqualified therapist.
On the one hand: this skill can be an *incredibly* dangerous thing to practice. I feel like you should never do it without a spotter.
On the other hand, for some survival situations where you may be trapped in an environment with no fresh air flow its a skill that might help tremendously to buy time until you can be saved. 😮
I like to do apnea but outside of water just laying on a bed, it's already a great exercise, but yeah it's pretty dangerous to do it in water
Tried to see how long I could watch this video with 1 breath. Made it to 6:41. This guy on the side is a champ for sure!
Wow, but 6 minutes is crazy, man
I really enjoy breathing. This really does give me a new appreciation for breathing. When praticed effectively, just deep breathing exercises is better then any anti-anxiety meds available.
Veritasium is probably one of the best youtube channels ever
It's like saying that bio-soup is the best meal in that dispenser ever. Some would say it's the Snickers bar or Mr Beast.
@@fabrb26 that makes no sense
Agreed.
When I was a kid my brother and I would do holding breath competitions all the time. I definitely remember getting past 2 min. Trying the initial test with Derek I got 2:03 and then doing the alphabet thing (thanks Edward Lear) brought me up to 3 min. I am not really the body type mentioned but it was very interesting to hear about packing. I have never heard the term but my mom once described a similar breathing exercise to get to sleep that has kind of stuck with me and I have done a lot since childhood. You breathe in as much as you possibly can, making sure you do it over 10 seconds. Hold for 5 second, and then take in even more in 5 one second breaths. Hold for 5, then breath out for 25 seconds continuously, literally emptying out as much as you possibly can. I guess it was probably doing that all the time that helped me hold my breath longer.
Anecdotally it seems to help me get to sleep when I am tired but just cannot turn my brain off. Who knows if it really helps though; maybe it is just the counting that helps turn off the brain, like counting sheep.
Before I even start I realise how much I trust this guy...
After, I REALLY enjoy breathing!
11:13 That "When have I not breathed for a minute? Maybe never in my whole life" kicked something in me and now, I want to try it too
This is fascinating. Do we know if there are long term impacts doing this on a regular basis, benefits as well as negative health issues? The obvious benefits that stand out would probably be ability to control breathing, endurance. But are there other subtle benefits. And what about the negative health issues like damage to brain cells? What do the health studies suggest? As always, another outstanding topic and video.
I was wondering about damaging brain cells, also. On the other hand, 4 oz of alcohol kills about a million brain cells, so it's probably less of an issue holding your breath than knocking back a few drinks after work.
Given that he isn't passing out, he's not teaching the threshold for brain damage.
@@karlrovey With all due respect, passing out seems to me like short term impact. I was wondering about studies that track people who do this over a long period of time. I can imagine that changes to body chemistry and biology would be subtle and not noticeable in the short term. But over a long period of time, years for example, the effects could accumulate.
I was far more curious about this than the method behind building the skill. We know there are long term affects associated with a lot of endurance pursuits that I would think this would mimic.
There have been studies that indicate breath holding can cause brain damage. Search for: breath holding brain damage, That said in some cases involving actual diving the brain injuries might be due to "decompression sickness" (the dissolved air in the the blood "fizzing" out) or similar.
But for other cases, it's already a fact that a human brain requires quite a lot of oxygen. If the brain didn't need that much oxygen there would be fewer stroke victims in the world... So. don't over do it - go look up the number of minutes human brains can go without oxygen and stick to below the lower number.
I loved this video, it feels very therapeutic to hold the breath. My personal record by just breathing a lot before holding is approximately 5 minutes now I just want to see how much more I can achieve with these advices.
Try and watch an engaging UA-cam video on your next attempt. I honestly feel like distracting your mind without expending calories to engage it by trying to distract it with your own imagination is super beneficial.
in my 20s I used to swim several times a week, after relaxing my body and breathing in a rhythmic way I could hold my breath for 4 minutes, my friends would not believe me until I did it in front of them, I now know that besides swimming under water often, being tall (6'2") also helps, I'm now 50 years old and have smoked for most of my life so my estimate of holding my breath now is probably 1 minute on a good day, thanks for the great video
There is a weird mental state you get into while doing long breath holds underwater that can't really be explained but its very tranquil and I found having my eyes open helped a lot.
I didn't realize he was talking to the same guy doing the breath holding until 16:00 lol🤣🤣🤦♂
Me too, I've realized few seconds earlier
I have sleep apnea so I basically sleep in a hyperbaric chamber every night. I suspect its one of the reasons that despite being a bit on the heavier side 170 lbs at 5'8" I have decent breath holding ability. I also used to swim and play French horn in middle school into high school and practiced breathing technique and breath holding.
I was also a French horn player!
@@veritasium The few but the proud
That's... not how it works. CPAP/APAP isn't anything like a hyperbaric chamber, and neither a hyperbaric chamber nor CPAP/APAP is going to increase your capacity to hold your breath. It's literally just some air at reasonably low pressure for most people (usually not more than about the pressure it takes to blow bubbles through a straw into a tall glass of water) stenting open your airway so it doesn't get blocked (think of one of those wacky inflatable wavy arm things, or a bouncy castle - the constant flow of air blows it out and keeps the tubes expanded, but when the flow of air drops, they collapse in on themselves).
That's assuming that you have OSA, of course, and not central sleep apnea like I have - where my brain literally just forgets to breathe, and I have to be ventilated and on oxygen at night because otherwise I spend 90% of the night with precipitously low oxygen levels and stop breathing over 100 times an hour, for up to 90 seconds at a time. Unfortunately, because the pressure and type of ventilation I need are more complex, the ventilation causes my alveoli to collapse if I come off the ventilator too fast when I wake up, and let me tell you, THAT is not fun at all.
@@JustAnotherBuckyLover I don't use a CPAP. I meant to say my dad has sleep apnea and he tells me my snoring sounds just like his sleep apnea snoring. Like I stop breathing multiple times during the night. I am not medically sure that I have it. But from the accounts of friends and family, I probably will take a sleep study soon.
The hyperbaric chamber was referring to my snoring reducing my air intake.
He meant hypobaric, but it's still not the same.
As a national level swimmer,this video taught me quite a few ways to understand my breaths. while swimming even 1 wasted movement could decide if u are going take extra breaths while swimming or not which would heavily affect the position u are going to be at those wasted movement and extra breaths can take your rank from 1st to 3rd or even below.Every movement has to be precise.Thank you for this video😭💖
i watched the video on 2x speed so brandon had to hold his breath for 9 minutes instead of 18, can't imagine that he would survive twice the length
Now I'm gonna watch it on 0.25x speed 😈
Hard not to be amazed. It probably has some benefits in learning body control and strengthening your willpower because that translates to so many other situations in life. Sort of like learning to tolerate cold showers. Relatively safe ways to practice not panicking when things get uncomfortable, which is a useful skill to have. When taken to these extremes though I would be seriously worried about damage to the brain - even if only minor.
I wish you kept the timer going when you invited us to breathe together! I retimed and hit 1 minutes 58 seconds, but I'm in that tall/skinny camp and also played trumpet in competitive marching band for years which is basically exhaling consistently while running for 15 minutes straight (granted, that was over a decade and a half ago). I have a naturally high resting heart rate - I'd be curious if that comes into play.
I hit a 5 min ad lol
and you didn't think of checking the seconds in the video and subtracting o.o
I also held it for straight 2 minutes easily until it was like, yeah I would need to breathe in soon
189cm 76kg
I am surprised, I don't do any sports for past 15 years. I sit at my PC daily for more than 10h and I don't eat healthy.
And I think I do very shallow breathing (maybe that even helped it)
Blissfulness, clarity, and focus come as a direct result of learning to calm and control the mind and body. Imagine if schools taught this before reading, writing, and arithmetic!
@Veritasium one of my favorites of your videos!
AMAZING that you're still going strong after all these years!
*The human instinct to hold your breath when you see someone submerged*
?
What if it's a still image?
I was a lifeguard for several years as a teenager and breath holding became almost a meditative way to pass the time. They were all small pools so scanning wasnt difficult to keep up with and I needed something to keep myself occupied. For about 3 months a year, 3 ish good long breath holds per 15 minute seat rotation, 3 seat rotations per hour, 8-12 hours per shift. I think my longest got up to 6 or 7 minutes, but pretty much every one of the techniques he mentions were super helpful. Getting up to 2:30 within what looks to be like an hour is really good.
Also crazy to see just how much pure O2 can push it
He has taken my breath away,wow well done 👍🏼
I remember seeing a ted talk(?) years ago about this and the top comment has lived rent-free inside my brain ever since: "man holds breath for 17 minutes, talks about it for 18"
Wow, as a teen I used to enjoy holding my breath underwater as long as possible, I think I could do just a little over 2 mins, this is crazy :D
Same, once other teen had the idea to do a contest of who would hold longer. Little did they know I was good. I was the first to go. After my performance, they all gave up to beat my time. Just like that the contest was over😂
@@AXMIM Nice! Similarly, I once made my PE teacher almost panic when I did it at the school swimming pool :D
Amazing episode Derek! Never thought I would watch someone hold his breath for 17 minutes. I took the test with you at the start and needed to breathe at the same time as you, for 40 seconds. I am not good at holding it, so it was so impressive to see you go from 40 sec to over 2.5 minutes. Incredible how much the body can take, it is usually the mind that gives up first, your brain that tells you to stop, but it is doing it to protect you, right? Or does the brain think you are out of oxygen, or does it really know you can keep going, but are just telling you to breathe?
I had the same 40 seconds!😂
I know that no one asked for it but I started with you and lasted 97 seconds. Seems like a good score in comparing it is over 2 times longer
Interesting video. I experimented with breathholding for a while, because I aimed to solve the most Rubik's cubes underwater with one breath. My relaxed breath hold record was only 4 minutes, and managed to do 7 cubes in 2:30 (video on my channel), which sadly wasn't enough to beat the WR. Now I feel like I should try again. 😅
I wonder, based on this video, if it might be more beneficial to solve in "stupid" ways that require a small set of algos and very little thinking to go on complete autopilot
"I aimed to solve the most Rubik's cubes underwater with one breath" makes you probably the coolest person ever.
Good thought, but not really. The professional method I use needed years to get really good at, but at this point it's just as automatic for me (all the algorithms required are in "muscle memory".).@@CDolph296
What the hell? Mark Rober, Real Engineering and now Veritasium uploading on a single day. Today is a good day.
Crazy just noticed that
Good day indeed
And Steve Mould
Yea and hacksmith
I really enjoyed this one, being a freediver myself. One word of caution though: do never, ever, attempt to practice breatholds in the water alone: Shallow water blackout is no joke. One moment you are totally fine, a second later you're in critical danger and a minute later you're dead. Take a class! Freediving can be super fun and safe.
This! People die really fast!
When he explained the mental state during a breath hold, it instantly reminded me of meditation, it's exactly the same thing
Thanks for this video, Derek. Funny that I'm "diving" in this matter a lot is the past week.
Last wednesday I held my breath for 3m15s in the pool. My record is still 5m02s but that one was on dry land 😁.
If you have some time, please make a video over the mammalian divers, especially sperm whales! Their biology is fascinating as well. There are some birds too.
WHAT I can't even hold my breath for 1 minute!
It’s alright same
5 minutes is great!
Isn't holding the breath on dry land much harder? You should easily do more than 5 minutes under water
@@OEclecticismO For most people yes, they usually get relaxed in water and can perform better. But not for me, holding my breath in water makes me a bit nervous lol
5:57 that clip of the baby going underwater was really cute.
Reminded of nirvana's album cover
13:22 skip ad. you're welcome
my personal record is 3 min 40 sec when i was in highschool..
submerged in water...
cool water really helps.. my normal record while seating was exactly 1 min shorter at 2min 40sec when
Whose worrying every time you see Brandon and can't focus on the video 💀💀
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Yeah I am also the one🤣
I remember seeing David Blaine do this at some point. Then I was discussing this with my partner a week ago, and I wasn't sure what the correct term for "mammalian dive reflex" was. I just remembered that humans can technically survive without inhalation for a bit of time.
8:27 bro discussing hypoxia like it's a kind of high 😂
its really good content to see an ad for Betterhelp with a guy unable to breath underwater right next to it.
What i think as the hardest part along with distracting your mind while holding breath is the point of time where you should finally give up. The urge to breath vs the urge to hold for some more time is somewhat very intresting😅.
Great Video👍🏻
Very interesting video. I went scuba diving a few years ago. I did the first 2 qualifications.
It was noted by my instructor that I was using such little air during dives, he was bewildered and switched me to half a tank for the rest of the dives (less cumbersome). Even then I had spare air. I was breathing 1 breath a minute, counting 30 for in and 30 for out. I breathed less than the dive masters who had been diving for decades.
I put it down to focusing my mind, and pacing/minimising my movements.... I would love to know why I used such little air. Yet, I've never held my breath for over 2 minutes!
I know that when you're at a high pressure, you get a lot more oxygen molecules per breath. Does your body still use the same amount of oxygen no matter the pressure? I've honestly never thought about it, but it would make sense. When you see scuba divers breathe at a normal rate, they're probably wasting a ton of oxygen that's in the tank. The only thing is that CO2 would also build up at the same rate, making you want to breathe more. I know rebreathers are also a thing. I wonder if any scuba systems use rebreathers with CO2 scrubbers to extend dive times?
@iankrasnow5383 Oh that's very true! I think you hit the nail on the coffin with that.
I was diving at around 20-30 metres, therefore I am inhaling 3-4x times the oxygen as on the surface... which means CO2 exchange is gonna take so much more CO2 out from your blood per breath.
You've actually reminded me that I think I may have thought of this at the time (it was years ago).
Your blood and body tissues, and the air in your lungs will have a much higher concentration of oxygen as a result of the depth. I'm sure that excess oxygen floating around in you (ready for exchange with CO2) + the relaxed nature of diving + the fact that you must focus on air preservation and breathing while diving accounts for my experience..
Maybe my dive masters just never realised how much air they were wasting exhaling so much exces oxygen 🤔
I was very comfortable breathing 1 breath a minute, then when we had to swim faster the urge to breath kicked in, I would count 20 seconds instead. But even then, felt like I was wasting/didn't need it.
@@iankrasnow5383 Like he said in the video, as mammals we have bultin under water reflexes to reduce our need for breathing when underwater. It doesn't have to do with pressure, it mostly has to do with temperature, specially face temperature. There isn't any change in the way cells consume oxygen. Like the guy said, the problem is the breathing reflex. Your body pressures you to breath way before it really needs more oxygen. In other words, is all in your head. Well, your brain.
@@TheInternetcordOne thing that you should remember is that while scuba diving you should never hold your breath. That is one of the first things they teach you so surely you know this. So perhaps one of the reasons the dive masters use more air is that they keep on breathing even if they do not need to. I mean it is of course good that you can be under water longer but the results of holding your breath have so dire consequences (ruptured lung) that it is not worth it.
@@trueilarim I did remember that. And that's why I didn't hold my breath. Breath in for 30, out for 30.
4:40 The 'Lungs packing' technique, combined with holding my breath at the end when I feel I can't take in more air, is what I do to get rid of hiccups. It works for me every time within seconds. I believe it's effective because it compresses my diaphragm. I hope this comment will be helpful to someone dealing with hiccups. They can be quite annoying and frustrating when they persist.
The scariest part about this is how he's implying he could just let it overtake him and he'd still be comfortable. That is quite an enlightening thought.
I once took NO2 and had a similar lack of "feeling the needed to breath" after taking it. Glad I had friends around to remind me to breathe, otherwise I have no doubt I would have just held my breath until I passed out.
I've been able to do this quite well since I was young, I was fascinated with holding my breath. I used to get into a mental state where I became calmer than I have ever been and I just kept trying to improve it
Damn this really validates my experience, I thought I was either miscounting or actually harming myself. I can't wait to go swimming again.
I think the most I ever got to was like 5 minutes
Did you ever try heroin or fentanyl?
I know it's illegal but it really works for holding your breath. One time I held my breath for about 10 minutes without even realizing it so imagine if I really tried really hard!
All my entire body felt like when you sit on your leg for too long, you know what I mean? lol
@@Alfred-Neuman pfp checks out
@@Alfred-Neuman Nah sounds like you'd die instantly trying that idea😂
@@rackneh
Do you know if we're allowed to use H during a Guinness world record? I'm not sure if it's really that dangerous but I do know I can beat this record VERY EASILY!
@@Alfred-Neuman just make sure to film it !
I was a swimmer, and a distance swimmer at that so I had a very efficient stroke without a lot of kick. At age 20 I made it 75 yards (3 laps of a 25y pool with flip turns between laps) without breathing, and had only heard tales of people who could do 100 yards, never met anyone. In high school I held my breath 3 minutes because I was bored in art class. But I always saw these 10+ minute holds as just unbelievable. It's great to hear some of the details from someone who is really that good. I suppose while I was used to the physiological aspects (convulsions from urge to breathe), I never got as far as deliberately relaxing mentally, it just happened or it didn't depending on other circumstances.
Definitely a lesson that the mind has a pretty elite control over our body when trained enough.
Wow, I actually held my breath for almost two minutes when he asked us too. I had no idea I could do this.