Keep in mind, once you go about 15 meters underwater, you enter what is called the “free fall”. In underwater diving, when you go deep enough, you actually reach a point of negative buoyancy. Usually free divers use this to assist their descent. Once you reach the point of negative buoyancy, the force of gravity will literally pull you down into the water, as though you were falling through air. Free divers don’t have a problem with this, because when it’s time to go back up, there is a rope they use to assist their climb. Here though….
Im ex Coast Guard and have literally ranted endlessly about how water pressure education NEEDS to be a part of swimming ed. Unfortunately, way too many people find out how hard it is to go back to the surface only after its too late. Especially teens, who are old enough to want to push limits, but young enough to not always look at safety guidelines. As things are, this is pretty much common knowledge for divers and rescue folks and very few others. Glad to see people talking about it here and learning! Pass it on!
I guess I'm lucky to have been kinda bad at diving down deep---waterskiing on Lake Mead, I tried many times to dive as deep as I could. Just to feel what it was like--it is the one place there where you can actually cool off--the water chills way down at some point--nowhere near as deep as 15 meters. I was always out of breath and had to surface and the cold water is creepy as anything can be--and dark. But I'm a perfect example of why you are right! We should have been taught that--I had lessons thru Advanced Swimming and Diving. Yet never a word of this. Had no clue.
I was a lake rat, and could swim really far under water, but iIcould only go 25ft down because I couldn't get my ears to pop and I'd get piercing pressure in my head. My brother and friends were diving to bottom of buoys once, and the friend dived down and just didn't come back up. The pressure popped his brain vessels or something some how.
It's really not that bad, especially if you're not freediving since you'd have a BCD, but it it certainly worth noting that you'll go from positive buoyancy to neutral and then negative as the air in your lungs compresses and being prepared for the return trip to be a bit harder at those deeper depths. Your wetsuit can also change your neutral buoyancy depth significantly so it's worth taking note of too.
@@Bidoof_yt you need to check out "in diving what is the bends?" it's fatal if not treated quickly enough, and even still, due to internal organ damage treatment can be meaningless.
I have a very weird fear(or idk how to call it) of objects in water. I'm not sure if I am afraid of deep or unknown creatures, but in the video these walls under water give me creeps, also the hole with the fan below, which the guy is diving towards also evokes anxiety in me.
@@funnybone107I have this phobia its awful I also get panic in VR spaces or when I look up to the sky or even when I played minecraft before 1.13 and fell into the ocean
Im nearly 46 and reading the comments about how you can get caught in deeper water shocks me. I didn't know that it is harder to get back up once you reach a certain distance underwater.
In case you don't know the real danger here is the fact that once you go below a certain depth the water is no longer trying to press you up but down instead. This makes it difficult for you to get back up + the deeper you go the more pressure you will feel. Especially around your chest and lungs. It is amazing to see that you can sit underwater the same way as on dry land or walk the same way except it is all in slow motion and kinda less gravity but it can get dangerous real quick. Should you ever want to try this somewhere then never alone and have at least a rope around your waist so you can help yourself back up or signal someone above you to start pulling.
I don’t understand how they do it, i’ve only been able to go 12 feet without my ears being in unbearable pain! i’ve watched tutorials on equalization or whatever but they literally don’t work. i genuinely want someone to explain it to me lmao. *please*
@@NewwbieeMCsameee 😭 I used to swim so much. One of my friends had a really deep pool and I remember we’d make a game out of who could get the toy at the bottom. I ended up winning but the pain in my ears were unbearable 😭
I literally get anxiety watching this, because of what happened when I used to swim in the open Pacific Ocean off the coast of CA, where I was born and raised. I will never forget the day I realized, that the deeper I went, the harder it was to get back up, and it wasn't necessarily a TIME issue. The water works against you at a certain point. It felt like it was pushing me down instead of allowing me to glide up through the water. Scared DA FUQ outta me and I was all of 13. THAT IS 50 years ago and I STILL feel anxiety when I relive that day!
I started abalone diving here in California in a town called elk. I think it was. I’m surprised I had the nerve to even do it, but I did several times and then I dove and some other areas that I don’t recall. It was dangerous going out on the rocks, but more dangerous coming back in, but luckily, I never got hurt. And I don’t even like abalone that much.
NEVER play with deep water. I remember I once dove so deep, that it took me longer than I first guessed to come back up and I almost, ALMOST ran out of air before I could reach the surface. I was literally only a few feet away short of drowning or passing out.
Same here the same thing almost happened to me one day and now saying you do what you did I'll never do that again because dying is forever I got more stuff I need to do but thanks for reminding me I'm 75
@@saulrosenberg9445 Yes, friend. May you have many more years of life to do the things you wish to do. God bless you and fill you with His wisdom. Amen.
Yea these are professional divers bud. They aren't like you. They will be fine. Glad you finally understand that regular people can't do what trained individuals like me can do.
I was today years old (23) when i found out that the lower you go, the lower your buoyancy becomes. But it makes perfect sense. Reading through these comments, i wanted to state that it’s not due to the water above you “pushing you down”. Because you actually technically have more pressure pushing you up from below your feet than what’s pushing you down. It really comes down to buoyancy, which is dependent on density of the medium and density of the object. Your body is normally less dense than water. But since density is a function of mass and volume, you can become more dense by compressing and reducing your volume, which happens as pressure increases. But water is incompressible. And your body has gases in it which are compressible. Water’s density will be the same as you go down, but your density increases until the point that your body becomes more dense than the water. Now you have negative buoyancy.
Actually you have more pressure on you the deeper you are, because the depth of water over your head (on you, not below you) is what matter. It actually works like a big flat slab of concrete, the entire water. P = h* p * g ; where P = pressure (water pressure) , h = height of water on you (from surface to your body’s center of gravity) , p (Greek Rho) representing density of water and g is gravitational constant 9.81 unit. (Constant). This equation is true for atmospheric pressure as well or any fluid. Changing the density. negative buoyancy is felt due to the high water pressure, your body cannot pass through the water wall. Otherwise when our lung has enough air, we are buoyant enough anyway , close to surface so not much water pressure on us, as well as we are working towards gravity not against it (going down towards earth). When coming up, the game is different. You exert against a water wall (depth wise you are far down with high water on you), you are working against gravity, you have less air in lungs. And plus you are exhausted bodily and panicking in mind.
Just reading the comments about "once you reach a certain depth in water, gravity pulls you down" made me more terrified about deep waters and the ocean even more now lol.
You may be misunderstanding. A liquid exerts pressure in every direction. It has to do with the fact that liquids are incompressible. Your body will feel the same pressure on every square inch of the body. This pressure will increase as you go deeper, but it's not pulling you down unless you have a humbolt squid on your leg at sunset.
Side note. This may help you one day, if you don't got a tank, KEEP BREATHING OUT WHEN GOING UP!!! If you don't the air in your lungs could expand an *BOOM*, lights out. Almost impossible while freediving tho because you can't come up with more air then you went down with
@@BenGilman People are talking about the Negative Bouyancy that occurs after a certain depth, and that is what causes you to get pulled down by the Water rather than being pushed up by it. As xaf0163 describes it "Keep in mind, once you go about 15 meters underwater, you enter what is called the “free fall”. In underwater diving, when you go deep enough, you actually reach a point of negative buoyancy. Usually free divers use this to assist their descent. Once you reach the point of negative buoyancy, the force of gravity will literally pull you down into the water, as though you were falling through air." I believe that is the comment they are referring to as well.
I have vertigo when I am at heights but swimming in have nothing at diving. Swimming is different from falling off to a hard ass ground that you have NO control over
In my childhood and friend and I used to load up my shorts with rocks, and then hold a large rock and jump into the lake near my house. I found out rather wuickly about pressure - all of a sudden it hits at a certain depth, and yes, after one goes a bit deeper it gets a lot harder to move one's limbs through it, not to mention pushing up off the bottom doesnt work the same. Anyone commenting otherwise on here has clearly never been there.
As someone who has been a car mechanic for 76 years, Don't do this. At around 15 meters, the water doesn't pull you back up, but pushed you down instead.
@@deceptOG My guess is maybe they've had repairs or junk cars come in after sinking in some water and heard stories of people ditching the car and drowning/nearly drowning and got an explanation as to why from someone that knew this. But maybe he's just being cheeky lol
For those wondering, there is a ladder that starts below the 15 meter point to enure the diver does not sink due to the negative buoyancy on humans at that depth.
As a scuba diver, maintaining nuetral buoyancy is one of the skills you need to master. I can attest to actually crashing into the ocean floor a couple times trying to find the sweet spot. Luckily, you can adjust the air in your BC to balance out. But we have equipment designed for this function This is something else entirely This is Scary to me and I've been down over 100ft, and also got my advanced cert in cave diving...in the pitch black cenotes in mexico...
Taught my son to swim at 3/4 yrs old. He became a water baby. Loved the water. As a result he became an underwater welder and commercial diver. The training was grueling, but so rewarding. It’s physically demanding, but for him, nothing is better than being in the water. So proud of him. If you like to travel and love the water…go to dive school.
@@82jpas a diver, when you have the equipment, what is scary isn't to fall down, but to quickly go up. While diving you can increase and decrease the air in your suit, making you go up and down, but if you were to add a little too much air, you'd go up, and the further up you are, the faster you go up And if you emerge too fast from a deep dive it can be deadly
I once wanted to dive deep into Bande Amir lake (it’s a deep lake in Afghanistan). Many good swimmers drown there every year. I’m a pretty good swimmer and I laughed every time locals warn me about a creature down there that pulls you down if you get too close to it. I was so close to proving them wrong, but now I’m just grateful I didn’t. Turns out that creature was negative buoyancy! These comments save lives!
I dive and the craziest thing is he doesn't have fins........fins amplify your kicks and allows you to go further. But at those depths I don't know how he is physically able to get back let alone keep diving 😮.........I am going to look into him more because I'm speechless. Free divers use weights to descend without expending energy and they have the best flippers...but this dude is just raw dogging it down and I would love to see the accent.....I'm impressed
The ear pain? I can feel the idiot that tries to do this. Fights the urge to breath, continues to go further down until he realises its time to get back up, by then its too late. The journey back up is far too long and he is now in the dying process.
I didn’t make it very long before I was gulping air. Had to do it several times so I could time coordinate my holding my breath with his dive. I would never hav3 made it back up
Btw it’s pretty dangerous if you’re not trained for free diving (correct me if I’m wrong) but as a scuba diver I’m told not to hold my breath going down because breathing equalised pressure in your lungs but when you free dive that equalisation isn’t there so it causes something known as lung squeeze which can damage your lungs
You’re absolutely right! In SCUBA diving you are told to never hold your breath because air is compressed when you go deeper, while the volume (capacity) of your lungs does not decrease, meaning that you have more air in your lungs (density of the air is higher). If you ascend quickly without breathing out, that air will expand, causing your lung to rupture, with the end result of a collapsed lung/pneumothorax. We are never taught the opposite of that (lung squeeze), divers and doctors alike are sadly not very aware of the condition, but it does occur somewhat regularly. @m.bird, decompression illness is something else entirely, to do with the dissolving of nitrogen in the tissues, and only occurs when you are breathing in air underwater. You are correct in that regard. However, it has no impact on the risk of lung rupture.
i believe it’s safer if you are holding your breath because the volume in your lungs never changes so they aren’t at risk of bursting when you come back up (unlike with scuba)
My ears hurt at 3 meters ,let alone that deep, and that's with ear protection, I'm so glad we left the water so many years ago .God bless you and your family 🙏. Lee
Ive got permanent ear problems for the rest of my life simply from swimming in a pool. It is going to drive me mad eventually. Nobody talks about these dangers enough.
@@m.bird. Speaking from experience (300+ scuba dives, often going to 20-30m depth), equalizing problems are caused mentally in 99% of the cases. I've seen so many people who had huge problems in the beginning of their scuba career but this all went away after sth like 15-20 dives. The trick is to blow your nose actually quite hard (e.g. at least as much like when blowing your nose into a tissue) while simultaneously relaxing the rest of your head. I suspect that many people instinctively cramp up all their head muscles while blowing.
Scary part is, you get to a around 10m and you start being pushed down, trying to swim to the surface again is considerably Harder past around 10m down as you may as well be swiming uphill!
No thanks . Not for me. I almost drown at age 5 by getting caught up in a whirlpool in the Chipola River. My Dad miraculously saved me! Many years later my brother Jimmy was in a terrible accident at his job at a lake and drown. He was only 37. My point… Life is precious. Safety First!!! 🎉🙏🏻👍😊💛
@@Инга-ч7б what he did is dive on empty lungs. If u try to dive deep by holding your breath than after 12ft/4m u will start getting headache from pressure. Also if u dive like he did and dont change your movement u will go down real fast
Other than free diving, if you come up too quickly you can become paralyzed. “But if a diver rises too quickly, the nitrogen forms bubbles in the body. This can cause tissue and nerve damage. In extreme cases, it can cause paralysis or death if the bubbles are in the brain. Nitrogen narcosis.” (MyHealth Alberta) truly terrifying
Listen to this: What is so scary about swimming? We can easily misunderstand the amount of breath we need. You go down and use all your breath and say, “this is as far as I can go.” Well your out of breath then you realize, “oh crap! I still have to swim back up!” Well yea! I went through this and almost died! 😅😅 I went to the bottom of a pool and then realized i still had to swim back up- long story short i almost drowned but my sister saved me!!
Only times I nearly have drowned are when my younger cousins try to climb on me and wrap their arms around my neck to hold on and when fat people in donut floaties fall on top of me Also about breathing I sorta just hold a bit of air in my mouth and when I run out of breath I breathe in that small pocket of air as I rise up tho to be fair I mostly swim in pools that I'm able to go to the deep end, stand on the floor and raise my arm up and my middle finger reaches out of the water
The video was like 15 seconds long? There are free divers who stay underwater for several minutes without a problem. The video is very cool, but him holding his breath is nothing extraordinary.
We had a normal pool when I was growing up, and I could swim when I was 4… but in my nightmares this is EXACTLY what our pool turned into in my dreams. This was 45 years ago so no internet or cable tv. It was all from my nervous imagination!
1) How much chlorine does it take to clean this pool? 2) What are the walls made of? And what does the structure of this facility look like? 3) Wouldn’t people diving in those pool, with no understanding of water pressure, die from the pressure coming up from the bottom of the pool? 4) How deep is those pool?
Looks like a water tank used for filming underwater scenes. The blue sides act like a blue screen, making it easier to add CGI backgrounds and effects.
Swimming to hell is wild af
Pool
Or
Beach 🏖️
Man trying Florida beach
underground 🎉🎉🎉
😂😂
😅😂
🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂😂😂
Keep in mind, once you go about 15 meters underwater, you enter what is called the “free fall”. In underwater diving, when you go deep enough, you actually reach a point of negative buoyancy. Usually free divers use this to assist their descent. Once you reach the point of negative buoyancy, the force of gravity will literally pull you down into the water, as though you were falling through air.
Free divers don’t have a problem with this, because when it’s time to go back up, there is a rope they use to assist their climb. Here though….
No
You're kidding😮
I was 28 yrs old when I learned this wtf
what kind of pool is this??
Thanks for the explanation. I really asked myself how does he do this without a weight belt to keep him down.
Im ex Coast Guard and have literally ranted endlessly about how water pressure education NEEDS to be a part of swimming ed. Unfortunately, way too many people find out how hard it is to go back to the surface only after its too late. Especially teens, who are old enough to want to push limits, but young enough to not always look at safety guidelines.
As things are, this is pretty much common knowledge for divers and rescue folks and very few others. Glad to see people talking about it here and learning! Pass it on!
I guess I'm lucky to have been kinda bad at diving down deep---waterskiing on Lake Mead, I tried many times to dive as deep as I could. Just to feel what it was like--it is the one place there where you can actually cool off--the water chills way down at some point--nowhere near as deep as 15 meters. I was always out of breath and had to surface and the cold water is creepy as anything can be--and dark. But I'm a perfect example of why you are right! We should have been taught that--I had lessons thru Advanced Swimming and Diving. Yet never a word of this. Had no clue.
I was a lake rat, and could swim really far under water, but iIcould only go 25ft down because I couldn't get my ears to pop and I'd get piercing pressure in my head.
My brother and friends were diving to bottom of buoys once, and the friend dived down and just didn't come back up. The pressure popped his brain vessels or something some how.
👍
@@who-nobody-neverhope he ok
He literally said " He didnt come back up" !......@@science1004
New fear unlocked: Negative buoyancy
It's really not that bad, especially if you're not freediving since you'd have a BCD, but it it certainly worth noting that you'll go from positive buoyancy to neutral and then negative as the air in your lungs compresses and being prepared for the return trip to be a bit harder at those deeper depths. Your wetsuit can also change your neutral buoyancy depth significantly so it's worth taking note of too.
this did NOT help my thalassophobia lmao
Not gonna be a danger to me , my ears are screaming just watching this .
😂😂😂😂 This is the comment for me
@@paulburke9198fr how do people do this I got 8 feet down and my ears hurt
"How deep is your pool?"
"Five."
"Five feet? That's nothing."
"Five stories."
I'm guessing meters. 16.4042 ft = 5 meters
Bruv wouldn’t this hurt your ears like hell
@@Bidoof_yt you need to check out "in diving what is the bends?" it's fatal if not treated quickly enough, and even still, due to internal organ damage treatment can be meaningless.
@@Bidoof_ytwater may even seep into his brain.
@@Cam-SB You know this is WAY more than 5m right
this literally triggered a fear in me i didnt even know existed
That would be thalassophobia my dude, wouldn’t suggest googling it if this wigged ya out.
That's deep bruh....
I have a very weird fear(or idk how to call it) of objects in water. I'm not sure if I am afraid of deep or unknown creatures, but in the video these walls under water give me creeps, also the hole with the fan below, which the guy is diving towards also evokes anxiety in me.
@@funnybone107I have this phobia its awful I also get panic in VR spaces or when I look up to the sky or even when I played minecraft before 1.13 and fell into the ocean
same im literally shaking-
Im nearly 46 and reading the comments about how you can get caught in deeper water shocks me. I didn't know that it is harder to get back up once you reach a certain distance underwater.
The deepest parts of the ocean can literally crush you due to the pressure
@@Tayanesetrue but clearly we not thinking about that when talking about a pool my friend. Well deep pools that go 15+ meters
I didn’t know that either
Yeah it makes sense and I'm guessing this is fresh water where you have less bouancy to begin with
I _am_ 46 and I had no idea about this either. I also grew up by the beach 🏖️
Living on the edge❌
Dying on the edge✅
In case you don't know the real danger here is the fact that once you go below a certain depth the water is no longer trying to press you up but down instead. This makes it difficult for you to get back up + the deeper you go the more pressure you will feel. Especially around your chest and lungs. It is amazing to see that you can sit underwater the same way as on dry land or walk the same way except it is all in slow motion and kinda less gravity but it can get dangerous real quick. Should you ever want to try this somewhere then never alone and have at least a rope around your waist so you can help yourself back up or signal someone above you to start pulling.
❤❤❤
Ya I'will for sure try deeper than this pool
I got anxiety just reading this.
@@Regorirogerme too!
If you should ever want to try this, watch "The Deepest Breath" about Free Diving and death, first. Then go sign up for beginner SCUBA.
New fear unlocked: Underwater depth
That's called thalassophobia I think
New?? Not scared of the ocean with all the creepy living being?
I won't even swim in an empty pool lol
New??? I love swimming, but I can't stand being in a water depth where my feet can't easily touch the floor.
God bless let him take the wheel of your life❤
spot the difference
The pool: ♾️
Dudes lungs:♾️
😂😂😂😂💯
I don’t understand how they do it, i’ve only been able to go 12 feet without my ears being in unbearable pain! i’ve watched tutorials on equalization or whatever but they literally don’t work. i genuinely want someone to explain it to me lmao.
*please*
@@NewwbieeMCsameee 😭
I used to swim so much. One of my friends had a really deep pool and I remember we’d make a game out of who could get the toy at the bottom. I ended up winning but the pain in my ears were unbearable 😭
One says the pool, one says the dudes lungs
@@NewwbieeMCI imagine there’s ear plugs for that
Bro ears: 💥💥🔥🔥😭😭
New fear unlocked: reading underwater diving comments
😂
Get outta my head!! You read my mind days ahead😂😂😂😂😂
Y su trabajo es reparar esa turbina que está asta abajo,
El señor: pásame un destornillador 😅
lol
Same 💀
I literally get anxiety watching this, because of what happened when I used to swim in the open Pacific Ocean off the coast of CA, where I was born and raised. I will never forget the day I realized, that the deeper I went, the harder it was to get back up, and it wasn't necessarily a TIME issue. The water works against you at a certain point. It felt like it was pushing me down instead of allowing me to glide up through the water. Scared DA FUQ outta me and I was all of 13. THAT IS 50 years ago and I STILL feel anxiety when I relive that day!
I can relate, I've had some close calls under bodies of water when I was younger and I can't stand to watch this shh***.
I know. It had the same effect on me.
I started abalone diving here in California in a town called elk. I think it was. I’m surprised I had the nerve to even do it, but I did several times and then I dove and some other areas that I don’t recall. It was dangerous going out on the rocks, but more dangerous coming back in, but luckily, I never got hurt. And I don’t even like abalone that much.
That's really creepy and scary comment 😮
Eu também tenho ansiedade por causa de algo que me aconteceu, em um rio, eu tinha 10 anos. Até hoje não superei. Hoje tenho 57 ( 58 dia 25/09)
NEVER play with deep water. I remember I once dove so deep, that it took me longer than I first guessed to come back up and I almost, ALMOST ran out of air before I could reach the surface. I was literally only a few feet away short of drowning or passing out.
Same here the same thing almost happened to me one day and now saying you do what you did I'll never do that again because dying is forever I got more stuff I need to do but thanks for reminding me I'm 75
@@saulrosenberg9445 Yes, friend. May you have many more years of life to do the things you wish to do. God bless you and fill you with His wisdom. Amen.
Pass out=Drowned
My arms turned into noodles just reading this
Yea these are professional divers bud. They aren't like you. They will be fine. Glad you finally understand that regular people can't do what trained individuals like me can do.
I was today years old (23) when i found out that the lower you go, the lower your buoyancy becomes. But it makes perfect sense.
Reading through these comments, i wanted to state that it’s not due to the water above you “pushing you down”. Because you actually technically have more pressure pushing you up from below your feet than what’s pushing you down.
It really comes down to buoyancy, which is dependent on density of the medium and density of the object. Your body is normally less dense than water. But since density is a function of mass and volume, you can become more dense by compressing and reducing your volume, which happens as pressure increases.
But water is incompressible. And your body has gases in it which are compressible. Water’s density will be the same as you go down, but your density increases until the point that your body becomes more dense than the water. Now you have negative buoyancy.
Actually you have more pressure on you the deeper you are, because the depth of water over your head (on you, not below you) is what matter. It actually works like a big flat slab of concrete, the entire water. P = h* p * g ; where P = pressure (water pressure) , h = height of water on you (from surface to your body’s center of gravity) , p (Greek Rho) representing density of water and g is gravitational constant 9.81 unit. (Constant). This equation is true for atmospheric pressure as well or any fluid. Changing the density. negative buoyancy is felt due to the high water pressure, your body cannot pass through the water wall. Otherwise when our lung has enough air, we are buoyant enough anyway , close to surface so not much water pressure on us, as well as we are working towards gravity not against it (going down towards earth). When coming up, the game is different. You exert against a water wall (depth wise you are far down with high water on you), you are working against gravity, you have less air in lungs. And plus you are exhausted bodily and panicking in mind.
Damn this explanation blew my mind. Thinking about it the way we were taught in physics, this seems so crazy
No j oh think the bends are the biggest worry
this makes so much more sense now! thank you!
@@bushramdutiwow! i didn’t know that! thats cool
Had no idea I could develop a fear of heights _underwater._
😅😅😅
You have a valid point sor
Lol
Nah that's a fear of the lows atp
Fear of depth.
Warning. Multiple Leviathan Class Lifeforms detected in your region
NICHE REFERENCE NICHE REFERENCE 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
That's so crazy cause I was just thinking watching this was giving me the subnautica heebie jeebies
@@JAD3__ niche?? bros talking about a million dollar IP
PFFT
Subnautica 2 around the corner boys
As someone who works at KFC for 57 years, Don’t do this. At about 15 meters the water doesn’t pull you back up but pushes you down instead.
🤣🤣
I know kfc always puts those 30m deep pools in the back of the kitchen smh 🤦🏼♂️
Damn bro @Sigmatic_Empathist
@Sigmatic_Empathist like hell I would even get into a pool 😂...thanks for the heads up bro
Kentucky fried chicken
The way i started breathing faster as he was going deeper and screaming ant the screen for him to swim back up😅
ngl it look so fun to go explore with a oxygen tank ofc, because it give backroom vibes
Just reading the comments about "once you reach a certain depth in water, gravity pulls you down" made me more terrified about deep waters and the ocean even more now lol.
You may be misunderstanding. A liquid exerts pressure in every direction. It has to do with the fact that liquids are incompressible. Your body will feel the same pressure on every square inch of the body. This pressure will increase as you go deeper, but it's not pulling you down unless you have a humbolt squid on your leg at sunset.
Side note. This may help you one day, if you don't got a tank, KEEP BREATHING OUT WHEN GOING UP!!! If you don't the air in your lungs could expand an *BOOM*, lights out. Almost impossible while freediving tho because you can't come up with more air then you went down with
@@BenGilman People are talking about the Negative Bouyancy that occurs after a certain depth, and that is what causes you to get pulled down by the Water rather than being pushed up by it.
As xaf0163 describes it "Keep in mind, once you go about 15 meters underwater, you enter what is called the “free fall”. In underwater diving, when you go deep enough, you actually reach a point of negative buoyancy. Usually free divers use this to assist their descent. Once you reach the point of negative buoyancy, the force of gravity will literally pull you down into the water, as though you were falling through air."
I believe that is the comment they are referring to as well.
I get Anxiety from playing Sea of Thieves and diving into the Shipwrecks, specially once my character starts gasping for air XD
you just made me think of a squid pulling you down in the ocean
You are a sick sick man
There’s fear of heights. Then there’s fear of DEPTHS.
then there’s fear of both😔
Well......Evidently I have both, cuz absolutely not.
I have vertigo when I am at heights but swimming in have nothing at diving. Swimming is different from falling off to a hard ass ground that you have NO control over
@@eh477 mmh....the water has its own mysteries. Different waves, tides, depths and different skills in swimming is needed.
My fear of depths is genuinely paralyzing. Absolutely not.
Key point: Don’t go under 15 meters, otherwise you will live with spongebob
Doot do do. Don't. Please GOD I hope he's safe
Lolll underrated comment 🧽
Learnt something new .. never knew that good to know
That's 45 feet.. Who goes there?
@@Godzgirl23i’ve gotta hope that if this pool exists, ppl are using proper precautions to not die doing it..
In my childhood and friend and I used to load up my shorts with rocks, and then hold a large rock and jump into the lake near my house.
I found out rather wuickly about pressure - all of a sudden it hits at a certain depth, and yes, after one goes a bit deeper it gets a lot harder to move one's limbs through it, not to mention pushing up off the bottom doesnt work the same.
Anyone commenting otherwise on here has clearly never been there.
I mean but why tf would you do that anyway?
Rocks? 😶 😂
As someone who has been a car mechanic for 76 years, Don't do this. At around 15 meters, the water doesn't pull you back up, but pushed you down instead.
Where does being a car mechanic come into play😂😂
@@deceptOGthat’s exactly what I said 😂😂😂😂😂 wtf does a car have to do with water buoyancy??
I know I'm the 3rd to ask but what does being a mechanic have to do with this?
@@deceptOG My guess is maybe they've had repairs or junk cars come in after sinking in some water and heard stories of people ditching the car and drowning/nearly drowning and got an explanation as to why from someone that knew this. But maybe he's just being cheeky lol
@@swordandsheild1yea I think they're being cheeky
Man that ain’t no pool……THATS A FLOODED APARTMENT BUILDING!!!!
😂😂😂😂
My thoughts exactly
It is a literal flooded building built for the purpose of being a dive/swim spot.
It's in Dubai
upside down
For those wondering, there is a ladder that starts below the 15 meter point to enure the diver does not sink due to the negative buoyancy on humans at that depth.
Negative boyancy...? 😱
As a scuba diver, maintaining nuetral buoyancy is one of the skills you need to master. I can attest to actually crashing into the ocean floor a couple times trying to find the sweet spot. Luckily, you can adjust the air in your BC to balance out. But we have equipment designed for this function
This is something else entirely
This is Scary to me and I've been down over 100ft, and also got my advanced cert in cave diving...in the pitch black cenotes in mexico...
Healthbars:
👂🏼Ears: 🟥🟥🟥🟥🟩
🫁Lungs: 🟥🟥🟥🟩🟩
🤢Nausea: 🟥🟩🟩🟩🟩
🏀Balls: 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩…
Does more green mean more nausea lol?
@@realzachfluke1 Idk… Yeah, I guess.
I’m not sure if that’s suppose to be a health bar.
Bro has no balls out of 12- sorry, 11 balls?
@@chilledburrito Bro took the joke too seriously 💀💀
"Oh, that's deep."
"Oh wow that's very deep."
"Holy, that's REALLY deep."
"HOW LONG IS THIS GONNA GO FOR?"
_YOOOOO DUDE!!!_
Taught my son to swim at 3/4 yrs old. He became a water baby. Loved the water. As a result he became an underwater welder and commercial diver. The training was grueling, but so rewarding. It’s physically demanding, but for him, nothing is better than being in the water. So proud of him. If you like to travel and love the water…go to dive school.
But does he know ABOUT NEGATIVE BUOYANCY AFTER 15 METERS
@@82jpas a diver, when you have the equipment, what is scary isn't to fall down, but to quickly go up. While diving you can increase and decrease the air in your suit, making you go up and down, but if you were to add a little too much air, you'd go up, and the further up you are, the faster you go up
And if you emerge too fast from a deep dive it can be deadly
@@82jp😂
@@82jp Yes, I’d assume a literal professional diver would know.
@@wtrmeloncat He's being sarcastic and also poking fun at all of the comments expressing this exact same fact
"911 whats your emeegency?"
"There's a pool on my pool"
I once wanted to dive deep into Bande Amir lake (it’s a deep lake in Afghanistan). Many good swimmers drown there every year. I’m a pretty good swimmer and I laughed every time locals warn me about a creature down there that pulls you down if you get too close to it. I was so close to proving them wrong, but now I’m just grateful I didn’t. Turns out that creature was negative buoyancy! These comments save lives!
Your blood tube could get exploded due to the pressure of the water in the deep
I remember people dying in that lake while I was there. It’s where those Gypsies are right?
I believe the locals.
@@kegyenDamn
The fact that he dives down past people in full diving equipment in the background is truly terrifying lmao
I dive and the craziest thing is he doesn't have fins........fins amplify your kicks and allows you to go further. But at those depths I don't know how he is physically able to get back let alone keep diving 😮.........I am going to look into him more because I'm speechless. Free divers use weights to descend without expending energy and they have the best flippers...but this dude is just raw dogging it down and I would love to see the accent.....I'm impressed
It ain't that deep bro, relax.
@@Arzodenu do it then
@@CMs-Corner bro is not that hard 😂 just dangerous if you don’t know what you doing
@@Arzodenthen do it
The maintenance of this pool is incredible
It's not a pool it's a portal
@@thedood73😂 that's a good one bro🤣
It really could be 😊
@@thedood73 definitely a portal
It's actually kinda exhausting to think about
I can barely get to the bottom of a normal swimming pool bc of water pressure! Mass respect for those who do stuff like this!
As a certified Walmart Greeter for 35 years I can assure you that this man dived into a pool.
Underrated comment!! 😂
Read it as died first instead of *dived
@@BigPrincessSam you mean copied comment.
Forget about the dive, how did you become a walmart greeter?👀
Mhm.. I concur!
Wow!😱I want to see the part of how he got back up!
Plot twist: he didn’t 💀
So did his family
There is no part of him coming up , because this is a fake video. Dont be gullible people.
@@anthonypickett7892can you please elaborate?
@@Toxin_E-07 lol
That Egyptian statue underwater alone would terrify me
Was curious about that when I seen it too...
@@msblessed4115My inattentiveness often scare me lol. “What statue” 😰
Dubai does Dubai things.
@@rh906 this is not the Dubai pool. This one from the video is called Paradive and it is located in South Korea.
@@chilledburritoI’ve never felt more understood! Do you have adhd too? 😂
My anxiety level 📈☠️
This is what pools look like in my weird ass dreams
real
Too real
Why is this comment so real
Mine tooooo! What’s that all about??
in my *nightmares, ngl
This is not deepest pool, this is Deadpool 😂
他甚至都沒有吐氣
Am telling you
😂 👏
😂😂😂😂😂
😂😂noiiice
I can feel the ear pain just watching this
He's doing a Frenzel Equalise to mitigate this.
And the headaches after it 😫
The ear pain? I can feel the idiot that tries to do this. Fights the urge to breath, continues to go further down until he realises its time to get back up, by then its too late. The journey back up is far too long and he is now in the dying process.
SAMEE
@@nepq1of1 This is the most helpful comment on the entirety of youtube
Me when my swim coach says that I’m going a little too deep in my dives….
I am struggling to breath on his behalf 😂
me too dear 😮😮😮😮😂
I thought I was the only one who couldn't breathe just watching the video😢
I stop my breath 3 times
exactly . . .
I can hold breath 2 minutes under water but i fear go in deep
this went from a pool to a minecraft dropper real fast
I came here for this comment
New fear unlocked: Depth.
@@m3ll0n_c0llie haha think that's bad think deep space
More like black holes underwater
Comme je vous comprends 😮...😵💫😶🇲🇫
@@mariederoubaix C'est comme si tu te noyais ou que tu tombais dans un trou noir. Quelle horreur. 🫣🇫🇷
Thalassophobia
Btw if yall didnt know there are ladders in that pool for people to climb back up
thanks, I was literally thinking how he going to back up
The new backrooms level is wild😭
Yeah
Mf found the entrance to the next pool rooms 😭
Anybody else holding their breath while watching this?
Me!!!!! I couldn't believe he kept going DEEPER AND DEEPER!! OMG!
Swimming too his death..u can not tempt fates..sad
I didn’t make it very long before I was gulping air. Had to do it several times so I could time coordinate my holding my breath with his dive. I would never hav3 made it back up
SWEAR I WAS FOR NO REASON
I surprisingly had no problem. Getting back up? yeah no
Btw it’s pretty dangerous if you’re not trained for free diving (correct me if I’m wrong) but as a scuba diver I’m told not to hold my breath going down because breathing equalised pressure in your lungs but when you free dive that equalisation isn’t there so it causes something known as lung squeeze which can damage your lungs
True. I'm impressed how his head is not exploding. My body starts to hurt already at 3-4 meters deep
Not true. The squeeze shrinks, but doesn't damage the lungs. It's less dangerous in that regard compared to Scuba, no decompression needed.
You’re absolutely right! In SCUBA diving you are told to never hold your breath because air is compressed when you go deeper, while the volume (capacity) of your lungs does not decrease, meaning that you have more air in your lungs (density of the air is higher). If you ascend quickly without breathing out, that air will expand, causing your lung to rupture, with the end result of a collapsed lung/pneumothorax. We are never taught the opposite of that (lung squeeze), divers and doctors alike are sadly not very aware of the condition, but it does occur somewhat regularly. @m.bird, decompression illness is something else entirely, to do with the dissolving of nitrogen in the tissues, and only occurs when you are breathing in air underwater. You are correct in that regard. However, it has no impact on the risk of lung rupture.
i believe it’s safer if you are holding your breath because the volume in your lungs never changes so they aren’t at risk of bursting when you come back up (unlike with scuba)
holding breath ascending is the big no-no in scuba
That one sign: “NO LIFE GAURD AT DUTY”
"Sorry bro didn't press record button" 💀
😂😂😂
Hahaha 😐
Lmao i would literally go home 😡🤣
As someone who identifies as 70% water, don't do this. At around 15 meters, the water stars whispering "Mistakes were made"
Stars?
By then it’s too late I’m guessing
Fear of negative heights: unlocked 💪🏻
Hahaha 😂😂
Reverse heights
It's called depth bro
It's called dept
You not good English
I'm going straight to the bottom anyway. I dont need any dam assistance deep water!!😂 😂😂😂
My ears hurt at 3 meters ,let alone that deep, and that's with ear protection, I'm so glad we left the water so many years ago .God bless you and your family 🙏. Lee
I pop my ear drums if I swim too deep or dive
Just pressure equalize, 1 of the first things you learn in any diving course
Ive got permanent ear problems for the rest of my life simply from swimming in a pool. It is going to drive me mad eventually. Nobody talks about these dangers enough.
There is a lot of coaching on equalizing pressure. But some people do seem to have better sinuses and upper airways for it than others.
@@m.bird. Speaking from experience (300+ scuba dives, often going to 20-30m depth), equalizing problems are caused mentally in 99% of the cases. I've seen so many people who had huge problems in the beginning of their scuba career but this all went away after sth like 15-20 dives.
The trick is to blow your nose actually quite hard (e.g. at least as much like when blowing your nose into a tissue) while simultaneously relaxing the rest of your head. I suspect that many people instinctively cramp up all their head muscles while blowing.
"its gonna stop now"
"okay now for sure"
"it's definitely stopping there"
"okay what the hell"
Literally me. It doesnt stop wtf
oh hell to the no
899
So, carrots are now called 'Olaf's Nose'? 🤣
😂😂😂
I’m too athsmatic to gaslight myself into thinking I could do this
Swimming is great for asthma. I have asthma and love diving.
This is actually very good for you then.
Interesting. . How so?? @@matheuskg123
“Oh wow that’s deep”
“Damn that’s-“
“DAMN.”
“DAYUM”
That metal fan at the bottom is all the red flags I need
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
😂😂
Yes, indeed it seems a giant Thermomix where he’s gonna be blended… fear!!!
It's decoration
RIGHT!!! Freakin’ scary!!!
Bros ears definitely combusted
Fr
he likely is good at equalizing quickly
You think this guy doesnt equalize lol
I was jus finna comment dis😂😂😂😂
wtf is equalizing
Scary part is, you get to a around 10m and you start being pushed down, trying to swim to the surface again is considerably
Harder past around 10m down as you may as well be swiming uphill!
😬😬😬😬
Good God NO
Scary
❤😂 Most people run out of air going that deep already let alone changing direction to breathe again 😮 scary asl 😅
@@allhandsonsteamdeck1440 yeah, mad respect to deep sea free divers !
Bro has the Assassins Creed black flag lung capacity
deepest pool ❌
clearest water ✅
No thanks . Not for me.
I almost drown at age 5 by getting caught up in a whirlpool in the Chipola River. My Dad miraculously saved me! Many years later my brother Jimmy was in a terrible accident at his job at a lake and drown. He was only 37. My point… Life is precious. Safety First!!! 🎉🙏🏻👍😊💛
Feeling bad for you, it must have been so hard to overcome for your brother and I suppose his wife and children... Good luck to you
My sympathies
those emojis after that is wild LOL
Sorry for your loss 😮
I’m so sorry for your and your family’s loss.
Man that's too deep for a damn fish😳i almost drowned just watching this 🙆🏾♂️
😂😂😂😂 True That 👍🏾
Lol
Taking Granny Words………. I almost drowned watching this tooooo funny. Toooo deep even for a fish 🐠 🤭.
😂😂😂😅
🤣🤣🤣 Exactly. I tried to hold my breath and about passed out with fresh air all around me. 🇺🇸⚔️🇬🇪
I feel like I couldn’t breathe watching this 😂
I don’t think anybody realizes just how much pressure that is!
Кто нырял, тот осознаёт!
Может внизу баллон с воздухом? Как он будет подниматься? Кесонная болезнь ему не грозит? !
@@Инга-ч7б He's not breathing compressed air so there is nothing to saturate his joints. He's safe IF he can hold his breath for that long.
@@johngaither9263да, Вы правы! Как он быстро погрузился, заметили? Как торпеда !!!
@@Инга-ч7б what he did is dive on empty lungs. If u try to dive deep by holding your breath than after 12ft/4m u will start getting headache from pressure.
Also if u dive like he did and dont change your movement u will go down real fast
ONLY THOSE WHO KNOWS TO SWIM AND DIVE KNOWS IT OTHERWISE FOR OTHERS ITS JUST A JOKE
Other than free diving, if you come up too quickly you can become paralyzed. “But if a diver rises too quickly, the nitrogen forms bubbles in the body. This can cause tissue and nerve damage. In extreme cases, it can cause paralysis or death if the bubbles are in the brain. Nitrogen narcosis.” (MyHealth Alberta) truly terrifying
Completely different. That's SCUBA.
The bends
Bru I literally just learned this on the new season of the Netflix show outer banks 😂
that only happens in scuba. literally only
Bends
I just drowned looking at this video 😂😂
Seriously. I'm still in shock, trainwrecking reading way too many comments.
Half expecting his head to explode from the pressure 💀
Had a panic attack thinking about having to swim up
Same
What do you mean up? There is no up.
Just accept that you're not going to make it up 😅
@@PK.NOiR.7😆😆😆
Listen to this:
What is so scary about swimming?
We can easily misunderstand the amount of breath we need. You go down and use all your breath and say, “this is as far as I can go.” Well your out of breath then you realize, “oh crap! I still have to swim back up!” Well yea! I went through this and almost died! 😅😅
I went to the bottom of a pool and then realized i still had to swim back up- long story short i almost drowned but my sister saved me!!
Only times I nearly have drowned are when my younger cousins try to climb on me and wrap their arms around my neck to hold on and when fat people in donut floaties fall on top of me
Also about breathing I sorta just hold a bit of air in my mouth and when I run out of breath I breathe in that small pocket of air as I rise up tho to be fair I mostly swim in pools that I'm able to go to the deep end, stand on the floor and raise my arm up and my middle finger reaches out of the water
I‘ve had nightmares like that
This man's lungs are amazingly healthy. Superpower!!
Думаю, 😮 это для тренировок ныряльщиков на большие глубины..
And I’m here coughing my lungs out after taking a drag of my spliff. Lol
Forget the lungs he went like 30 feet he should be feeling some serious pressure on his body
I'd love to try that 😮😊
The video was like 15 seconds long? There are free divers who stay underwater for several minutes without a problem. The video is very cool, but him holding his breath is nothing extraordinary.
Bro got ruptured eardrums about 10 times 💀
Looks like an unfinished map
Water Tomb Raider
Looks like some backrooms type of shi
for those who dont know, the name of this pool is the deep dive dubai
its the deepest pool which is over 60 meter deep.
WTF 🤨 ( OMG ) THATS SCARY JUST LOOKING AT IT 😢
Did they flood an office building or something to build it? It looked like there were hallways and he was descending into an old A/C shaft.
@@ScottLafray-dd2fp Kinda of looks purpose built for training. Those appear to be little training "offices" on the sides. Just my guess
But why tho….so dangerous and scary. I don’t see the fun in this at all… maybe I’m boring 😂
It trains military and rescue swimmers! As well as free divers!
У меня даже дыхание остановилось, глядя на этого парня😮😮😮!
Адрес пиши, куда скорую вызывать😉
Когда вы глядели?.. Дыхание не может смотреть.. 😅😅❤❤
сколько же там интересно метров???
@user-th2ft8nl9p Что это такое?
Интересно как он так быстро опускается, практически не двигаясь для этого, вроде только в плавках, без утяжелителей
I’ve hard literal nightmares about stuff like this😂.
same
asthma: “not today.”
This gives me anxiety..does anyone else feel it .👀
I feel I'm suffocating just by watching 🤣
Yes! Makes my stomach hurt!
We had a normal pool when I was growing up, and I could swim when I was 4… but in my nightmares this is EXACTLY what our pool turned into in my dreams. This was 45 years ago so no internet or cable tv. It was all from my nervous imagination!
Yasss!😭
For sure. I would oanic
That pressure is dangerous
its 15m. anything below that is dangerous
"how deep is your pool"
"only 4"
"only 4 feet"
"4 miles"
How many lungs does he have?😂😂😂
Yes
Bro has gils
Были лёгкие, он так бы не нырнул.У него тяжёлые жабры!
Yes
😂😂😂
There's ladders all around the pool when the guy needs to come back up, for context
still tho his lungs have infinite capacity
I don't think anyone uses those
Yeah you do, if it's too hard to go back up swimming @@Goatlikeitornot
@@Goatlikeitornotwhen your below 15 meter then it would be very tiring to go back up without support like a ladder or rope
That’s for the life guards to retrieve the dead bodies …
Buds playing Mario 64 irl
exactly where my head went as well haha
He even have the moustache
That beat was so fire 🔥
1) How much chlorine does it take to clean this pool?
2) What are the walls made of? And what does the structure of this facility look like?
3) Wouldn’t people diving in those pool, with no understanding of water pressure, die from the pressure coming up from the bottom of the pool?
4) How deep is those pool?
I’m going by the markings on the wall, I think like 20 ft?
Looks like a water tank used for filming underwater scenes. The blue sides act like a blue screen, making it easier to add CGI backgrounds and effects.
@@anxietysponge9019those are meters or yards. He's gone at least 20ft just from his dive alone.
@@Goblinkatie It's a real place, though. I know someone who's actual gone to these. They also have underwater chess.
you would have to be a lot deeper for a lot longer to die from just ascending
Bro's eardrums are 100% cooked
Even the cameraman doesn't dares to go with the dude 😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂
that's cause the cameraman never dies 😊
@@eatcat.2….. then the camera man would go with?
Underrated comment! LOL
@@ev8242 he doesn't because he knows this is the rare case where filming doesn't protect you 😬
not really scared of the depth just not risking my eardrums to explode😂
Pool inside the house ❌
House inside the pool ✅
I noticed that 😅
Best comment honestly
😂😂😂😂
When your house gets flooded but you need your phone charger
My anxiety is directly proportional to how deep he goes
Nicely said!
That's what she said 😂😂😂😂
@@dawnquan318 I hope you're laughing WITH and not AT the person to whom you directed your comment
Daughter: Dad? I dropped my ring you gave me in the pool.👧🏽
Goes exponential
Bro got the infinity oxygen cheat code
Panick attack once u realize how far back up the surface is😂😂😂
Just had a panic attack reading this comment 🤔😱😅
Depends on how long he can hold his breath how long to the bottom then back to the top 🤔 hope he figured right 😂
@@KevFactor1966smh captain obvious over here
This man is dead he just don't know it yet
There’s multiple bottoms for that reason. Kids stay on the left
Bro found atlantis
Bro made the dumbest comment 🙄
@@ty53148bro had the dumbest reply
@@__LSP If you say so, cringe kids.
@@ty53148 bro take everything too serious! don't be like this it's not healthy for you
😂😂😂
New anxiety level unlocked.
You're welcome.
Unlocked*
No worry guys there was a minecraft door on the red cirkel
😂
I CAN FEEL THE PRESSURE IN MY FACE JUST WATCHING 😭😭