I remember watching Le Grand Bleu when it first came out in Paris. Watching this took me back to the experience of watching that film. Beautifully filmed and wonderfully elegant and courageous dive.
Alamda Ali Balqhin u mean the man made virus that we all know is man made yah we still fightin now but we dont even question where it actually came from who made it and whats there purpose after this shit they all want us to get back on ourlives like nothing happened, im talkin about the circus called "NEWS" everything u see is a illusion and u dont know whats happening behind whats really happening thats why its a show a circus get my point now
@@vhysnu I disagree.Excactly the opposite.Is more dificult cause you use your hand's strength.That's why the records are lower than the records with the help of weights and fin
There is a free diving breath holding app on Android that teaches you how to hold your breath using breathing exercises. After 30 days of doing there exercises you can hold your breath for 4+ minutes. Give it a go, it's really neat
When I was a teenager I once held my breath for 4 minutes, lying on my bed. During the last 30 seconds my lungs were violently doing breathing movements (involontarily from my perspective), but I kept my throat closed, no air flow.
The longest I've ever held my breath was four minutes without moving. Then one day whilst swimming underwater I swam the length of a 25 m pool and back which I did easily. Something happened along the way that ONE day my heart rate slowed way down. An unbelievable feeling not struggling with breathing or anything. So upon hitting the wall where I usually come up for air after 50m on the way back I decided not to come up for air. I didn't need it and proceeded to go back one more time. 75m on one breath and a bit of a struggle but I made it. I'll never forget that day. I never could duplicate that day again. I tried the day after and many after that. Never. The magic only happened once for me. The feeling of physically FEELING your heart slow is odd & beautiful while feeling like you could spend "all day under water.
I always used to see how many lengths i could swim in my parents old pool with one breathe. Ive totally experienced that before a couple times and eventually started practicing slowing my heart rate while just floating. I never actually took it seriously, just thought it was a cool concept. It almost felt like i was sleeping underwater and that time didn't exist, at points you think that you've been under for 20 minutes and wonder how you still feel like you can go longer.
Rxonmymind- what a beautiful and amazing story. One day I want to be able to experience something like that in the ocean. I cant even last more than 2 min. How do you last so long and what techniques do you use?
@@rickymagilljr.8129 I know this isn't what you want to hear but ....it just happened. Kind of like when my wife said she's pregnant. JK. To give you an idea what might have led up to that I have been trying to perfect my underwater technique. If memory serves correct I was able to get across a 25-meter pool in six "strokes". Which I did. I'm of average build nothing like Michael Phelps. I'm 5-10 and was at that time in biathlon-ish shape. Just to give you an idea of my physical condition. As for my technique for lack of better term it was a mix of tadpole and swordfish. I had nothing fancy going such as dolphin kicks underwater or anything like that. I really like to glide and relax when I'm underwater. As I push off the wall and at the peak of my momentum comes to a slow my arms & hands will come up towards the center of my chest while at the same time my legs will come up like a frog underwater. To finish the "push", my hands and arms I would make a circle from above my head down to my chest and then push down towards the center of my body towards my groin (like a lollipop) where my arms would stay flat against my body while at the same time my frog legs would kick. All this was in one motion. With that technique my glide would go pretty good. Thanks for asking. I wish you the best of luck and I hope one day you achieve that. Kia Kaha
i had this too but just in my bed as I was 13 😂 I tried to hold my breath long as possible and then from one in the other moment the feeling that need to breathe was totally away (sorry for my English)
They practice breathing and breath holding techniques, such as lung packing. Over packing already full lungs by sipping or gulping little bits of air in right before they descend. Then learning and practicing how to mentally and physically eqaulize that pressure during the entire dive..We supposedly have mammal like instinct to hold our breath longer, like dolphins and seals which can hold their breath,8 ,10, 15 minutes at a time. This is said because we were born into air after coming from water( an aquatic state) while living inside our mothers for 9-10 months.
Incredible!!! WOW!!!! The body being able to handle that is impressive, for sure!..... BUT the MENTAL part of that is INSANE!!!! thats truly amazing!! Congrats
I smoked for 12 years and I could do around 3~ minute breath hold in a seated position after a week of practice. Breathing technique and mental state are key. Sit in a comfortable seated position. Now being a breathing exercise where you spend an extended period of time on the inhale and the exhale... Spend 5 seconds on the inhale, doing it slowly to draw it out for 5 seconds... then hold for few seconds... now exhale over a period of about 5 seconds... wait a few seconds and repeat. Keep doing this, do it for a few minutes, you should pay attention to how you are feeling when you do this and kind of find a rythm that feels natural/comfortable with you... the exact times of the inhale/exhale will really differ from person to person. (The purpose of this stage, is to regulate your bodies rythm, your body is getting used to operating with less oxygen. Think of it like a marathon runner who goes high up into the alps, to train in a low oxygen environment. He or she is acclimating their body to a reduced oxygen environment.) Now once you've done this for a few minutes... around 2-5 minutes... Spend the next 15 or 20 seconds, taking quick rapid breaths... Full inhale then full exhale, it should take about 1-2 seconds, repeat this for about 15 seconds~ and then do a full inhale and hold your breath... You can pack more air into your lungs after your full inhale as well doing air gulps (lung packing), although don't over do this, I usually just do a couple gulps real quick. Practice this a few times a day, for a couple weeks. You'll be able to hold your breath 2 minutes without much effort at all in a seated position. I smoked cigarettes for 10+ years and have Asthma and can do 3-4 min in a seated position without too much effort. Only practice freediving or pushing your limits freediving with a buddy with experience in water rescue or even better practice with an instructor. While practicing breath holds is fine while sitting on your couch alone... going in the ocean alone to free dive is not recommended. Especially among inexperienced divers or divers pushing their limits.
Holding your breath is actually the "easier" part of a dive like this. Equalizing your ears at such depths is much harder. At the bottom she has less than one-tenth the volume of air in her lungs due to the pressure. And while descending head down, she has to force air from her lungs into her mouth and thence into her inner ears, in order to prevent her eardrums from bursting. Most people can learn to do a static (resting) breath-hold of three to four minutes. Very few people can learn to equalize their ears that far down. Which, of course, is why this was a world record. Additionally, the intense pressure on the diaphragm makes you REALLY want to breathe.
Most impressive free dive. What struck me was the people with no tanks that met her on her way up at considerable depth. Job well done.... What a moment...
I was watching her dive from 0 to 97 meters, just noticed her silhouette was damn good in that deep blue sea... Never thought that she's already gone... 😭
Audrey Mestre died while attempting to break Tanya Streeter's 160m freediving record in 2002. Audrey went down to 171m pulled her pin on her lift tank to fill the lift bag, AND NO AIR WAS IN THE TANK,!!! the bag didn't fill and she only had 2 safety divers with her. They couldn't get her back up quick enough because they had to ascend slowly because,,, its all on RUclips her entire horrible death, yes it was all filmed. Its called All the truth about the death of Audrey Mestre.. its quite interesting, alot of ppl fault her husband 🤔🤔🤔🤨🤨🤨
@lazer tag the divers are on a gas mixture from their air tanks called Trimix ,oxygen, nitrogen and helium. She is on a single breath of oxygen and over packed as much as possible,""lung packing"" a practice free divers do. On her decent down her lungs decompress the deeper she goes, due to the pressure of deep water. If she takes air from one of their tanks her lungs will over expand quickly and explode. Im not an expert nor do i dive but this is how i understood it... she also blacked out shortly after the first safety diver was trying to help her.... hope i was able to explain it a little bit...RUclips her story its unreal...
Question: Why is it hard to submerge for the first 10-20m, but from 30m or so, the diver goes into a kind of free fall ? What is going here scientifically speaking?
An Phạm Sounds correct at a glance, but doesn’t water pressure affect your body from all directions? Not too sure about that explanation myself. Anyone else?
Ok here is your answer= An Pham is 100% incorrect. Paul Ashton is 100% correct on pressure. She keeps sinking that fast due to being weighted down. I am not sure where the weights are, but I see something around her wrists that might be pulling her down. Notice she almost never exhales also. Apparently deep divers wan5 to hold that oxygen inside their lungs as long as possible to extract all the oxygen possible...at least I think that’s the theory behind it.
Have done a bit more research on this and apparently the point at which a diver becomes negatively buoyant (starts sinking), is when the air entrained in the suit material (small amount), and the divers lungs is compressed to such an extent that the air loses enough buoyancy, making the diver sink. Gas becomes denser the more it is compressed, gas will be comprised more by the surrounding water pressure, so the deeper a free diver goes, the quicker they will sink. (I think that is how to goes).
You should look up for Pigil Hininga documentary to find a Badjao man who set a record of 200ft (thats 20 floors) and stunned the free diving community in the philippines when he joined a competition. He walks on the sea floor like he is walking on land. The best Badjao divers can stay underwater for up to 5 minutes. Superhuman lungs they say.
i really realllly want to learn diving for me diving and running make me feel that I'm alive (also flying but that is impossible i mean i want to fly like a bird ) this is the freedom for me
Just watching this freaks me out because it is so demanding on the body. Do you what kind of pressures you are exposed to at that depth? A lot! In fact you get the bends and can die I& you swim back up to quickly from that depth. You have to stop at certain depths on the way back up to prevent that depth sickness. I am surprised that she stopped for as little as she did on her return to the surface. People who can do stuff like this are quite literally beyond top shape in regard to their body fitness. Athletes who can no,d their breath AND dive to these depths and return in one breath are literal masters over their bodies circulation system. Amazing.
Max is right. Decompression sickness is caused by excess gas dissolving in your blood at high pressures. As you come up to the surface the pressure lessens and the gases are released. Too much dissolved gas releasing at once can form bubbles in your bloodstream. This is why SCUBA divers make stops on the way up, to allow all the excess gases they have built up over time by breathing in compressed air at high pressures to release slowly over time instead of all at once. Freedivers on the other hand don't have to worry so much because the amount of gas contained in a single breath of air isn't enough to cause any debilitating effects.
That’s from too much nitrogen in the blood trying to escape in he form of little bubbles and that am get your heart! It also has to do with the amount of time you spend at certain depths! Hear deep water divers train their bodies to adapt to these pressures etc....
Its mindblowing for me when you still need to go 50 meters up and you allready held your breath 3 minutes, 50 meters that is swimming to lanes on a normal 25m swimmingpool. lol i do 1 minute over one lane ( 25 meter )
keep going down is one thing but as you plummet into the abyss, you have to remember to save enough air supply for the muscles to pull you back and the time it will take for the decompression stops. one thing I realised though was this. if the diver gets into trouble the cable is retracted and the diver has a lash going to it. so in effect they might be able to be saved. Well done and I bet theres no coronavirus down there too.
Clearly she was there to help the safety divers if they got into trouble.
It's hard to imagine how much mental discipline it would take to succeed in such a free dive.......full respect!
A year ago, my 60-year-old grandpa freedived at 50m. We are still waiting for him to resurface.
How did you know it was 50m, was you holding his hand?
lol
LMAO!!! That caught me off guard and I burst out laughing!! Thanks!! 👍🏼👍🏼😂😂
Your grandpa was 60? You look about 30!
You got me on that one! Rofl!!!
Here iam choking on a glass of water just watching this......
rest in peace sayuri, you will always remain a legend❤❤😔
Rip young lady at least your legacy will live on. What a achievement ..🙏🏽🙇🏽♂️👏🏽👍🏾
She died ?
@@odetobaltimore Yes, she died after falling from her residence somehow, not diving related.
@@PirateCommander sad man . Very interesting woman . Pray her soul has peace
@@odetobaltimore Agreed.
3 more meters down and she would have met Aquaman in Atlantis!
😂😂😂
Stop it lmaooooooooooo😂🤣😂
Hahaha
romit ghosh following Poseidon’s trident 😂
ههههههههههههه
I remember watching Le Grand Bleu when it first came out in Paris.
Watching this took me back to the experience of watching that film.
Beautifully filmed and wonderfully elegant and courageous dive.
Slartibartfast One of my favorite movies with Jean Reno. Was thinking of it the other day as I want to get a poster for my room.
That cameraman waiting at the bottom for all the time deserves a medal
The cameraman is on the surface operates the camera remotely
SYKR HD No way.. cameraman needs to be with his camera all the time.. that’s a known fact
Ok my bad. Maybe the cameramen is not freediving, but dive in with an oxygen tube (or whatever its name)
SYKR HD lol
If hes down there he has oxygen.... otherwise it would be funny. The cameraman freedives down and stays 2 or 3 times as long as the record holder
This was one of my favorite freediving videos on youtube. Good night, Sayuri🙏
I wouldnt be able to get over the fear of having to resurface.
imagine a deep sea creature in the dark
@@wahmodijiwah4201 dream on lol
Re-surfacing hurts my ears.
i only dive with scuba gers but icant wait to freedive after this circus going on
Alamda Ali Balqhin u mean the man made virus that we all know is man made yah we still fightin now but we dont even question where it actually came from who made it and whats there purpose after this shit they all want us to get back on ourlives like nothing happened, im talkin about the circus called "NEWS" everything u see is a illusion and u dont know whats happening behind whats really happening thats why its a show a circus get my point now
To me this was unbelievable, A lot of credits to that person for such an amazing dive.
This the real world record of free diving. No wheights, no fin for help.Just her body, a breath and nothing else.Congratulations!
Pano Tak this is actually easier, since you move by holding the rope
@@vhysnu I disagree.Excactly the opposite.Is more dificult cause you use your hand's strength.That's why the records are lower than the records with the help of weights and fin
It saddens me to know that she passed away. RIP. I hope your legacy will live on.
Lukaslevanen1435 how ?
How?
@@MMAmedia she felt from her apartment
The last thing I would want while recovering breath after a 100m dive is people splashing water on my face...
Ramó 😂😂😂
Right
😂😂😂😂
200m diving in both ways
That’s going to be a war lol 😂
Nearly 4 min underwater while Moving. That is already amazing.
Gaillard Stephane and keep in mine she’s 97 meters which is nearly 10 atmospheres or pressure or 10 times the pressure of the normal air
There is a free diving breath holding app on Android that teaches you how to hold your breath using breathing exercises. After 30 days of doing there exercises you can hold your breath for 4+ minutes. Give it a go, it's really neat
When I was a teenager I once held my breath for 4 minutes, lying on my bed. During the last 30 seconds my lungs were violently doing breathing movements (involontarily from my perspective), but I kept my throat closed, no air flow.
Seems like a really cool supportive community to be a part of! Congrats to Sayuri
I just can't believe this, RIP Sayuri Kinoshita.
what?
@@drunkkitty6614 www.thesun.co.uk/sport/othersports/9535351/japanese-freediver-sayuri-kinoshita-30-dead-after-freak-accident-when-she-fell-from-her-flat-into-car-park/
Damn, that fucking sucks. RIP Sayuri.
Why did i feel difficult in breathing while watching it !
Me too, i think it has that effect on most ppl. 🤔😊
I guess you smoke my friend lol
She didn't even gasp for air when she came up. Amazing
Me to! 💙👌👍😉😍🏊♀️🏊♀️🏊♀️
mirror neurons
The longest I've ever held my breath was four minutes without moving. Then one day whilst swimming underwater I swam the length of a 25 m pool and back which I did easily. Something happened along the way that ONE day my heart rate slowed way down. An unbelievable feeling not struggling with breathing or anything. So upon hitting the wall where I usually come up for air after 50m on the way back I decided not to come up for air. I didn't need it and proceeded to go back one more time. 75m on one breath and a bit of a struggle but I made it. I'll never forget that day. I never could duplicate that day again. I tried the day after and many after that. Never. The magic only happened once for me. The feeling of physically FEELING your heart slow is odd & beautiful while feeling like you could spend "all day under water.
Rxonmymind it happens, search for Badjau tribe and learn how they do ot
I always used to see how many lengths i could swim in my parents old pool with one breathe. Ive totally experienced that before a couple times and eventually started practicing slowing my heart rate while just floating. I never actually took it seriously, just thought it was a cool concept. It almost felt like i was sleeping underwater and that time didn't exist, at points you think that you've been under for 20 minutes and wonder how you still feel like you can go longer.
Rxonmymind- what a beautiful and amazing story. One day I want to be able to experience something like that in the ocean. I cant even last more than 2 min. How do you last so long and what techniques do you use?
@@rickymagilljr.8129
I know this isn't what you want to hear but ....it just happened. Kind of like when my wife said she's pregnant. JK.
To give you an idea what might have led up to that I have been trying to perfect my underwater technique. If memory serves correct I was able to get across a 25-meter pool in six "strokes". Which I did. I'm of average build nothing like Michael Phelps. I'm 5-10 and was at that time in biathlon-ish shape. Just to give you an idea of my physical condition.
As for my technique for lack of better term it was a mix of tadpole and swordfish. I had nothing fancy going such as dolphin kicks underwater or anything like that. I really like to glide and relax when I'm underwater.
As I push off the wall and at the peak of my momentum comes to a slow my arms & hands will come up towards the center of my chest while at the same time my legs will come up like a frog underwater. To finish the "push", my hands and arms I would make a circle from above my head down to my chest and then push down towards the center of my body towards my groin (like a lollipop) where my arms would stay flat against my body while at the same time my frog legs would kick. All this was in one motion. With that technique my glide would go pretty good.
Thanks for asking. I wish you the best of luck and I hope one day you achieve that.
Kia Kaha
i had this too but just in my bed as I was 13 😂 I tried to hold my breath long as possible and then from one in the other moment the feeling that need to breathe was totally away (sorry for my English)
Wow, awesome dive! From a complete noob to a world record holder in only a few years! Sayuri's not just an ama, Superama!
I’ve never really cared to pay much attention to this stuff. But, I found this to amazingly beautiful.
So calm and so relaxed. Definitely finding inner peace with that capability!
Respect! I don’t understand how people can dislike this video. Like what’s there to dislike?? This is an amazing achievement and nothing less.
How is that physically possible....the human body is a amazing
They practice breathing and breath holding techniques, such as lung packing. Over packing already full lungs by sipping or gulping little bits of air in right before they descend. Then learning and practicing how to mentally and physically eqaulize that pressure during the entire dive..We supposedly have mammal like instinct to hold our breath longer, like dolphins and seals which can hold their breath,8 ,10, 15 minutes at a time. This is said because we were born into air after coming from water( an aquatic state) while living inside our mothers for 9-10 months.
@@sonyadempsey5154 interesting thank you.
It isn’t, the human body is fragile and weak. The human mind, on the other hand..
@@sonyadempsey5154 this is an amazing thing. Thanks for sharing
@@annmargaret1591 😊👍you're welcome
RIP Sayuri. I remember watching this video, now I hear of your passing. Life taken away too soon.
Damn! I only just found out about this amazing woman and not a minute later I discover that she tragically died last year. RIP.
Wow! I’m not even really into freediving, but this gave me goosebumps!!! Incredible!!! Just simply insanely incredible!!!
What amazing training and physiological discipline this must require! Congratulations!
Incredible!!! WOW!!!! The body being able to handle that is impressive, for sure!..... BUT the MENTAL part of that is INSANE!!!! thats truly amazing!! Congrats
Damn that was like 4 minutes under i cant even go under the shower for 5 seconds
I smoked for 12 years and I could do around 3~ minute breath hold in a seated position after a week of practice.
Breathing technique and mental state are key.
Sit in a comfortable seated position. Now being a breathing exercise where you spend an extended period of time on the inhale and the exhale...
Spend 5 seconds on the inhale, doing it slowly to draw it out for 5 seconds... then hold for few seconds... now exhale over a period of about 5 seconds... wait a few seconds and repeat. Keep doing this, do it for a few minutes, you should pay attention to how you are feeling when you do this and kind of find a rythm that feels natural/comfortable with you... the exact times of the inhale/exhale will really differ from person to person. (The purpose of this stage, is to regulate your bodies rythm, your body is getting used to operating with less oxygen. Think of it like a marathon runner who goes high up into the alps, to train in a low oxygen environment. He or she is acclimating their body to a reduced oxygen environment.)
Now once you've done this for a few minutes... around 2-5 minutes...
Spend the next 15 or 20 seconds, taking quick rapid breaths... Full inhale then full exhale, it should take about 1-2 seconds, repeat this for about 15 seconds~ and then do a full inhale and hold your breath... You can pack more air into your lungs after your full inhale as well doing air gulps (lung packing), although don't over do this, I usually just do a couple gulps real quick.
Practice this a few times a day, for a couple weeks.
You'll be able to hold your breath 2 minutes without much effort at all in a seated position.
I smoked cigarettes for 10+ years and have Asthma and can do 3-4 min in a seated position without too much effort.
Only practice freediving or pushing your limits freediving with a buddy with experience in water rescue or even better practice with an instructor. While practicing breath holds is fine while sitting on your couch alone... going in the ocean alone to free dive is not recommended. Especially among inexperienced divers or divers pushing their limits.
@@kryptocake thanx much for the info i took a print screen of it I'll practice it before skating for more pushing foward
Holding your breath is actually the "easier" part of a dive like this. Equalizing your ears at such depths is much harder. At the bottom she has less than one-tenth the volume of air in her lungs due to the pressure. And while descending head down, she has to force air from her lungs into her mouth and thence into her inner ears, in order to prevent her eardrums from bursting. Most people can learn to do a static (resting) breath-hold of three to four minutes. Very few people can learn to equalize their ears that far down. Which, of course, is why this was a world record. Additionally, the intense pressure on the diaphragm makes you REALLY want to breathe.
People constantly testing the boundaries of the human body. Incredible.
Not even a rock dives better than her. Impressive!
Most impressive free dive.
What struck me was the people with no tanks that met her on her way up at considerable depth.
Job well done....
What a moment...
rest in peace beautiful sayuri!
RIP Sayuri. We will miss you forever. Thank you for great diving.
R.I.P Sayuri-san
I was watching her dive from 0 to 97 meters, just noticed her silhouette was damn good in that deep blue sea...
Never thought that she's already gone... 😭
I don't understand why I've been waiting to breathe normally.
Rest In Peace! Just saw that she passed away July of 2019 😞
Just saw it too. What a sad way to pass away on...
How?
@@xA18kND1x She fell from her flat
Audrey Mestre died while attempting to break Tanya Streeter's 160m freediving record in 2002. Audrey went down to 171m pulled her pin on her lift tank to fill the lift bag, AND NO AIR WAS IN THE TANK,!!! the bag didn't fill and she only had 2 safety divers with her. They couldn't get her back up quick enough because they had to ascend slowly because,,, its all on RUclips her entire horrible death, yes it was all filmed. Its called All the truth about the death of Audrey Mestre.. its quite interesting, alot of ppl fault her husband 🤔🤔🤔🤨🤨🤨
@lazer tag the divers are on a gas mixture from their air tanks called Trimix ,oxygen, nitrogen and helium. She is on a single breath of oxygen and over packed as much as possible,""lung packing"" a practice free divers do. On her decent down her lungs decompress the deeper she goes, due to the pressure of deep water. If she takes air from one of their tanks her lungs will over expand quickly and explode. Im not an expert nor do i dive but this is how i understood it... she also blacked out shortly after the first safety diver was trying to help her.... hope i was able to explain it a little bit...RUclips her story its unreal...
Congratulations. We have never met but I'm so proud of you.
I was shocked to hear the news that she had just passed away. I hope she will be happy in heaven forever.
www.deeperblue.com/breaking-japanese-freediver-sayuri-kinoshita-passes-away/amp/
RIP, KINOSHITA SAYURI
4:16 coolest moment when other divers casually join @ 40 meters I was like... WTF... okay this is super cool
Quarantine got me every where on youtube
Rip Sayuri. Swim free now
Amazing to watch her ,during free fall 🤩🤩
Question: Why is it hard to submerge for the first 10-20m, but from 30m or so, the diver goes into a kind of free fall ? What is going here scientifically speaking?
It's the pressure of the water that pushed her down
An Phạm Sounds correct at a glance, but doesn’t water pressure affect your body from all directions? Not too sure about that explanation myself. Anyone else?
@@PaulAshton1151 the lungs are compressed so you loose bouyancy. Water pressure goes up 1 atmosphere every 10 m I think.
Ok here is your answer= An Pham is 100% incorrect. Paul Ashton is 100% correct on pressure. She keeps sinking that fast due to being weighted down. I am not sure where the weights are, but I see something around her wrists that might be pulling her down. Notice she almost never exhales also. Apparently deep divers wan5 to hold that oxygen inside their lungs as long as possible to extract all the oxygen possible...at least I think that’s the theory behind it.
Have done a bit more research on this and apparently the point at which a diver becomes negatively buoyant (starts sinking), is when the air entrained in the suit material (small amount), and the divers lungs is compressed to such an extent that the air loses enough buoyancy, making the diver sink. Gas becomes denser the more it is compressed, gas will be comprised more by the surrounding water pressure, so the deeper a free diver goes, the quicker they will sink. (I think that is how to goes).
Wow !!! Absolutely speechless 😶
She did great!
And I was really impressed with the body shape of the man at 4:22. Wow!
Kin Wake ikr? and the way he swins looks so natural,. he looks like he belongs in the water,.
@@tet0889 "Natural" is right. So flawless.
I think I could watch him just frolicking under water for hours.
Now I sound like a pervert 😆
@@DjentleAnt and i thought i am the only one who thinks he is hot
She's amazing! Makes it look so effortless. 😎
Me: I take a deep breath and start to descend into deep like a pro. At 10 feet, "I need a breath" I am back up to see another day.
I hold my breath while watching she still won
😍😍😘😘🇦🇺 too 🇯🇵 congratulations and without fines omg
That's a very strong endurance 🙌💪
Now you can swim for eternity, RIP sayuri kinoshita
RIP SAYURI!
Sometimes I go down to the bottom of the deep end at the public pool, so I know how she feels.
An incredible accomplishment, well-done, Sayuri!
I went 99 meters just watching this
Rest in Peace Sayuri Kinoshita :(
A true beautiful mermaid, such a sad loss. :-(
These videos terrify me. Respect.
I had to breathe ten times while watching her dive.I suck...air.
Whoever thought about diving deep into the ocean like this...they had it all figured it out
Wow! Amazing... congratulations, and well done!
What a strong lady to look up to. Rest in peace.
I give respect to the camera diver who had to followed her, down there.
He/she had a tank. No big deal
No they have a dive eye, it’s a machine, first time that year.
Hello! I’m from Brazil. Just a word: INSANE!!! Congrats!
You should look up for Pigil Hininga documentary to find a Badjao man who set a record of 200ft (thats 20 floors) and stunned the free diving community in the philippines when he joined a competition. He walks on the sea floor like he is walking on land. The best Badjao divers can stay underwater for up to 5 minutes. Superhuman lungs they say.
97m > 200ft
FMFvideos yeahhh.. and walk in 200ft with speargun to spear fish😂😂😂😂😂
FMFvideos the diver is equipped with a suit to protect him, let him dive in without it and see if he dares!
97 Meters = 291 Feet . That’s 29 floors + A Bird house
I read that they have genetically larger spleens, an adaptation for deep diving.
Wow! What an amazing achievement that she worked hard for!
Omg! I can barely tolerate pressure at 10ft! She's amazing!
I'm a free diver in Northern California and thats impressive !! Great Job Sayuri!!! All the best
She's sadly not with us anymore but you probably know it as well by now.
Amazing human physiology!
うわ、凄い。。。海の綺麗さから始まって、要求される高い集中力と精神力。
最初は潜っていくけど、途中から自然落下。
観てるだけで感じる海の冷たさと、想像を絶するGの圧力。
漆黒の闇と静けさ、最大値となった恐怖を振りほどくかの如くUターン。
重力に逆らいながら光の方へと昇っていく彼女の体は美しい。
そして安全確保のためにワラワラと現れるSAFETYの兄ちゃん達のカッコ良さよ・・・
(真面目に観てたのに、最後は邪心が・・・笑)
Its so sad how I live in the Bahamas and never visit Dean's blue hole and people be coming all the way from Japan to visit
wow this came up on my feed and I googled her and she has passed. Rest in Peace
4:23 How gorgeous safety staff~~~~
Rest in Peace Sayuri ,,
The thought of even being in open water gives me anxiety. I need to be able to touch the bottom at all times haha
i really realllly want to learn diving for me diving and running make me feel that I'm alive (also flying but that is impossible i mean i want to fly like a bird ) this is the freedom for me
Diving is better then flying trust me.
Задница супер!
I would've drown after 30 seconds.... Fantastic!
R.I.P.
Just incredible! So humbling 🙌🏻
And I thought long jumpers and hurdlers had nice butts.. well played Japan!
Superhuman that's all I got to say congratulations you deserve everything you want in life
How the hell is this possible?
Training hard?
The can lower their heartrate and pack like 5 times more air into the lungs. Its not normal though very extreme and crazy I think.
Rest in peace brave lady.
観ているだけで息苦しい…
超人だわ…
Watching this in 2020 thinking what a great way for her to be socially isolating.
Samurai badassery
Ama ?
Amazi g !!!👍👍
I can appreciate the discipline & conditioning ....as I too free dive - with fins...usually ...amazing
Just watching this freaks me out because it is so demanding on the body. Do you what kind of pressures you are exposed to at that depth? A lot! In fact you get the bends and can die I& you swim back up to quickly from that depth. You have to stop at certain depths on the way back up to prevent that depth sickness. I am surprised that she stopped for as little as she did on her return to the surface. People who can do stuff like this are quite literally beyond top shape in regard to their body fitness. Athletes who can no,d their breath AND dive to these depths and return in one breath are literal masters over their bodies circulation system. Amazing.
Max is right. Decompression sickness is caused by excess gas dissolving in your blood at high pressures. As you come up to the surface the pressure lessens and the gases are released. Too much dissolved gas releasing at once can form bubbles in your bloodstream. This is why SCUBA divers make stops on the way up, to allow all the excess gases they have built up over time by breathing in compressed air at high pressures to release slowly over time instead of all at once. Freedivers on the other hand don't have to worry so much because the amount of gas contained in a single breath of air isn't enough to cause any debilitating effects.
That’s from too much nitrogen in the blood trying to escape in he form of little bubbles and that am get your heart! It also has to do with the amount of time you spend at certain depths! Hear deep water divers train their bodies to adapt to these pressures etc....
almost correct, but the risk of DCS does exist in Freediving. Of course less likely then with scuba
Its mindblowing for me when you still need to go 50 meters up and you allready held your breath 3 minutes, 50 meters that is swimming to lanes on a normal 25m swimmingpool. lol i do 1 minute over one lane ( 25 meter )
What's the title of the background music? Thanks
Jed Lumanas Read the description , lazy!
Jed Lumanas I couldn't find it in the description. SHAZAM AND SIRi dont know the song either.
No worries. Thanks :)
keep going down is one thing but as you plummet into the abyss, you have to remember to save enough air supply for the muscles to pull you back and the time it will take for the decompression stops. one thing I realised though was this. if the diver gets into trouble the cable is retracted and the diver has a lash going to it. so in effect they might be able to be saved. Well done and I bet theres no coronavirus down there too.
Humans are awesome!
The power of the CALM mind😌