Impressive. Almost as impressive as when I once swam the whole length of the local public swimming pool underwater and nearly made it to the end, even though my goggles filled up with water. Pretty similar achievement, I think.
This is unreal. I remember my 1st 50ft scuba dive & the panic that set it when I couldn't equalize & had to surface. She was the closest thing I've ever seen to a mermaid!
@Tony it was clearly a joke, but see if you do the math you’re body stops floating around 25-35 feet and 12 meters is 39 feet. So in this case you are wrong my body could definitely go much more than 12 meters I just wouldn’t be alive.
I think they were also waiting to see the piece of paper she pulled off the marker at the bottom. She stored it in her hood so when she pulled it out they knew she had made it all the way!
They do that in apnea. The summersion is not succesful until some seconds pass when the diver reaches the surface. That is because there is still chance of blackout.
This was incredible, the whole time I was thinking, “she has to swim all the way back up right!?” Just wow, I can only imagine the training and dedication
Insane watching how little she moves even when getting off of the noddles to start her dive. You can tell she has done this so many times and cut every single extrenuous muscle twitch out of the equation.
That moment at the end where they waited for her to catch her breath before congratulating is one of the most respectful things I have seen in sport and athletics. Wow
Yeah that’s just a usual thing they do in this sport. Cuz sometimes when they reach the top they can still pass out, like if they surface too quickly and don’t adjust to the pressure change, or if their lungs are at its limit.
I may be wrong, but they waited till she pulled the tag/ticket/marker out of her mouth. She grabbed that at the base of the rope. They waited for evidence of success.
@@proxyzov it doesn't necessarily have to be 3 seconds, as long as it removes any air from your ears which is causing the pressure to cause you pain its enough
@@johnners2981 for my untrained eye diving straight down does look simple but i assume the techniques and preparation they use to handle the immense pressure changes on lungs, eardrums and stuff are probably very advanced and take years of training. my ears start hurting 4-5 meters under water i have no clue how they handle it.
@@johnners2981y’all are trying to booster your ego about being “trained” whatever tf that means. Doesn’t matter if you’re an Olympic gold medalist or a normal dude, this is impressive
never mind descending i was thinking about how long the decompression must be for the camera man. I'm glad to see she was tethered since I don't see how anyone could do a rescue at 93 meters if she blacked out. Those drones are getting good.
@@anthon2915 yes it is :) Simply an exageration on the sensation of instinctively holding my breath simingly indefinitely by watching someone like her perform a sensationnal performance :)
What i find mesmerizing is the fact that there must incredible pain and discomfort from both not taking a breath aswell as the pressure, yet it seems so serene. This is a real dangerous situation even with assisting divers, but there is nothing indicating that when watching the dive. Absolutely awesome!
I believe to dive for long periods of time, one needs to be in a nearly trance-like state to minimise oxygen usage. Hence why she was just lying there on the surface for a while, to bring her vitals and mind to a state of minimal activity.
It is very difficult to equalise your hears at these depth (like when you are on a plane and the hears hurt until air gets in). Pressure itself is not painful, but your lungs are compressed at the size of a grapefruit. To squeeze some air out to blow your hears is an athletic feat in itself.
When I was younger I was a synchronized swimmer and could hold my breath for two minutes while exerting energy under water (upside down). These days, I can barely make it one minute while sitting still, on land 😂 This woman is amazingly talented and strong! Mad respect 🙌
Yes. In high school, I ate a bag of crackers and drank a can of soda for lunch. I would go running or play a tennis match afterwards. Didn't eat till 7 or 8 pm. Youth!
for me this is just so frightening to watch... the breathing reflex (I guess it is) setting in on the way down already... just incredible. This stuff gives me serious chills
Its the build up of carbon dioxide that forces your body into that reflex yes, its just knowing you can get past it and forcing yourself to ignore it is something easy for them but scary for just about everyone else
Considering what it takes to do this, that’s almost exactly what they did. I doubt they had their eyes open or were doing anything noteworthy in terms of mental function. I can achieve that for about ten seconds while sitting on a comfy sofa.
@@zwischendurundmoll3968 that point where everything goes black is when I would pass out and automatically start breathing again, but I never went that far. You can do it too. It's good to know what that feels like if you free dive so it doesn't happen underwater. I used to do a little fish spearing but never could stay down very long.
I've been down to 30 metres and looking up was amongst the scariest thing I have ever experienced, knowing that you absolutely have to have sufficient oxygen left in your lungs but no way of checking! It's also a crazy different feeling with the pressure. Let's just say I never wanted to take it further...
Unreal! I knew a guy who could hit 50m and it was absolutely mind boggling. His neon green fins would disappear in crystal clear water for minutes at a time. I can't even imagine double that. Gives me chills.
They set a target depth before they dive so the line is preset. They also set it on their dive watch too which tracks the depth so they just need to listen for a beep.
@@jamescordara You can train it. My record was in the swimmingpool with no movement on my own. I think it was around 3 minutes. All this after 8 years of training in a diving school.
Crazy how once you get past the buoyancy point, you just sink like a rock Edit: I also have learned how much fun you fat computer scientists must be at parties. “ACKSHUALLYYY”
Is that what’s going on? Hard to tell how quick she was moving with no good reference point other than the occasional discoloration on the rope. But then I saw the meter clock continuing to go up as she did nothing so I thought she had a weight belt she would drop at the bottom. That’s interesting though!
@@nicholaszamelis9471 my understanding is definitely limited, but at some point the water pressure on top of you overpowers the force of the air in you causing you to float, so once you get deep enough, even full of air, you’ll sink.
@@spaarm not the other guy, but think of your lungs as a balloon. The weight of the water pushes against your lungs compressing the air (e.g. the balloon shrinks). It's your giant balloon lungs that make you float. You body is mostly water and bones etc are dense. Eventually the weight of the water has compressed the air so much it's no longer providing enough boyuancy. At that point in time, you will start sinking and stay sinking.
Such a humble lady. Just listened to BBC radio 4's , 'from our own correspondent'. The interviewer was so kind. This lady came across as humble and grateful. Inspirational.
@@ciarancervantes that’s awesome 👏 👏👏 It’s even more awesome that you set goals for yourself and attempt to achieve them! You will do very well in life if you apply that mentality to all aspects of your life 🤩
You can hold your breath longer in water than you can out of it. Try it floating in water with your head above the surface. You can hyperventilate and hold more oxygen in your blood than usual because of the water pressure.
Yup, and that means she doesnt take full breath at the last moment, otherwise she will float. Probably calculated that the oxygen conserved not swimming down is worth the reduced air. Must be only slightly negative buoyant, so it helps on the going upward
Actually I think she took a full breath. At the beginning she is swimming downwards. But when you swim down the air in your lungs compress. At a certain depth, the downward force because of gravity is higher than the upward force of air in her lungs, and thus she will then sink at that height and lower. At least that's my theory
@@Hard750 It’s not the pressure it’s the salinity that far down, the saltiest sea water floats on top of the ocean with a gradient of salinity. Science tells us that the saltier the water the more buoyant you are. Scary to think about that the further you dive the easier it is to sink.
I just googled that the deepest free dive was 214 meters. Even 93 meters was slightly beyond my imagination, but more than two times that just blows my mind
214 meters is the record for the no limit free diving, meaning using a sled to go down and then go up with a balloon filled with air. So her 93 meters "fully human" is definitely mind blowing !
yo , sentado frente al monitor, mirando el video, me quede sin aire a los 10 segundos ¡¡¡¡¡¡, increible , felicitaciones por la profesionalidad ¡¡¡¡¡¡¡
I will always think of the movie The Big Blue anytime I see footage of people free diving. One of the coolest movies of the 80s and one of my favorites of all time.
@@gawaino4980 it wasn’t sarcasm. This was a joke. It’s like having a child say, I can hold my breath for 10 seconds, beat that. The child knows the swimmer can go longer but they think their 10 seconds is better. Therefore, it being funny to certain people.
I swam on the swim team when I was younger and can hold my breath underwater across the pool but only the 25 m not the 50 m, she’s just built different idk
Attempting to take a breath at depth when doing freediving like this could be catastrophic, possibly even fatal. Her lungs are compressed due to having taken air at the surface. Every 33-ish feet (10m) of depth adds one atmosphere worth of pressure. Down at the bottom of that line if she were to attempt to take a breath off a scuba regulator she'd be opening her lungs to air at over *9 times* the pressure it was at the surface. All at once. It'd be like shrinking a balloon (her lungs) in a box (her chest cavity), and then slamming it back to full size with a blast of +9 bar compressed air. I don't know if it'd be fatal, but I imagine it'd be very, very dangerous. That's one of the so very many things that's so damn scary about this sport - even if someone is *right there* wearing a tank full of air, and you're drowning, they can't save you. I truly do not understand how these people are terrified all the time.
Haja fôlego! Concentração máxima, incrível. O auto controle psicológico conta muito nesta hora! Ela ficou 3 minutos e 14 segundos; conseguiu descer 93 metros, é pra poucos!
The training adapts your body to utilize the oxygen as efficiently as possible, and brain damage comes 4+ minutes after all oxygen has been depleted. So really the incredible efficiency these athletes have for 2ish minutes should do little damage to the brain, but they would have to work to dissipate all the lactic acid built up in their muscles from the dive. Their whole bodies would be burning by the end.
for a normal person while drowning (not dead yet), their brain will be so severly damaged after 4 minutes of not breathing under water (and taking in water) that it would be unlikely for them to survive. even if their brain is still alive, it would not function.. the person would be on life support forever. although this isn't always the case as you can watch on bondi rescue ;) - from your local professional lifeguard
@@isaacdavidson7985 Through both natural aptitude and training, yeah, these folks are able to do shit that is totally beyond the ability of the layperson. One of the interesting techniques is the "top up" you see her doing right before she rolls over to dive. Using mechanical action of her mouth and throat she's able to pack more air into her lungs by positively compressing them (albeit only slightly). When operating at the absolute limits of human performance like this every tiny shred of advantage is vital. Truly an astonishing sport and jesus it's terrifying to watch.
Can anyone describe the breathing techniques she was using before going down and when she surfaced? It looks like she’s sipping air and I’m curious how that works
А если резко вдохнуть захочется на дне? Или вдруг слюной поперхнется и закашляется мало ли ? Ну будет глотать а такка к верх ногами то слюна не в то горло пойдет и поперхнеться То она воду вдохнет и умрёт? Почему на всякий случай с ней кто-то с балоном рядом не плывёт? Когда в ванной ныряю и мне охота вдохнуть то я голову сразу вытаскиваю наверх, а она куда вытащит?
И куда она воздух дела из лёгких? Она вдохнула и нырнула , Почему пузыри не выходили подв одой ни разу ? И потом когда вынырнула она наоборот ещё вдох сделала, куда делся весь воздух с лёгких? По идее она должна была тогда вынырнув выдох сделать раз под водой не выходили пузырт и только потом вдох же
@@ИнКрид я не большой спец, но на такую глубину , страхующий с баллоном не ныряет по двум причинам, ему нужно проходить декомпрессию погружаясь как вниз так и вверх , человек с баллоном на эту глубину и обратно будет идти минут 20-30,в принципе есть таблицы, можно посмотреть. Но, не это главное, человек погружающийся на вдохе не нуждается в декомпрессии и поэтому он не может вдохнуть из баллона газовую смесь, которой заполнен баллон, а на таких глубинах водолазы используют смесь. Следующее, по правилам фридайвинга выдох в воде запрещён, это ведёт к потере сознания, потому не видно пузырей)) Третье, когда выходишь на поверхность не делают больших выдохов,поэтому кажется, что она снова вдыхает, есть метода выхода, почитайте может увлечётесь.
Глубина, просто невероятная глубина, которая затягивает все дальше и дальше, вокруг ничего и только тишина, а с каждым метром все темнее и темнее... Глубина...
No, at 15-18 meters you would feel how your lungs squeeze and probably won't find any air to equalize. Nobody in the comment's actually understands what an incredible thing this woman did and how much training it took to be able to do that.
Wow...I've just drawned 10 times trying to hold my breath while she was diving... I wonder if this is piece of cake for the Bajau tribe from Philippines.
Impressive. Almost as impressive as when I once swam the whole length of the local public swimming pool underwater and nearly made it to the end, even though my goggles filled up with water. Pretty similar achievement, I think.
They are not, anyone with a few days of practice can swim 50m or yards underwater...
So guess you’ll need a new greatest achievement
@@carlosmontclair3808 diablo avocado is the best, he is the champion not her....
Nice try troll
@@carlosmontclair3808 ever heard of sarcasm?
Bro you are years ahead of the guy from the video..congrats wish you to beat your record next time
This is unreal. I remember my 1st 50ft scuba dive & the panic that set it when I couldn't equalize & had to surface. She was the closest thing I've ever seen to a mermaid!
Yea I start to struggle with equalizing between 12 and 15 meters some where. To go to 93 is CRAZY.
Shes equalizing on the way down
@@hobbybugs1286 ofc on the way down is the only time you need to and only time you should equalize
great story. You went once, she does this probably every day. It's as easy for her to dive as it is as easy for you to fill your mouth with food.
@@OregonCrow yeah but she can also fill her mouth with food easily
I could easily beat her record and dive much deeper, but without coming back to the surface.
😂
Lol hahahah
@Tony it was clearly a joke, but see if you do the math you’re body stops floating around 25-35 feet and 12 meters is 39 feet. So in this case you are wrong my body could definitely go much more than 12 meters I just wouldn’t be alive.
😂😂..
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
The title didnt mention anything about diving so I thought it was such a lame world record just floating on the noodles.
Right!! 🤣
Same haha
same lol
Yeah lol such a weird choice of thumbnail considering how majestic she looks underwater, couldn't they have used one of those parts
Hahaha literally
I love how they gave her a moment to breathe before celebrating.
I think they were also waiting to see the piece of paper she pulled off the marker at the bottom. She stored it in her hood so when she pulled it out they knew she had made it all the way!
They do that in apnea. The summersion is not succesful until some seconds pass when the diver reaches the surface. That is because there is still chance of blackout.
@@Wakis123 what the use of the paper tho?
@@N1ko0L Proving she made it all the way I guess.
@@N1ko0L there aren't cameras all the time, it's a way to prove that she got it to the end
Think about how many breaths you took while watching this, she took one!
Ow wow.
And she was actively moving.
1:38 my longest holding my breath 🤣
And while lying on the bed
she actually packed her blood with oxygen with like ten or so breaths
This was incredible, the whole time I was thinking, “she has to swim all the way back up right!?” Just wow, I can only imagine the training and dedication
Hello simp how are you
100% training: these divers push themselves far past what people think is possible
Blew my mind. We “humans are the most sophisticated gadget on the planet.” Most haven’t read the owners manual.
@@kevinkemble3718 lol the owner's manual says she's supposed to enter a state of hypoxia preceeding death after that =/
@@TheCreepyArchives 😐
Imagine being 2 minutes under water already when u need to dive another 80 meters upwards to get air
I think theres divers with tanks ready to step in. Idk tho
@@fathanyusrizal Yeah, not hard at all tough guy
@@dropsnooze5274 Absolutely mate
@@fathanyusrizal which is why this is a World record, the others are just to lazy
@@dropsnooze5274 My motto in life is, "If someone else has done it, I can too. I'm just to lazy to do what it takes to get on their level".
Insane watching how little she moves even when getting off of the noddles to start her dive. You can tell she has done this so many times and cut every single extrenuous muscle twitch out of the equation.
That moment at the end where they waited for her to catch her breath before congratulating is one of the most respectful things I have seen in sport and athletics. Wow
It’s just common sense.
Yeah that’s just a usual thing they do in this sport. Cuz sometimes when they reach the top they can still pass out, like if they surface too quickly and don’t adjust to the pressure change, or if their lungs are at its limit.
I may be wrong, but they waited till she pulled the tag/ticket/marker out of her mouth. She grabbed that at the base of the rope. They waited for evidence of success.
@@craigdurie958 can't quite tell but I think she tucked it in her hood
It’s a rule. They don’t certify the dive until the diver gives the okay, shows the tag and recovers sufficiently.
I dont know why but I like it near the end when everyone joins one by one, rising to the surface together.
I bet that support helps more than anything!
Was like some "destiny 2" shit
Plus when they confirmed her record, they splashed water simultaneously. Humans are so beautiful
@@gayfruit4411 Beautiful for swimming and splashing water together lmao
I don't know jack shit, but my guess is its like spotters? In case she faints or something they can come in and save her or something?
Oh, bi-fins, two fins. I kept reading that as Biffins. World record Biffins. What even is that.
She ate 93 blueberry muffins before attempting the dive, and didn't get any cramps
Me too haha wtf is biffins xD
Biffin is the skin between the testicles and anus 🤷♂️
Glad to see I wasn’t alone 😂
@@Allylockpwnage That t’aint it !
I once was diving 4 meters deep in a pool ... My ears almost explode
there is a technique called equalizing. every 3 meters hold ur nose for 3 seconds
She had that thing pinching her nose
So that she could blow Air into her inner ear.
@@MinutePlant nope. it is called equalizing and u hold ur nose for 3 seconds and it goes away
@@proxyzov it doesn't necessarily have to be 3 seconds, as long as it removes any air from your ears which is causing the pressure to cause you pain its enough
Interesting how something that looks so deceivingly simple, is actually incredibly difficult and dangerous.
Congrats!
@@acmhfmggru Indeed, to the untrained eye this looks remarkably simple. To the untrained eye of course.
@@johnners2981 for my untrained eye diving straight down does look simple but i assume the techniques and preparation they use to handle the immense pressure changes on lungs, eardrums and stuff are probably very advanced and take years of training. my ears start hurting 4-5 meters under water i have no clue how they handle it.
@@johnners2981y’all are trying to booster your ego about being “trained” whatever tf that means. Doesn’t matter if you’re an Olympic gold medalist or a normal dude, this is impressive
I love seeing people just start appearing like these ethereal weird finned creatures as she lines up with her team when surfacing
I like that they came seemingly out of nowhere and then mimicked her movements to follow her up
So magical haha
True! Like a mermaid with her court just came and fetching her
lol true
It must have been really encouraging too!
Real props go to the cameraman for diving that deep with a camera on! Amazing
Hahahah went to the comment section to find this!
In case you are wondering is a drone. No scuba diver can descend that fast.
never mind descending i was thinking about how long the decompression must be for the camera man. I'm glad to see she was tethered since I don't see how anyone could do a rescue at 93 meters if she blacked out. Those drones are getting good.
@@FranFerioliyou can definitely descend that fast in scuba. But yes it was a drone/ROV
@@bonerici Indeed the ascent would be impossible for a scuba diver.
breathtaking.
I see what you did there
@@dCephei 🤣
Literally
I'm sure you thought very deeply about that one 🤣
@@code-dredd ohhhhhh, this is perfect. 🤣 i also see what you did here.
I think I just broke the world record of holding my breath in front of a computer...... Unreal...
Top comment
This is a joke right? (No offense)
Just want to make sure because i’m kind of dense sometimes when it comes to these things
@@anthon2915 yes it is :) Simply an exageration on the sensation of instinctively holding my breath simingly indefinitely by watching someone like her perform a sensationnal performance :)
@@anthon2915 wtf 😂
It all feels so quiet and smooth, and yet so terrifying. Incredible stuff.
What i find mesmerizing is the fact that there must incredible pain and discomfort from both not taking a breath aswell as the pressure, yet it seems so serene. This is a real dangerous situation even with assisting divers, but there is nothing indicating that when watching the dive.
Absolutely awesome!
I believe to dive for long periods of time, one needs to be in a nearly trance-like state to minimise oxygen usage. Hence why she was just lying there on the surface for a while, to bring her vitals and mind to a state of minimal activity.
It is very difficult to equalise your hears at these depth (like when you are on a plane and the hears hurt until air gets in). Pressure itself is not painful, but your lungs are compressed at the size of a grapefruit. To squeeze some air out to blow your hears is an athletic feat in itself.
@@FranFerioli its "ears" not "hears" lmao
When I was younger I was a synchronized swimmer and could hold my breath for two minutes while exerting energy under water (upside down). These days, I can barely make it one minute while sitting still, on land 😂 This woman is amazingly talented and strong! Mad respect 🙌
You just need a little bit of train, use your mind and you stomach, not your chest
@@panfn7539 I kind of think she might know that … but this is just a hunch ;)
@@panfn7539 100% abdomen, correct
Yes. In high school, I ate a bag of crackers and drank a can of soda for lunch. I would go running or play a tennis match afterwards. Didn't eat till 7 or 8 pm. Youth!
@@juicyfruit6311 This whole getting older thing is a total scam.
for me this is just so frightening to watch... the breathing reflex (I guess it is) setting in on the way down already... just incredible. This stuff gives me serious chills
Its the build up of carbon dioxide that forces your body into that reflex yes, its just knowing you can get past it and forcing yourself to ignore it is something easy for them but scary for just about everyone else
I could pass out, hold my breath again and pass out again sitting in bed before she did this dive. Respect!
Only you couldn't ;) Reflex prevents you...
@@ChessJourneyman I can hold my breath till everything goes black.
@@comfortablynumb9342 dang bro
Considering what it takes to do this, that’s almost exactly what they did. I doubt they had their eyes open or were doing anything noteworthy in terms of mental function. I can achieve that for about ten seconds while sitting on a comfy sofa.
@@zwischendurundmoll3968 that point where everything goes black is when I would pass out and automatically start breathing again, but I never went that far. You can do it too. It's good to know what that feels like if you free dive so it doesn't happen underwater. I used to do a little fish spearing but never could stay down very long.
I've been down to 30 metres and looking up was amongst the scariest thing I have ever experienced, knowing that you absolutely have to have sufficient oxygen left in your lungs but no way of checking! It's also a crazy different feeling with the pressure. Let's just say I never wanted to take it further...
This is one of those clips where I feel like I'm trying to breath real hard and suffocating just from watching it. What a feat! Congrats!
mind boggling, the energy used to get back up without a breath!😳
Lack of energy*
That looks like fun. Impressive dive. Love the calm descent after she goes beyond being buoyant. Well done. Great video clip too.
Thanks Algorithm, I really needed to see this.
The Water looks soo clean, beautiful to watch, without sound almost, calming 👌
Unreal! I knew a guy who could hit 50m and it was absolutely mind boggling. His neon green fins would disappear in crystal clear water for minutes at a time. I can't even imagine double that. Gives me chills.
I think the hardest part is knowing when to go up again
I think the hardest part would be holding my breath that long but that's just me.
They set a target depth before they dive so the line is preset. They also set it on their dive watch too which tracks the depth so they just need to listen for a beep.
@@Pandabrah_D I think the OP means in a less practical way. Like how far can I take it.
I think the hardest part is not breathing.
@@jamescordara
You can train it. My record was in the swimmingpool with no movement on my own. I think it was around 3 minutes. All this after 8 years of training in a diving school.
Crazy how once you get past the buoyancy point, you just sink like a rock
Edit: I also have learned how much fun you fat computer scientists must be at parties. “ACKSHUALLYYY”
Is that what’s going on? Hard to tell how quick she was moving with no good reference point other than the occasional discoloration on the rope. But then I saw the meter clock continuing to go up as she did nothing so I thought she had a weight belt she would drop at the bottom. That’s interesting though!
@@nicholaszamelis9471 my understanding is definitely limited, but at some point the water pressure on top of you overpowers the force of the air in you causing you to float, so once you get deep enough, even full of air, you’ll sink.
@@spaarm no, thats not how it works
@@Elcanario91 lmao how about you explain it to all of us then point dex😂
@@spaarm not the other guy, but think of your lungs as a balloon. The weight of the water pushes against your lungs compressing the air (e.g. the balloon shrinks). It's your giant balloon lungs that make you float. You body is mostly water and bones etc are dense. Eventually the weight of the water has compressed the air so much it's no longer providing enough boyuancy. At that point in time, you will start sinking and stay sinking.
I could easily do everything she did up to 0:23
You might be surprised, lung packing is quite difficult and very dangerous if you do it without proper training.
@@thageran6871 I thought she was just lying there
if you know how to do packing then you can dive to 50-60 meters ?
Yall it’s a joke saying that they can swim in the surface
How do you peeps not get the joke lmao
Вітаю. Для мене шок. Я такого ще не бачив. Це справжній рекорд який заслуговує визнання в світі. Дякую.
Such a humble lady. Just listened to BBC radio 4's , 'from our own correspondent'. The interviewer was so kind. This lady came across as humble and grateful. Inspirational.
That's the most impressive dive I've ever witnessed. Her technique is flawless and her bravery is beyond most mortals. I tip my hat to you young lady.
Who else tried holding their breath lol I was dying so I skipped some seconds so she could finish faster 😌
Go back on tiktok
It’s a different ballgame when you’re exerting energy (kicking)
@@kimberlyb5512 Ik not me comparing myself in anything to her 😂 but I am really good at holding it in the sea and pool , my friends can’t beat me 😌💪
@@ciarancervantes that’s awesome 👏 👏👏 It’s even more awesome that you set goals for yourself and attempt to achieve them! You will do very well in life if you apply that mentality to all aspects of your life 🤩
You can hold your breath longer in water than you can out of it. Try it floating in water with your head above the surface. You can hyperventilate and hold more oxygen in your blood than usual because of the water pressure.
It’s crazy how she just sinks
Yup, and that means she doesnt take full breath at the last moment, otherwise she will float. Probably calculated that the oxygen conserved not swimming down is worth the reduced air. Must be only slightly negative buoyant, so it helps on the going upward
Actually I think she took a full breath. At the beginning she is swimming downwards. But when you swim down the air in your lungs compress. At a certain depth, the downward force because of gravity is higher than the upward force of air in her lungs, and thus she will then sink at that height and lower. At least that's my theory
@@thijsthebest1012 a partir de los 30 mts el cuerpo humano se hunde por el peso del agua, que ahi es cuando deja de usar sus pies para bajar.
@@fredericksetjadiningrat9517 nope, human body below 25-30 meters just sinks by itself because of high preasure
@@Hard750 It’s not the pressure it’s the salinity that far down, the saltiest sea water floats on top of the ocean with a gradient of salinity. Science tells us that the saltier the water the more buoyant you are. Scary to think about that the further you dive the easier it is to sink.
Охренеть!!!!!
Браво!
Задерживал дыхание пока смотрел ролик, раз пять….
Думаю тренировок за спиной не мало, если не с детства!
Legendary 😮
Legendarily stupid and useless
Imagine the pressure on her body going that deep. How heavy everything feels
thats not how atmospheric pressure works its not getting harder because the pressure equally raises
Finn sipp yeah, it equally raises. But the force on your chest from all sides is unbelievable down there.
Its 9.3 times the pressure compared to the surface pressure
Art Jakson i think it is amazing, that our body can handle such a force
My ears feel like they are going to implode at about 15 feet so I can't even imagine this
The whole thing was amazing to watch! I especially loved the way the rest of the mermaids followed her up to the top
That group waiting just below the surface were mermen buy yes, it was beautiful.
Nataliia : **world record bifins till -93m**
The cameraman dude : AM I JOKE TO YOU???
Lol 😂 you can hear his tank when he breathes. Funny comment tho 🤣👏👏
so polite he only went 92m to let her get a record
@@kimberlyb5512 nah wasn’t funny at all tbh
@@allegorx58 bend over
@@kimberlyb5512 if there was a cameraman following her while breathing air out of a tank he would be a dead camerman now.
You're video just went onto my FAV list.
93m under the water. Amazingly it's brighter than I thought. Congratulations.
I just googled that the deepest free dive was 214 meters. Even 93 meters was slightly beyond my imagination, but more than two times that just blows my mind
214 meters is the record for the no limit free diving, meaning using a sled to go down and then go up with a balloon filled with air. So her 93 meters "fully human" is definitely mind blowing !
@@greenandglams True, it must be like 120 m.
We can't rule out the fact the she might be an actual mermaid.
Завораживающее зрелище! Умничка!
i am also a PADI diver But the time of this ladies in your video is very good i like it very much their stamina is very good
Viva Ukraine and strong Ukrainian diver Natalia! My congratulations, proud you!!!
That was the longest 2minutes I've ever seen
I could do it at the local pool
@@turtsable
but you would hit the bottom after 2 seconds
If I would’ve tried to hold my breath watching I would’ve died right here on the toilet
Breathtaking performance
I see what you did there…
yo , sentado frente al monitor, mirando el video, me quede sin aire a los 10 segundos ¡¡¡¡¡¡, increible , felicitaciones por la profesionalidad ¡¡¡¡¡¡¡
I will always think of the movie The Big Blue anytime I see footage of people free diving. One of the coolest movies of the 80s and one of my favorites of all time.
Omg, I can’t breath seem this video! She was amazing 👏🏾👏🏾 incredible!!!
Beautiful dive. As a swimmer I can hold my breath but even watching these people train in the pool freaks me out. So impressive
I could hold my breath underwater across my pool
But most competitive swimming pools are 50m she almost did twice that amount.
@@gawaino4980 Did you miss the joke there sport?
@@4477superman its not a joke but yh i missed the sarcasm
@@gawaino4980 it wasn’t sarcasm. This was a joke. It’s like having a child say, I can hold my breath for 10 seconds, beat that. The child knows the swimmer can go longer but they think their 10 seconds is better. Therefore, it being funny to certain people.
I swam on the swim team when I was younger and can hold my breath underwater across the pool but only the 25 m not the 50 m, she’s just built different idk
Слава Богу за таких героев! Которые побеждают себя...
I have no idea what’s going on or why RUclips suggested this, but I enjoyed her ever so smooth kicking motion.
*me the whole way down:* oh they'll meet her down there with an air tank
*me when she turns around:* Ö
Attempting to take a breath at depth when doing freediving like this could be catastrophic, possibly even fatal.
Her lungs are compressed due to having taken air at the surface. Every 33-ish feet (10m) of depth adds one atmosphere worth of pressure. Down at the bottom of that line if she were to attempt to take a breath off a scuba regulator she'd be opening her lungs to air at over *9 times* the pressure it was at the surface. All at once.
It'd be like shrinking a balloon (her lungs) in a box (her chest cavity), and then slamming it back to full size with a blast of +9 bar compressed air.
I don't know if it'd be fatal, but I imagine it'd be very, very dangerous.
That's one of the so very many things that's so damn scary about this sport - even if someone is *right there* wearing a tank full of air, and you're drowning, they can't save you.
I truly do not understand how these people are terrified all the time.
Haja fôlego!
Concentração máxima, incrível.
O auto controle psicológico conta muito nesta hora!
Ela ficou 3 minutos e 14 segundos; conseguiu descer 93 metros, é pra poucos!
Sim, com certeza
caramba.. PARADO já seria muito dificil, imagina indo cada vez mais fundo e fazendo vários movimentos? realmente incrível.
I held my breath together with her, I am now sending this comment from the afterlife.
The way she goes down following the rope is just so graceful. Beautiful to watch.
Everybody talking about her but more impressive was the cameraman GREAT JOB MY BOY!!!
It's not just how you hold your breath, but the oxigen you use with your whole body. Incredible control.
I wonder what the long term effects of diving so deep and depriving your brain of oxygen , over time can do to the body .
I would think the body would contain every last bit of oxygen in your brain when you hold your breath specifically to prevent that
The training adapts your body to utilize the oxygen as efficiently as possible, and brain damage comes 4+ minutes after all oxygen has been depleted. So really the incredible efficiency these athletes have for 2ish minutes should do little damage to the brain, but they would have to work to dissipate all the lactic acid built up in their muscles from the dive. Their whole bodies would be burning by the end.
for a normal person while drowning (not dead yet), their brain will be so severly damaged after 4 minutes of not breathing under water (and taking in water) that it would be unlikely for them to survive. even if their brain is still alive, it would not function.. the person would be on life support forever. although this isn't always the case as you can watch on bondi rescue ;) - from your local professional lifeguard
@@jackawwwf2236 they probably also have bigger lung capacities then most humans they are able to take in more oxygen.
@@isaacdavidson7985 Through both natural aptitude and training, yeah, these folks are able to do shit that is totally beyond the ability of the layperson.
One of the interesting techniques is the "top up" you see her doing right before she rolls over to dive. Using mechanical action of her mouth and throat she's able to pack more air into her lungs by positively compressing them (albeit only slightly). When operating at the absolute limits of human performance like this every tiny shred of advantage is vital.
Truly an astonishing sport and jesus it's terrifying to watch.
Impressive. Found myself holding my breath while watching this!!!
That was incredible to watch, it's amazing what people can achieve when they put in the effort, a big well done to that diver
I’m more surprised she can hold her breath for that long with good composure, def takes a lot of breathing techniques and training. Kudos to her!
79k views and only 22 comments??? That was amazing. Talk about super human.
I tried holding my breath when she was still at 10 meters. Next thing I know everybody’s clapping.. what happened in between?
This video was so long I had to skip some of it, can't imagine holding my breath and swimming that long what a professional 😲👏
Incredible! i cant imagine the air stress inside her,going so deep and coming back even with energy usage, its nerves of steel!!!
Frame looking amazing! Look like she walking back up.
I was in the deep end of a public pool and couldn’t even go all the way down because I ran out of air. They are so courageous
Omg, getting back to the surface was excruciating. I thought she'd never get there!
Аплодирую Стоя, высокий уровень,
Хорошая выносливость 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Молодец девчонка, сверхчеловеческие возможности показывает!!!
Life - How much cardio do you want? Nataliia Zharkova - Yes.
Going down is the easy part, it's the going back up which is the scary part.
My head feels like its gonna explode just 8 feet underwater
because u dont use the technique calles equalizing. hold ur nose for 3 seconds every 3 meters
@Jett Watson well not efficient but whatever floats ur boat
Very nice.
Also, looks so surreal when she is moving back up. Epic shots
Super impressive and such an oddly satisfying thing to watch her come back up and when the others joined her it was almost mesmerising
Can anyone describe the breathing techniques she was using before going down and when she surfaced? It looks like she’s sipping air and I’m curious how that works
I believe that was called packing - intentionally pushing more air into the lungs, stretching them out a bit.
@@KnightMirkoYo also that helps to reduce the reaction that send low oxygen signal to the brain, something like that
И обнимашки в конце устроили - милота :-)
Ну да, страхующий на 30- ти метрах только нарисовался , а обниматься это да))
А если резко вдохнуть захочется на дне?
Или вдруг слюной поперхнется и закашляется мало ли ? Ну будет глотать а такка к верх ногами то слюна не в то горло пойдет и поперхнеться
То она воду вдохнет и умрёт?
Почему на всякий случай с ней кто-то с балоном рядом не плывёт?
Когда в ванной ныряю и мне охота вдохнуть то я голову сразу вытаскиваю наверх, а она куда вытащит?
И куда она воздух дела из лёгких? Она вдохнула и нырнула , Почему пузыри не выходили подв одой ни разу ? И потом когда вынырнула она наоборот ещё вдох сделала, куда делся весь воздух с лёгких? По идее она должна была тогда вынырнув выдох сделать раз под водой не выходили пузырт и только потом вдох же
@@ИнКрид я не большой спец, но на такую глубину , страхующий с баллоном не ныряет по двум причинам, ему нужно проходить декомпрессию погружаясь как вниз так и вверх , человек с баллоном на эту глубину и обратно будет идти минут 20-30,в принципе есть таблицы, можно посмотреть. Но, не это главное, человек погружающийся на вдохе не нуждается в декомпрессии и поэтому он не может вдохнуть из баллона газовую смесь, которой заполнен баллон, а на таких глубинах водолазы используют смесь. Следующее, по правилам фридайвинга выдох в воде запрещён, это ведёт к потере сознания, потому не видно пузырей)) Третье, когда выходишь на поверхность не делают больших выдохов,поэтому кажется, что она снова вдыхает, есть метода выхода, почитайте может увлечётесь.
It was not she who broke the record of 93 meters, but the cameraman who recorded it from 1 meter below her when she reached 93.
I think the footage is from a drone: Diveye
They are not free diving
Scuba
@@leeward6762 It's a drone, a scuba diver would need to make stops while going back up to avoid decompression sickness.
@@giannidisumma2948 that makes sense :)
The comments are so unappreciative. This is one of the top human physical achievements I've witnessed. Historic, well done Nataliia!
Yes, this will solve all the world's problems.
had a big smile on my face when I saw her take out that from her suit. Awesome job!
There's a really great part when diving ,,A out of body experience sleeping relaxing shutting your self down,💢
It’s like she’s diving deep into a blue abyss
When she was at 50m to go, I was crapping myself 😂
AMAZING
wow what an achievement.. congrats Nataliia!
Глубина, просто невероятная глубина, которая затягивает все дальше и дальше, вокруг ничего и только тишина, а с каждым метром все темнее и темнее... Глубина...
I could get down there panic would set in when the rope runs out
No, at 15-18 meters you would feel how your lungs squeeze and probably won't find any air to equalize.
Nobody in the comment's actually understands what an incredible thing this woman did and how much training it took to be able to do that.
Unnecessary fact:
That means if she got decapitated she would be awake for much longer, given that her brain is trained to work on so little oxigen
Why was my first thought ‘I’d love to see that’
If you get decapitated you pass out for lack of blood pressure almost instantly
And then I realized I would not be able to hold my breath this long ...
Wow...I've just drawned 10 times trying to hold my breath while she was diving... I wonder if this is piece of cake for the Bajau tribe from Philippines.
Ай да молодець ! А ми все футбол , футбол ... Ось де наше злато )))
This is amazing i deep 4 meters and my head feel like a explosion