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  • hace 7 meses
Así fue el récord de apnea estática de Vitomir Maricic, 29.03.

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00:00Hoy, Vítomir Maricic, un elite freediving atleta, va a intentar romper la historia
00:10por intentar romper el registro mundial en el más largo de la red world.
00:16Antes de su intento, va a liberar pure oxígeno.
00:21Este es un método que va a permitir que le empiegue las fronteras beyondas las capacidades humanas.
00:28Este es un viaje hacia el conocimiento. Este es un viaje hacia las fronteras de las humanidades.
00:35Y este es, por lo tanto, un viaje a Vítomir, donde muchas cosas suceden.
00:45As soon as I take the last breath, the game is up.
00:51Zero to five minutes, relaxation and pleasure.
00:55One important thing to mention is that it is common misknowledge
01:01that the urge to breathe, that the discomfort that comes from holding the breath
01:06is due to the fact that the oxygen levels are going down.
01:09But no, this is not the case.
01:11It is the CO2 that is building up that creates this discomfort.
01:15I will have to struggle with extremely high CO2 levels.
01:19And high CO2 is very hard to tolerate.
01:22This is the thing that creates the urge to breathe the contractions
01:25and that makes you breathe every time.
01:28This is why we're out of breath when we do sports or something.
01:31We breathe heavily because we need to get rid of CO2,
01:34not because we're missing oxygen.
01:36So it's even harder than when you're breathing normal air.
01:40But you have more fuel to endure longer.
01:43Five to ten minutes struggling with the urge to breathe.
01:49Mentally you die, you suffocate.
01:52You're not supposed to have such high levels of CO2
01:56and you're not supposed to hold your breath for that long.
01:58So your body goes through drowning.
02:02But physically it doesn't really happen because you still have oxygen
02:06so you can survive.
02:07And then eventually how far you get from actually dying,
02:12it's not possible to say because this is unexplored.
02:15No one has done it.
02:16Even the people previously doing these records,
02:18it's just a handful of people.
02:19We're talking about maybe three or four people in the world.
02:22So I don't think anyone can answer that.
02:27question.
02:28Is it five minutes or 30 minutes more that the human body can endure?
02:3310 to 15 minutes struggling with the contraction phase,
02:38trying to mimic the breathing rhythm.
02:42Why do it?
02:43Well, basically a record like this is something where I can challenge myself
02:49on a different level than in my sport,
02:51but at the same time shedding a light on what I really believe
02:56to be important in this world and what I would like people watching this
03:01to have awareness of.
03:04Spending daily my trainings and hours and hours in the ocean,
03:08remembering how it was when I was a kid in the Mediterranean,
03:11I understand perfectly well what has happened
03:14and what is continuing to happening with overfishing.
03:18And the sea is empty.
03:20Everything is gone.
03:22And this is why I'm constantly supporting and trying to bring awareness
03:26to the contributions of Sea Shepherd,
03:28because I see that they're definitely changing things.
03:31They've changed the whaling in the Pacific.
03:33They've changed the shark finning in the MED.
03:36So they are making changes from a government legislative level
03:40to actually hands-on action in the sea and in the ocean
03:43in the most remote parts of the world.
03:46And this is, I think, something that needs awareness of people.
03:49First, that there is a huge problem.
03:51And second, that there is a way to help.
03:53And there are people that are actually doing the help.
03:56You just need to help and support them.
04:0015 to 20 minutes, starting to get into heavy contractions,
04:04struggling with defocusing and other mental techniques.
04:08Talking about volumes in the lungs.
04:10And so his lungs, as he's holding his breath open,
04:15his lungs will slowly, slowly start to collapse.
04:21If I felt something is not safe, then I'm not really going to do it.
04:25So the fear is only fear of not succeeding
04:29or not being able to beat myself mentally or physically.
04:34So I wouldn't say the fear at this point is of any health risk,
04:38even though, objectively, there is a risk.
04:41But as long as I can manage it, it's fine.
04:44It's a calculated risk I'm willing to take.
04:4820 to 25 minutes, pure suffocation and hoping to survive.
04:58The fight, okay?
05:00There is the fight against time and the fight against pain.
05:05I think he is an expert in managing this.
05:08He will have to stay present and try to observe himself from far away.
05:14He will try to have to imagine that he is looking at himself like from a third-person perspective.
05:21I can only imagine that it is like from a third-person perspective.
05:38¡Gracias!
06:08¡Gracias!
06:10¡Aplausos!
06:12¡Aplausos!
06:22¡Aplausos!
06:24¡Aplausos!
06:26Ya, no me diste nada, pero
06:28tu viste que tu cuerpo no se puede
06:30Estaba tan cerca
06:32de salir
06:34y pensaba
06:36¡Aplausos!
06:38¡Aplausos!
06:40Y ya, no me diste nada,
06:42si no me diste sufrir
06:44El mejor no me diste
06:46porque no me diste en esta noche
06:48pero no me diste en esta noche
06:50y no me diste nada
06:52Aplausos!
06:54Si te digo algo
06:56y te dices
06:58te dices
07:00No me voy a tratar
07:02de tratar con esto
07:04Así que esto fue parte del C-Shepard Fit para el Océan Contest, donde cualquier persona en esta funda puede contribuir por actividades o por donaciones.
07:14Y si quieres apoyar a C-Shepard y C-Shepard, tienes el QR y puedes ganar 1 euro, 2 euros, un par de mil euros.
07:24Lo que tienes dentro es ir directamente a las fleas de C-Shepard, que están protegiendo los océanos de la Océana de la devastación.
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