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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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00:04I did it! I did it! I reached the top! Mount Ibris is the highest peak in the world!
00:12I'm special! I did it all by myself!
00:17What is she doing here?
00:19What can I say? Every now and then, a new girl will pop up and do the same thing you do and give me a headache.
00:23What's this? Are there many people who arrived here before me?
00:26Why did about 7000 people arrive here?
00:28You're not special! Do you see all this skeleton?
00:31They all arrived normally! They celebrated, rejoiced, and gave me a headache!
00:35No, of course it's special! You can't imagine the effort I put in to get here!
00:39And you've arrived! And then every person thinks they'll be happy when they reach the top!
00:44He thinks that this is what will give him enough domain!
00:48What makes him feel like he's accomplished something! Something amazing! No one has ever done it before!
00:53But the only truth is that this mountain is on the Mahani!
00:56It's the same way you'll rise! It's the same way you'll fall! You're not special!
01:02What you're doing! Has anyone ever done it before?
01:05Enough! You accepted disappointment! Even if it's something many people have done before!
01:10It's still a difficult achievement! And I'm right, I'll celebrate! If I achieve it!
01:13Everything is difficult the first time! It's your life, and you're doing it for the first time!
01:17The truth is, there's no difference between you and anyone else trying to be happy!
01:21You think you're happy now because we're worried!
01:24When you get here, you'll be happy! And here you are!
01:27He starts telling you about something else, and then something else, and then something else!
01:31I tell her it happens, but the summit changes something!
01:33And you keep getting stiff!
01:35That guy is provocative, by the way! But you're the one who's provocative!
01:38It's not surprising that you've arrived here!
01:39My son, my dear, this is the third time it has come out today!
01:41Let me tell you something! I'm not going to let your negative energy diminish my achievement!
01:44The most important thing is that you don't let your positive energy make the situation bigger!
01:48I'll make you some tea!
01:49What should I make you? Tea? Tea!
01:51You donkey!
01:53Reaching the top is easy!
01:57The arrival and the magic are fantastic! It's the companionship!
02:00Do you remember this skeleton?
02:02If he were to live from the dead!
02:03He wants to reach the top again!
02:05He's got ambition or something!
02:06And what do I want?
02:07He'll be dead! Not even a cup of tea!
02:12Ma'alatin Sukra, don't talk to me!
02:14I am!
02:26music
02:29Dear viewers, may God bless you, I know you are in a new episode of the Al-Daheeh program.
02:32On May 10, 1996, specifically at midnight
02:36My dear, a team of 13 people
02:39What will Abu Ahmed do? He will embark on one of the most dangerous journeys on our planet.
02:43These people will climb the highest peak in the world.
02:46Mount Everest
02:47That's right, my dear, climb Everest.
02:49I don't need to tell you that it's not an easy adventure.
02:51Normally, people don't complete it.
02:53Three people on our trip, for example, to come halfway through the trip
02:55Of course, Abu Ahmed, he might be describing their determination more than the difficulty of the journey.
02:59Because they discovered that the oxygen they had in the tanks was insufficient.
03:02Oxygen, Abu Ahmed
03:03You're confused, Abu Ahmad
03:04The others are kissed by divers
03:06Oh, I'm waiting
03:07On the summit of Everest
03:08Atmospheric pressure reaches one-third of the atmospheric pressure at sea level.
03:12This means you only have a third of the oxygen you're used to.
03:15What is this pressure that causes the oxygen to be released and bound?
03:19If these people had continued without oxygen tanks
03:21Her life will be in danger.
03:23The rest of the team that completed it are all professionals.
03:25We are ready for all circumstances.
03:26For example, we have a Japanese climber in the thirteenth country
03:29I climbed the six highest mountain peaks before Everest
03:31And now it's the turn of the highest peak.
03:33And there's another one like Doug Hanson
03:35This is considered his second trip
03:37After the trip the previous year that he couldn't complete to the end
03:39All these countries, my dear, are led by one man named Rob Holly.
03:42Connected to the mountains, a professional New Zealander
03:44This man, my dear, didn't just succeed in reaching the summit of Everest.
03:47Three times before
03:48I'm not going to pray to the Prophet like that, risking eating something.
03:50Because he is one of the founders of a company called
03:53I've got him working
03:54In the name of God, what a wonderful thing, Abu Ahmed! It seems these are the dream team.
03:56You're telling me you've singled them out from me because of you? He's the one who got them.
03:58Welcome, my dear, to the team!
04:00Reached the summit successfully
04:01Oh Abu Ahmed, we really say that they have arrived
04:03Surely you've finished your episode now.
04:05Because this is the difficult stage, and thank God we have reached the top.
04:08Hey, my dear, that's the trick, through the problem's position in the ascent.
04:11The problem is always with the descent.
04:13They are two eight climbers.
04:24And because they can't see, the chances of them slipping, falling, or something else happening to them are higher.
04:28This means that their remaining in their place could be tantamount to death.
04:31Their blind actions could lead to death
04:33On the day after, my dear, who will the camp lose contact with?
04:37Bramhall, the company's founder
04:39The leader who climbed Mount Everest three times
04:41This is the fourth time
04:42My expectations, my dear, are becoming increasingly unrealistic.
04:44Little by little, my dear, we discover that after three expeditions, Rom conquered Everest and died.
04:49His body froze near the southern peak of the mountain.
04:52You might think, my dear, that this is a tragic and surprising twist.
04:55For a professional team, everything was fixed
04:57But unfortunately, nature defeated him.
04:59But my dear, you know, this whole mountain thing is a bit widespread.
05:03This incident is not unique at all.
05:05Deaths on Everest
05:07According to some sources, this amounts to 300 deaths annually.
05:11I wish I could die, but sometimes many people who climb come back with it.
05:15They lose parts of their bodies
05:17You might only see someone's nose
05:18Everest hopes he might return blind
05:20Oh man, Abu Hamid, you made me laugh
05:21So after all this preparation, I might lose my nose.
05:24And it's possible that the mother will run towards the property after she has tired herself out and climbed.
05:27I'm so proud of the achievement I made.
05:28What I'm telling you, my dear, is that everything on Everest is unfortunately a terrifying challenge.
05:32Because at every moment nature changes in its form, conditions, contents, and many other aspects.
05:37Even the summit itself is far away, Janah says, "Do you see it? That's what you're climbing, right? Do you see?"
05:41Okay, go out, I went out and there's fresh snow on it.
05:44My dear, the summit challenges those who climb it.
05:47If you're a man, go out and see Madam Everest, please go out.
05:49Scientifically, the Himalayas, to which Mount Everest belongs
05:52It rises by one cent each year
05:54What's this, Abu Hamid? How come? Are we the ones flattering the mountaintop?
05:57So, are you going to report it or what? We need to explain, my dear.
05:59Let's go back to the beginning, the one you love.
06:00In each episode, dear reader, we usually go back to the hero's childhood.
06:03And his beginnings explain his personality
06:05In the case of our hero, Mount Everest, it means
06:07His childhood was a bit long
06:09One hundred and twenty million years
06:10From about 120 million years ago
06:19India was part of an ancient supercontinent called Gondwana
06:23Gondwana encompassed what is now South America.
06:25Africa and the Arabian Peninsula
06:27And take Australia and Antarctica with them
06:29India will start one step at a time, like you say, "grab it."
06:32And it drifts north on its own at a speed of five centimeters per year.
06:36But it remains from about eighty million years ago
06:38This dinner drift will increase to fifteen centimeters annually.
06:42That cat, Zannan, is slow, my dear, but this was the fastest tectonic drift in history.
06:48As far as we know, of course, it means you were on a tectonic continent that drifted more than [a certain amount of time/year].
06:52But she didn't say
06:53The important thing is that in another thirty million years, this new speed of drift will lead to India colliding with the Eurasian continent.
07:00This collision will create the Tibetan Plateau and a great mountain range.
07:04The mountains extend for two thousand nine hundred kilometers
07:07This is why this mountain range passes through more than six countries, from Afghanistan to China.
07:12This newly formed mountain range, my dear, will be called the Himalayas.
07:16The highest point in this range will be called Mount Everest.
07:20Mount Everest, my dear, which reaches a height of 8,848 meters above sea level
07:26You know, my dear, this isn't a fixed number, as I told you, its length changes.
07:29If you could imagine, my dear, how high is this approximately?
07:31This is about ten Burj Khalifas, meaning one Burj Khalifa on top of the other is about 800 meters high.
07:35Why does the height change? Because of the ice covering the summit.
07:38The size of this ice changes from time to time.
07:40This is where, my dear, the word Himalayas originates.
07:42Himalaya means "collection".
07:44Walaya means house, meaning the house of the student.
07:46But because scientists won't just sit around and let the ice harden
07:48And the workers kept coming back, a little bit, then they left a little bit.
07:50They will agree, but if we measure from above sea level
07:53Everest is the highest point on Earth's surface.
07:56And yet, my dear, my drift hasn't stopped until today.
07:58And India is still working, God willing, pushing towards the north
08:01Everest and the Himalayas are increasing in height every year, just like I told you.
08:06So if you go this year and climb Everest, then next year you'll be
08:08You haven't reached the highest peak yet.
08:10Let's get rid of the geology notebook, my dear.
08:13And we resort to the formation of history
08:15Let's ask ourselves, has anyone been able to conquer a geography in this way?
08:18A towering mountain range covered by the following
08:21Its summit reaches the highest point on the planet.
08:24and oxygen
08:25Is there a madman who could do that?
08:27Mount Everest, located in northeastern Nepal
08:29On the borders of the night or the entrance
08:30He will have a great standing with the people around him.
08:33As a towering line connecting the earth and the sky
08:35That's why, my dear Nepalese, they will call it Sajramatha
08:38Meaning God of Heaven, and the Tibetans call him Shemu Ame, meaning God of the Earth
08:43I know how much you're being harassed like that
08:44But the most common people, like Stonton, live in the Everest region.
08:47It is the soup
08:48The word "Ti" means "my dear" or "those coming from the East."
08:50The T tribes moved to the Everest region 500 years ago
08:53Where are Abu Ahmed and these people?
08:54Why do they have to live in such a difficult place?
08:55The truth is that the mountain is not just a place for them to live.
08:57But also a center for their beliefs
08:59Search for the belief
09:01You'll find people doing difficult things
09:02According to Sharba
09:03The mountain is sacred because it is the home of the enlightened god.
09:06Climbing this mountain is necessary
09:08And it requires a religious ceremony called "Bouja".
09:10A ceremony requiring permission from God to ascend the mountain
09:13But their beliefs led them to live a life of sorghum for years.
09:16And their belief system that made this ascent journey essential
09:18They made them ideal primary mentors
09:22To help climbers who have been ascending Mount Everest to this day
09:25The first people understood that they had religious beliefs.
09:27Despite the importance and symbolism of this place
09:29They have lived there for approximately 500 years.
09:31Their ability, their handling, and the number of times they were released
09:33What made them stand out was that they helped people who wanted to get ahead.
09:37So their livelihood continued to come from here.
09:38The topic is ongoing.
09:39I have a question
09:40Now, since the Tibetans call it by that name
09:42And the soup is called by the name
09:43The Nepalese call it by the name
09:45Everest, where did you come from?
09:50Every now and then, a foreigner will come and draw a map like that.
09:53For example, the French geographer Jam Tabitist
09:56This man, in 1733, attempted to draw the first map of Tibet and the Himalayas.
10:01With that, every so often, scientists began to explore the area.
10:05Look at what kind of girls are living
10:07What creatures live here?
10:08But by the 19th century, all of that would change.
10:10From the period 1849 to 1855
10:13The truth is, the Indian survey will be a very bureaucratic and tedious survey of the Himalayan peaks.
10:18Hey guys, we're doing a survey of the Himalayas.
10:20Are you going to wash it?
10:21no
10:22We discover spaces
10:24As they scan the Himalayas, my dear, they will discover that eh, da, da, da, da, da
10:28This is almost the highest peak in the world, in the Himalayas.
10:31The Indian surveyor decided to ignore all the names that came before it and call it Everest.
10:36Named after George Everest, the British surveyor
10:38This is what existed before it and contributed to the geodetic survey in the Himalayas
10:41Of course, my dear, what is this first thing? This is the tallest peak in the world?
10:44Now the residents will feel it, oh no, the first headache
10:47In it is his letter
10:50The historian, not Ezerman, will say so.
10:57As long as it's there like this, we won't know that it's the highest peak in the world.
11:01Okay, peace be upon you. Mind your own business, Uncle Mountain. Thank you, we don't want anything from you.
11:04The first thing that comes to mind is that it is the highest peak in the world.
11:07It will transform from a remote and forgotten mountain between Palu and Tibet into a magical subject
11:11It will attract people from all over the world
11:12This will then become one of the most important challenges of the twentieth century.
11:16Sailing Mount Everest and reaching its summit, the highest peak in the world
11:20Second time, Umm Ahmed, not the soup you told us about.
11:22They release it normally? Yes, my dear.
11:24But this is where we start to approach the topic scientifically.
11:27Everest is 120 million years old
11:28The soup has been around for a year.
11:30But the tenth century is the first scientific record of the length and height of Mount Everest.
11:34Many historians and climbers consider this to be the true moment for the challenge to begin.
11:39Get rid of those soup guys
11:40No, we start now.
11:41We have no information that they will even reach the top.
11:43We are the ones who write history.
11:44And we're the ones who will say it now.
11:45The first one of us to go out, and he was the first one to go out.
11:47My dear friend, the Saudi attempts will begin in 1921.
11:50It will continue for 32 years.
11:52There will be 12 failed attempts.
11:54Until the New Zealand climber Edmond Dhlary succeeds
11:57Tibetan climber Tenzin Yurigai
12:00When did this happen? In May 1953
12:02Internationally, my dear, they will officially be the first people to successfully reach the summit of Mount Everest.
12:07To date, more than 6,000 people have reached the summit of Mount Everest.
12:11He said this
12:116000 people will be named Abu Ahmed
12:13What are people saying?
12:14You're the one who told the story of the failure
12:15Dear, can you please be patient?
12:17Mohammed is still in the same situation as before.
12:19Okay, uncle, for Egypt
12:20We'll be patient with you, we'll take the journey one step at a time, and you'll see what I mean.
12:22To climb Everest, we need to determine the time.
12:25In this case, we only offer two months a year.
12:27May and April
12:28But why?
12:29Because at this time the winds are slow
12:31This makes this the ideal season for climbing.
12:34So we've set the time.
12:35The best place
12:36It's not the Himalayas
12:37What is meant here, my dear, is that we will arrive.
12:39How and from which side and which direction will we get out?
12:41simple
12:42You'll find Everest between Tibet and Nepal
12:44This will create two famous routes to the value of Mount Everest
12:47Yama Sawskul South Lane
12:48This is found in Nepal
12:49or North Eastdush
12:51This is found in Tibet
12:52If you take the south lane
12:53You'll go by plane
12:54You will go to Lodi, the name of Khanbo in Nepal
12:56He described the route to you with a flag.
12:57And it will burn down completely in the camp of Al-Qada
12:59The camp
13:00And we, Abu Hamad, are not going to climb
13:01Are you going to make a quick buck with them or what?
13:03my darling
13:04Don't you remember the soup I told you about their rituals?
13:06You are in this camp
13:07You will learn about their culture in detail.
13:09Mohammed is going on a school trip
13:10I am a mountain climber.
13:11We're still going to get to know each other.
13:13We are in Dahm
13:13Also hasty and coffee
13:15Didn't I tell you to be patient, son?
13:16Oh, I forgot, Abu Hamad
13:17I'll give the president now
13:18This, my dear, is the culture you need to survive.
13:20And you take off
13:21The soup will teach you
13:22How to prepare yourself physically and mentally
13:24So that you can reach high altitudes
13:26Because your awesome, terrible adventure
13:28Which some people pay for
13:30One hundred thousand dollars
13:31We do this every day
13:33After that, it will gradually start to burn.
13:35As you can see in the picture
13:36We will stay, my dear
13:37We're going as far as Camp Two.
13:39This is at an altitude of 6492 meters.
13:41Maybe tomorrow will bring everything there.
13:43And then we go to Camp Three
13:45This will be at an altitude of 7468 meters.
13:48It will give you a little rest
13:49After that, we'll go to Camp Four.
13:51At an altitude of 7925 meters
13:54This, my dear, is the way
13:55There is the second way
13:57This is based on the same idea of ​​training.
14:00As you can see in the picture
14:01That's if you're a beginner like me, my dear.
14:03This will be less risky for you
14:05From the southern passage of Nabali
14:06for him?
14:06Because the perception is less in it
14:08The risk of avalanches decreases.
14:10And we protect you
14:11Also, access to the camp is via this road.
14:13You can do it in Arabic
14:14It's not good that you go by plane
14:15Southern Camp Uniform
14:16This gives climbers an opportunity
14:18If they take luxuries for the trip
14:20And equipment that makes them more prepared
14:22Okay, easy trip, Abu Ahmed.
14:23Like a metro station
14:24What does that mean?
14:25The meadow line is pointing upwards instead of running horizontally.
14:27Whether the southern or northern road
14:29They're all camps, and we'll reach the end.
14:31If you focused on the two pictures, my dear
14:33You will find something very important
14:34Whether the southern road or the northern road
14:36It doesn't end at the top
14:38The climbers stop at approximately 8,000 meters
14:41After that, my dear, you're on your own.
14:43No camps, no supplies
14:45And no places to enjoy brunch
14:47Even Da Katara is telling you that we're finally here
14:49Rely on God, it's not our business.
14:51Jay and his companions
14:53Communications technicians
14:54That's it, you're a wife, you and your photo.
14:55At this moment, if you want to continue as a climber
14:57You will only have one
14:59Who? Someone from the soup.
15:00Why, my dear?
15:01Because you've reached what climbers call
15:05Death Zone
15:06Make a dramatic exit and come back.
15:07The area of ​​death, my dear, was given that name.
15:11Because after 8000 meters the body no longer behaves normally
15:14It needs external support systems.
15:16The air is thin, meaning the penalty distances
15:19oxygen increases
15:20There is no pressure
15:21This pressure continues to decrease as we move further away from sea level.
15:24Sterility, we reach a third of the pressure level
15:26And the oxygen you get used to
15:28Then the last 800 meters
15:30Shadi Harak Shoha Ba'a
15:31Why are you playing it?
15:31Dear, the lack of oxygen affects the lungs and heart.
15:35Even the brain is terrifying
15:37A topic that begins with dizziness and oxygen rust
15:40Because less of your muscle starts to weaken
15:42Because your muscles need oxygen to produce energy
15:44And you will start to experience shortness of breath.
15:46How will you compensate for the situation when you're breathing rapidly?
15:48This can cause pulmonary edema.
15:52Merge
15:52Your lungs will start craving liquids
15:54As oxygen levels decrease, your cognitive function will begin to deteriorate.
15:58Then you start to lose your sense of direction.
16:01Stimulating your memory will start to malfunction.
16:03Where did I come from and what am I doing?
16:05And how am I here?
16:06Start, you'll have many questions
16:07The brain can also be susceptible to fatal conditions.
16:10Cerebral edema
16:11Here the brain is now filled with fluids
16:14Due to low pressure and poor oxygen levels
16:17And this is the situation, my dear, if it takes too long
16:18The brain may suffer permanent damage
16:21Riversapolite
16:22Even your body's attempts to adapt and save you, my dear
16:25It will harm
16:26The body keeps thinking it's burning because of your weapons.
16:28You're hurting me, your body will find half the oxygen
16:31Then the red blood cells start to work more
16:33So they can try to get as much oxygen as possible.
16:36Of course, there are many red blood cells in the body.
16:38You'll do what we see happening on the Greater October Road or the Ring Road.
16:41Peak time
16:42So the heart starts to burn all these blood cells.
16:45He gives generously
16:46His heartbeats become irregular to the point where he develops heart failure.
16:50So that my dear doesn't go through this horror, it's normal.
16:52You can take oxygen cylinders with you.
16:54I laughed at you, there's still terror in the air
16:56My dear, if possible, please take a sufficient number of oxygen cylinders.
17:00And they'll stay like that on your leg
17:02And you can finish on time
17:03You must finish before the tubes that you are able to remove run out.
17:08During your ascent, my dear, it's not just the circumstances or the lack of oxygen that will occupy your thoughts.
17:11If you look around you, you'll find many colors.
17:14All these colors will make us call this area by a name other than Death Zone
17:18It is Rainbow Valley
17:20Qoz Qazah Valley
17:21Oh Abu Ahmed, this means that whoever survives and succeeds
17:24He is no longer a corpse; he sees the lights, he sees the dreams, he sees success and fulfillment.
17:28My dear son, didn't I tell you to be patient?
17:30Oh Abu Ahmed, how long will I remain in this state of paralysis?
17:32I'm so tired, I swear. My dear, you're kind.
17:33The colors I'm talking about are neither green nor decorative, nor are they flowers.
17:38This is the worst nightmare you can imagine
17:40This is a spy
17:41The climbers who came before you were scrambled.
17:44The colors I'm telling you about are just the colors of the clothes they're wearing.
17:48And their oxygen tubes
17:49And the ice preserves its appearance and shape.
17:52To the point that it has become one of the landmarks of the place.
17:54For example, Green Boots and Jess
17:56Swann Baljur, who lost his life in 1996
17:58And he preferred the green boot on his foot
18:00As one of the most important signs
18:02Which distinguishes North Esterge Road
18:04So, my dear uncle, you are describing the road to someone, and you are telling him
18:06You see a green boot leg? You'll enter from there on the right.
18:08His body, after the body, enters the right
18:09You might find, for example, other bodies of the American slut
18:12Frances Arsentiev, who led the trip
18:14With her husband Sergei, they suffered from cerebral edema
18:16The ones I told you about until they died where they stood
18:18Just Francis, my dear, won't be distinguished by a particular color.
18:20But her lifeless features made her look like a sleeping princess.
18:23It will make people call it Sleeping Beauty
18:25I want to tell you, my dear, that some spies date back to ancient times.
18:28For a whole century, for example
18:30British ascetic George Malloy
18:31The one who lost his life in the sale of six in 1924
18:34And his spy won't be discovered.
18:36Except in the nineties
18:37And Ahmed doesn't understand
18:38Why have these bodies been left unattended for so long?
18:40These people have no blood
18:41People, honoring water means burying it.
18:42We're not going to turn them into road signs.
18:44Someone should take them down and bury them humanely.
18:46Unfortunately, my dear, the process of deploying these spies is very difficult and dangerous.
18:51Tal'ees, you'll get a body that's on your mind, you'll get another body
18:54The body that descends, the body
18:55I want to tell you, my dear, that there are a lot of companies
18:57He pays her a lot of money to release the bodies of these people's relatives.
19:01That's why this year is 20202020
19:03The army in Nepal allocated five million rupees
19:06No, to retrieve a single session
19:08And that, my dear, is equivalent to thirty-seven thousand dollars.
19:11This, my friend, is not very encouraging because the procedure itself is expensive.
19:14The helicopter cannot reach these altitudes because of the strong winds.
19:17Let me tell you, my dear, one session requires twelve men to perform it.
19:22From their heights of thousands of meters, each one of these needs four oxygen cylinders.
19:27Each of these costs four hundred dollars.
19:29That means you're talking about twenty thousand dollars, and that's just one item.
19:31Let's see the rest of the preparations.
19:32The subject is harsh and frightening
19:35When we congratulated you, my dear, that, thank God, your journey was successful and you passed through the death zone
19:39The colors of the rainbow are gone in the past.
19:42You now have a new challenge
19:43What's with the celebration?
19:44No, now you need to get off
19:46You will descend gradually from one camp to the next until you reach the base of the mountain.
19:50Of course you're full of enthusiasm and happy that you met the challenge and succeeded
19:53Rizek, my dear, this trip will be a thousand times better for you.
19:56You'll find that you didn't just leave anything behind
19:58Your feet are short, but you also left tons of waste.
20:01The Nepalese army is not only offering incentives to retrieve bodies
20:04This also has the capacity to remove tons of garbage, waste, and refuse left behind by climbers from Mount Afrissen.
20:11In one year, the volume of this waste reached 12 tons.
20:15What's left? Oxygen cylinders? Garbage cans? Cans of everything?
20:20Plastic bottles, batteries, everything
20:22I want to tell you that it was from the past century, but this was a charming oasis where a group of people lived.
20:28The original soup sellers who are working on the mountain and preserving the environment
20:30The only people who visited them were scientists who were fascinated by nature, geography, and all that
20:35Suddenly their entire ecosystem changed.
20:37Abu Ahmed's reason for being so tired is that the Nepalese army
20:39What prevents people from climbing it completely locks it up.
20:42She has no more bodies or garbage left.
20:44Yes, my dear, the ecosystem of this region has changed.
20:47But now the financial system is dependent on this region.
20:51Based on international climbers
20:52Mountain climbing has become more important than a tourist activity that the region's inhabitants depend on.
20:56This activity brings in around $300 million for Nibel
21:00The time has come when you know you don't want to climb Mount Everest, how much will you pay?
21:03The tourism companies that contract with them
21:05It costs between $25,000 and $30,000 per person
21:08It depends on many things.
21:09Will the accommodation be arranged on your own or with a guide?
21:11Type of instruments: oxygen stomatists
21:13Up to the point of using a hot air gun and a tablet that will show you the weather moment by moment.
21:16Al-Masiri, my dear, despite all these terrifying geographical conditions and despite the thousands of dollars you will pay
21:22Because you'll likely have to repeat the attempt several times to succeed.
21:25However, the situation is very promising.
21:26The number of climbers increases every year.
21:28The region has begun to suffer from what is called
21:31A huge business led by tourism companies
21:33Sometimes it works in your favor, and sometimes you become its victim.
21:36In his book
21:39Journalist John Karkauer
21:41He will tell us, my dear, a frightening experience
21:42So, my dear, in the first episode, we lost the team we started with, and the talc storm destroyed it.
21:46John was one of the lucky survivors of this incident.
21:49This man will not only transfer the success experience
21:51But we will criticize, with knowledge, the tourism companies that attract climbers in terms of appearance.
21:55Those who pay high amounts
21:56But they offer them very basic services and tools of poor quality.
22:00John's statement suggests that companies are exploiting the overwhelming desire of people to climb Everest.
22:04She climbs to the highest peak in the world and sits there telling this story, and she accepts them, my dear, even if they don't have [the means].
22:10Any climbing experience
22:11This leads to the presence of incompetent people among us who are trying to climb to the top.
22:16They have no experience here and no one to help them.
22:18And in his words, my dear
22:19And the people with experience were too tired to help
22:22Above 8000 meters, after 8000 meters, is not a place where people can afford morality.
22:27Meaning, if you have high morals above 8000 meters
22:31Manliness dies above 8000 meters
22:32too tired, unable
22:33Now, my dear, we arrive at the most important question and point of our episode.
22:36Now we know that the religion of Ebal and the high mountain regions maintain climbing as a form of tourism and a source of income.
22:40Why do tourism companies exploit thousands of climbers? Because it's also a source of income.
22:45This survival, my dear, is the most important thing.
22:46Our beautiful climbing customer
22:48According to John, there are many peaks you can reach
22:50You'll see the same natural habitats as Everest, and perhaps even more beautiful.
22:53And most importantly, you'll reach these peaks without the fourth risk you might face on Everest.
22:58Travel agencies A might be exploiting the situation, as John said.
23:00But that doesn't explain the fundamental human desire to climb Mount Everest.
23:04What are you doing to yourself?
23:05Sometimes, my dear, this also means that people are responsible.
23:08You're going for a tough experience
23:09It's hard on your brain, hard on your psyche, hard on your lungs, hard on your heart, hard on your legs.
23:13You see corpses, my dear, from 1924
23:16Corpses that shared your passion
23:18These bodies are frozen in this nightmare
23:20Forever she remained, stumbling on the path
23:22I understand, my dear, that in order to achieve one's dreams
23:24There must be some sustenance, but there will also be difficulties and challenges.
23:27The reward for this livelihood should be something meaningful.
23:30If you have a family, you have a check-up, you have money.
23:33But what is the goal that would make a person risk their life and money to climb a mountain?
23:37If you look, my dear, at the thousands of people who have tried to climb Mount Everest
23:40It's very difficult to find common names that unite them.
23:43There are explorers whose defense is curiosity and exploration, like Zorg Malorin.
23:46And some of them are romantic, like Sleeping Beauty and Jazaa
23:49And some of them are journalists on assignment, like John
23:51The one who was released in 1996 because of the incident he was covering for a magazine
23:54For some, my dear, climbing remains an attempt.
23:57To overcome depression or suicidal thoughts
24:00My dear, they are all people who differ in many ways.
24:02But they agree on one thing
24:03Climbing Mount Everest was the appropriate answer to a goal or need they experienced at a particular time.
24:08It's difficult to determine which goal is more important than the other.
24:10Or, one person from a different country might need something more than the other.
24:13Is it love, romance, career success, the throes of depression, or the pursuit of fame?
24:17According to Ahlem Astikl, something from Andreas Wilk of Clarkson University
24:21This is precisely the secret behind Mount Everest's allure.
24:23While humans differ in their goals, desires, and challenges
24:26Mount Everest offers them what he called
24:30Mount Al-Azizi offers them a clear, measurable sequence.
24:34And what we perceive as fake is that whoever reaches the top is at the top.
24:38This is a point we can measure with a ruler and say is the highest.
24:41You were, at one point, the highest person on Earth.
24:45And to achieve this, you were able to overcome your need, your fear, and your anxiety.
24:49And you were able to achieve the goal that made you go on this adventure in the first place
24:52You received validation; you are a strong and distinguished person.
24:55Validation is often something you don't know how to obtain in your life
24:57It's difficult to measure how popular or successful you are.
25:00And about this, says the historian Maurice Isermann
25:02Mount Everest is neither the most beautiful nor the most difficult, but it is the highest.
25:05This is what makes the prize awarded at the highest possible point.
25:08If you reach the summit of Everest, there's nothing higher and nothing harder.
25:11Therefore, in a very positive way, you might believe that there's nothing to be afraid of or that you can't do again.
25:16Or, in the words of the caller, to the person who reached the summit for the fourth time
25:22Everest can be a daunting challenge, but it's a measurable one.
25:26Why the distance and the stages, and most importantly, why the clear direction?
25:29When many people reached the summit of Everest, some started telling you
25:31God granted inflation in the summit.
25:34I need to do something harder; I need to outshine the six thousand people who made the trip.
25:38For example, the first person to reach the summit of Everest without oxygen tanks
25:42One named Réunion Mizner
25:43Are you guys climbing Mount Everest?
25:44Wow, there are six thousand people performing the marriage operation?
25:46Okay, I'm the first one to do it without oxygen. Go ahead, one more person.
25:48Okay everyone, you all see
25:50I am the first blind person to reach the summit of Mount Everest
25:53One named Eric Wimmer
25:54In the end, my dear Everest is not special in itself.
25:56If tomorrow a point higher than Everest appears
25:58Perhaps then Everest will return to being a deserted and quiet mountain.
26:02And they keep going to the point where humans are further away and paying more money.
26:05Because, as Luca Such, one of the survivors of Researcher 96, says
26:08Everest is important because it tells a story
26:10And that's all, a story whose goal is measured by a ruler
26:13Despite its difficulty, it is much easier than other goals that have no measure.
26:16For example, she wants Saeed or wants her family to lend him money.
26:19Or she wants to love
26:20The story of Mount Everest never changes.
26:22The new hero did not change with the new need or the new circumstances.
26:26He climbs, reaches, and plants his flag on the summit.
26:29They say that at one point he was truly at the top
26:31And that in a moment, the hero of this story
26:32That's all, my dear
26:33This is the best time to end the episode while it's at its peak.
26:35And you think that if you watch the last episode, you'll watch the next one.
26:38Look at the sources, and we'll celebrate with them by subscribing to the channel.
26:39Buhamad, I want to tell you that I succeeded in reaching the Ibers text message.
26:44What is this Ebers text, my dear?
26:45Your nation

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