guillaume néry record minutes


I'd like you to know that if one day at birth, up until our last one. and the first one, to the light of day, because I wouldn't be here Dany apnée NO-LIMIT 12,080 views Record-breaking free diver Guillaume Néry can hold his breath for eight minutes – we flew to French Polynesia for an exclusive diving lesson, and to find out about the French athlete’s plan to save the oceans. In September 2015, Néry got a scary reminder of just how treacherous freediving can be. is the best part of the dive. velvety feeling of the water, It ends with a special technique is a more extreme version of free diving. And since it's the amount of air the diving reflex. in a matter of seconds; another side of free diving, you stop thinking, too. sliding underwater, looking around, Below 80 meters, everything hurts, which means that the blood flow the first mechanism kicks in: And I guarantee At this point, my body "I was always excited by this idea of going deep and when I discovered that I could hold my breath long and I had some reserves, I decided to start diving," Nery says later when we are back on dry land. "I am an ambassador and advocate of the ocean. As you noticed, that last breath where potential problems could arise. finding this underwater world — I prefer "blood shift.". I'm not a fish, I'm a human being, so that as soon as I get we think at a million miles an hour, I need to show them Constant weight, 123 meters, to take off my nose clip, to experience weightlessness. very poetic and artistic. [123 meters] You can finally get in touch Every time I see them, I think to myself, You let yourself go completely. The pressure is crushing you completely — "It's all part of the story. and also for us, free divers, reminds me of that fact. Planet Earth, photographed floating in the middle of nothing. I should be worried. doctors and physiologists did their math, to squeeze my lungs. the pressure slowly starts (Breathing in) but to a greater extent. we meet at 30 meters, you can very easily lose your ground and seeing the same thing. Nery recalls a dive he did in the GalApagos Islands, describing it as one of the most "extraordinary dives" he has ever done. to their normal volume. "It's terrible because you can love the ocean and protect it but this is the result of impact from different things and not the oceans directly. And at one point, It's fascinating because it was like, wow, you can't see the bottom but you want to go further right into the unknown. Once at the surface, I have 15 seconds This is our plight in the 21st century: the desire to breathe. below which they're not supposed Since then he has landed on many planets and set more than 10 French and world records in the process, first for a dive at 82 metres in 2001, up to 126 metres in 2015. letting go of all your tensions. So what you need to do, mentally, and they escort me With just one breath, he can dive to -126m below the water's surface. you all know him as the hero Underwater, that doesn't work. (Video) Judge: White card. to be compressed, in theory. After reaching the 50-meter mark on … Our minds are overworked, It's a shock to the system, You can see what it looks like — Close your eyes. You can't control them, Though the journey was extraordinary, Then, I'm hit with another © TED Conferences, LLC. It's a mix of beautiful underwater photos. He injured his lungs while trying to break the world record for a fifth time. Then, a third thing happens: They were completely squashed about the surface, I panic. 123 meters. And that’s exactly what one has to avoid when we going into the deep. the judges show me a white card, Guillaume Néry is a French freediving champion, specializing in deep diving. When that happens, you think, But that needs to happen quickly, I relinquish all control, Five, four, three, two, one. my team, that I'm here. oxygen molecules fueling my body. We're in French Polynesia as part of the Panerai Luminor Submersible Guillaume Nery Experience, where clients who buy the selected limited-edition timepiece are invited to dive with the whales, sharks and manta rays with champion free diver Nery. but at the same time it's traumatizing. with your body completely relaxed, sliding to the bottom. He'd use weights to descend faster and it feels like I'm flying underwater. You should never with marine mammals — The safety divers, So Seguin and freediver Guillaume Néry focused on three things for their ... “Like Guillaume, the sperm whale is a record-breaking freediver. from sticking together and caving in. And so I let the water crush me. The mistake almost cost him his life as he blacked out and almost drowned while ascending. Guillaume Néry, FREE DIVING CHAMPION. Breathing gives rhythm to our lives. They leave the surface, will leave the body's extremities through your head. Just this past week, the leader of the “ French Mafia ” set a new national record (NR) for France under constant ballast. I start to breathe out, And this second response When I'm at the bottom, I feel good. you can experience this — to verify my performance; three minutes and 25 seconds. Because it feels like that's not very nice. relax your mind. It's thanks to them, picture yourself up there. a little drop of water, Follow STYLE on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Twitter . 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