The Exhilarating Peace of Freediving Guillaume Nry TED Talks

(Video) Announcer: 10 seconds.

Five, four, three, two, one.

Official top.

Plus one, two, three, four, five

six, seven, eight, nine, ten.

Guillaume Néry, France.

Constant weight, 123 meters,

three minutes and 25 seconds.

National record attempt.

70 meters.

[123 meters]

(Applause)

(Video) Judge: White card.
Guillaume Néry! National record!

Guillaume Néry: Thank you.

(Applause)

Thank you very much,
thanks for the warm welcome.

That dive you just watched is a journey –

a journey between two breaths.

A journey that takes place
between two breaths –

the last one before diving into the water,

and the first one,
coming back to the surface.

That dive is a journey
to the very limits of human possibility,

a journey into the unknown.

But it’s also, and above all,
an inner journey,

where a number of things happen,

physiologically as well as mentally.

And that’s why I’m here today,

to share my journey with you
and to take you along with me.

So, we start with the last breath.

(Breathing in)

(Breathing out)

As you noticed, that last breath
in is slow, deep and intense.

It ends with a special technique
called the carp,

which allows me to store one to two
extra liters of air in my lungs

by compressing it.

When I leave the surface,
I have about 10 liters of air in my lungs.

As soon as I leave the surface
the first mechanism kicks in:

the diving reflex.

The first thing the diving reflex does
is make your heart rate drop.

My heart beat will drop
from about 60-70 per minute

to about 30-40 beats per minute

in a matter of seconds;
almost immediately.

Next, the diving reflex causes
peripheral vasoconstriction,

which means that the blood flow
will leave the body’s extremities

to feed the most important organs:

the lungs, the heart and the brain.

This mechanism is innate.

I cannot control it.

If you go underwater,
even if you’ve never done it before,

you’ll experience the exact same effects.

All human beings
share this characteristic.

And what’s extraordinary

is that we share this instinct
with marine mammals –

all marine mammals:
dolphins, whales, sea lions, etc.

When they dive deep into the ocean,
these mechanisms become activated,

but to a greater extent.

And, of course, it works
much better for them.

It’s absolutely fascinating.

Right as I leave the surface,

nature gives me a push
in the right direction,

allowing me to descend with confidence.

So as I dive deeper into the blue,

the pressure slowly starts
to squeeze my lungs.

And since it’s the amount of air
in my lungs that makes me float,

the farther down I go,
the more pressure there is on my lungs,

the less air they contain
and the easier it is for my body to fall.

And at one point,
around 35 or 40 meters down,

I don’t even need to swim.

My body is dense and heavy enough
to fall into the depths by itself,

and I enter what’s called
the free fall phase.

The free fall phase
is the best part of the dive.

It’s the reason I still dive.

Because it feels like
you’re being pulled down

and you don’t need to do anything.

I can go from 35 meters to 123 meters
without making a single movement.

I let myself be pulled by the depths,

and it feels like I’m flying underwater.

It’s truly an amazing feeling –
an extraordinary feeling of freedom.

And so I slowly continue
sliding to the bottom.

40 meters down,

50 meters down,

and between 50 and 60 meters,
a second physiological response kicks in.

My lungs reach residual volume,

below which they’re not supposed
to be compressed, in theory.

And this second response
is called blood shift,

or “pulmonary erection” in French.

I prefer “blood shift.”

(Laughter)

So blood shift – how does it work?

The capillaries in the lungs
become engorged with blood –

which is caused by the suction –

so the lungs can harden

and protect the whole chest cavity
from being crushed.

It prevents the two walls
of the lungs from collapsing,

from sticking together and caving in.

Thanks to this phenomenon,
which we also share with marine mammals,

I’m able to continue with my dive.

60, 70 meters down,
I keep falling, faster and faster,

because the pressure is crushing
my body more and more.

Below 80 meters,

the pressure becomes a lot stronger,

and I start to feel it physically.

I really start to feel the suffocation.

You can see what it looks like –
not pretty at all.

The diaphragm is completely collapsed,
the rib cage is squeezed in,

and mentally, there is something
going on as well.

You may be thinking,
“This doesn’t look enjoyable.

How do you do it?”

If I relied on my earthly reflexes –

what do we do above water
when there’s a problem?

We resist, we go against it.

We fight.

Underwater, that doesn’t work.

If you try that underwater,
you might tear your lungs,

spit up blood, develop an edema

and you’ll have to stop diving
for a good amount of time.

So what you need to do, mentally,
is to tell yourself

that nature and the elements
are stronger than you.

And so I let the water crush me.

I accept the pressure and go with it.

At this point, my body
receives this information,

and my lungs start relaxing.

I relinquish all control,
and relax completely.

The pressure starts crushing me,
and it doesn’t feel bad at all.

I even feel like
I’m in a cocoon, protected.

And the dive continues.

80, 85 meters down,

90,

100 meters – the magic number.

In every sport, it’s a magic number.

For swimmers and athletes
and also for us, free divers,

it’s a number everyone dreams of.

Everyone wishes one day
to be able to get to 100 meters.

And it’s a symbolic number for us,

because in the 1970s,
doctors and physiologists did their math,

and predicted that the human body
would not be able to go below 100 meters.

Below that, they said,
the human body would implode.

And then the Frenchman, Jacques Mayol –

you all know him as the hero
in “The Big Blue” –

came along and dived down to 100 meters.

He even reached 105 meters.

At that time, he was doing “no limits.”

He’d use weights to descend faster
and come back up with a balloon,

just like in the movie.

Today, we go down 200 meters
in no limit free diving.

I can do 123 meters
by simply using muscle strength.

And in a way, it’s all thanks to him,
because he challenged known facts,

and with a sweep of his hand,
got rid of the theoretical beliefs

and all the mental limits
that we like to impose on ourselves.

He showed us that the human body
has an infinite ability to adapt.

So I carry on with my dive.

105, 110, 115.

The bottom is getting closer.

120,

123 meters.

I’m at the bottom.

And now, I’d like to ask you to join me
and put yourself in my place.

Close your eyes.

Imagine you get to 123 meters.

The surface is far, far away.

You’re alone.

There’s hardly any light.

It’s cold –

freezing cold.

The pressure is crushing you completely –

13 times stronger than on the surface.

And I know what you’re thinking:

“This is horrible.

What the hell am I doing here?

He’s insane.”

But no.

That’s not what I think
when I’m down there.

When I’m at the bottom, I feel good.

I get this extraordinary
feeling of well-being.

Maybe it’s because I’ve completely
released all tensions

and let myself go.

I feel great, without the need to breathe.

Although, you’d agree,
I should be worried.

I feel like a tiny dot,
a little drop of water,

floating in the middle of the ocean.

And each time, I picture the same image.

[The Pale Blue Dot]

It’s that small dot
the arrow is pointing to.

Do you know what it is?

It’s planet Earth.

Planet Earth, photographed
by the Voyager probe,

from 4 billion kilometers away.

And it shows that our home
is that small dot over there,

floating in the middle of nothing.

That’s how I feel

when I’m at the bottom, at 123 meters.

I feel like a small dot,

a speck of dust, stardust,

floating in the middle of the cosmos,

in the middle of nothing,
in the immensity of space.

It’s a fascinating sensation,

because when I look up, down,
left, right, in front, behind,

I see the same thing:
the infinite deep blue.

Nowhere else on Earth
you can experience this –

looking all around you,
and seeing the same thing.

It’s extraordinary.

And at that moment,

I still get that feeling each time,
building up inside of me –

the feeling of humility.

Looking at this picture,
I feel very humble –

just like when I’m all the way
down at the bottom –

because I’m nothing,

I’m a little speck of nothingness
lost in all of time and space.

And it still is absolutely fascinating.

I decide to go back to the surface,
because this is not where I belong.

I belong up there, on the surface.

So I start heading back up.

I get something of a shock

at the very moment when I decide to go up.

First, because it takes a huge effort
to tear yourself away from the bottom.

It pulled you down on the way in,

and will do the same on the way up.

You have to swim twice as hard.

Then, I’m hit with another
phenomenon known as narcosis.

I don’t know if you’ve heard of that.

It’s called nitrogen narcosis.

It’s something that happens
to scuba divers,

but it can happen to free divers.

It’s caused by nitrogen
dissolving in the blood,

which causes confusion

between the conscious
and unconscious mind.

A flurry of thoughts goes spinning
through your head.

You can’t control them,
and you shouldn’t try to –

you have to let it happen.

The more you try to control it,
the harder it is to manage.

Then, a third thing happens:

the desire to breathe.

I’m not a fish, I’m a human being,

and the desire to breathe
reminds me of that fact.

Around 60, 70 meters,

you start to feel the need to breathe.

And with everything else that’s going on,

you can very easily lose your ground

and start to panic.

When that happens, you think,
“Where’s the surface?

I want to go up. I want to breathe now.”

You should not do that.

Never look up to the surface –

not with your eyes, or your mind.

You should never
picture yourself up there.

You have to stay in the present.

I look at the rope right in front of me,
leading me back to the surface.

And I focus on that,
on the present moment.

Because if I think
about the surface, I panic.

And if I panic, it’s over.

Time goes faster this way.

And at 30 meters: deliverance.

I’m not alone any more.

The safety divers,
my guardian angels, join me.

They leave the surface,
we meet at 30 meters,

and they escort me
for the final few meters,

where potential problems could arise.

Every time I see them, I think to myself,

“It’s thanks to you.”

It’s thanks to them,
my team, that I’m here.

It brings back the sense of humility.

Without my team, without all
the people around me,

the adventure into the deep
would be impossible.

A journey into the deep
is above all a group effort.

So I’m happy to finish
my journey with them,

because I wouldn’t be here
if it weren’t for them.

20 meters, 10 meters,

my lungs slowly return
to their normal volume.

Buoyancy pushes me up to the surface.

Five meters below the surface,
I start to breathe out,

so that as soon as I get
to the surface all I do is breathe in.

And so I arrive at the surface.

(Breathing in)

Air floods into my lungs.

It’s like being born again, a relief.

It feels good.

Though the journey was extraordinary,

I do need to feel those small
oxygen molecules fueling my body.

It’s an extraordinary sensation,
but at the same time it’s traumatizing.

It’s a shock to the system,
as you can you imagine.

I go from complete darkness
to the light of day,

from the near-silence of the depths
to the commotion up top.

In terms of touch, I go from the soft,
velvety feeling of the water,

to air rubbing across my face.

In terms of smell,

there is air rushing into my lungs.

And in return, my lungs open up.

They were completely squashed
just 90 seconds ago,

and now, they’ve opened up again.

So all of this affects
quite a lot of things.

I need a few seconds to come back,

and to feel “all there” again.

But that needs to happen quickly,

because the judges are there
to verify my performance;

I need to show them
I’m in perfect physical condition.

You saw in the video,
I was doing a so-called exit protocol.

Once at the surface, I have 15 seconds
to take off my nose clip,

give this signal and say
(English) “I am OK.”

Plus, you need to be bilingual.

(Laughter)

On top of everything –

that’s not very nice.

Once the protocol is completed,
the judges show me a white card,

and that’s when the joy starts.

I can finally celebrate
what has just happened.

So, the journey I’ve just described to you

is a more extreme version of free diving.

Luckily, it’s far from just that.

For the past few years,

I’ve been trying to show
another side of free diving,

because the media mainly talks
about competitions and records.

But free diving is more than just that.

It’s about being at ease in the water.

It’s extremely beautiful,
very poetic and artistic.

So my wife and I decided to film it

and try to show another side of it,

mostly to make people want
to go into the water.

Let me show you some images
to finish my story.

It’s a mix of beautiful underwater photos.

(Music)

I’d like you to know that if one day
you try to stop breathing,

you’ll realize that
when you stop breathing,

you stop thinking, too.

It calms your mind.

Today, in the 21st century,
we’re under so much pressure.

Our minds are overworked,
we think at a million miles an hour,

we’re always stressed.

Being able to free dive
lets you, just for a moment,

relax your mind.

Holding your breath underwater

means giving yourself the chance
to experience weightlessness.

It means being underwater, floating,

with your body completely relaxed,
letting go of all your tensions.

This is our plight in the 21st century:

our backs hurt, our necks hurt,
everything hurts,

because we’re stressed
and tense all the time.

But when you’re in the water,

you let yourself float,
as if you were in space.

You let yourself go completely.

It’s an extraordinary feeling.

You can finally get in touch
with your body, mind and spirit.

Everything feels better, all at once.

Learning how to free dive is also
about learning to breathe correctly.

We breathe with our first breath
at birth, up until our last one.

Breathing gives rhythm to our lives.

Learning how to breathe better
is learning how to live better.

Holding your breath in the sea,
not necessarily at 100 meters,

but maybe at two or three,

putting on your goggles,
a pair of flippers,

means you can go see another world,

another universe, completely magical.

You can see little fish, seaweed,
the flora and fauna,

you can watch it all discreetly,

sliding underwater, looking around,
and coming back to the surface,

leaving no trace.

It’s an amazing feeling
to become one with nature like that.

And if I may say one more thing,

holding your breath, being in the water,
finding this underwater world –

it’s all about connecting with yourself.

You heard me talk a lot
about the body’s memory

that dates back millions of years,
to our marine origins.

The day you get back into the water,

when you hold your breath
for a few seconds,

you will reconnect with those origins.

And I guarantee

it’s absolute magic.

I encourage you to try it out.

Thank you.

(Applause)

(视频)播音员:10 秒。

五四三二一。

官方顶。

加一、二、三、四、五、

六、七、八、九、十。

纪尧姆·内里,法国。

恒重,123米,

3分25秒。

全国纪录的尝试。

70米。

[123米]

(掌声)

(视频)裁判:白牌。
纪尧姆·内里! 全国纪录!

纪尧姆·内里:谢谢。

(掌声)

非常感谢,
感谢您的热烈欢迎。

你刚刚观看的那次潜水是一段旅程——

两次呼吸之间的旅程。 两次呼吸

之间发生的旅程

——最后一次是在潜入水中之前

,第
一次是回到水面。

那次潜水是一次
探索人类可能性极限的旅程,

是一次进入未知世界的旅程。

但它也是,最重要的是,
一个内心的旅程

,许多事情发生,

生理上和精神上。

这就是为什么我今天来到这里,

与你分享我的旅程
并带你一起去。

所以,我们从最后一口气开始。

(吸气)

(呼气)

正如你所注意到的,最后一次
吸气是缓慢、深沉和强烈的。

它以一种称为鲤鱼的特殊技术结束
,通过压缩

它可以让我在肺部储存一到两
升额外的空气

当我离开水面时,
我的肺里有大约 10 升空气。

一旦我离开
水面,第一个机制就会启动

:潜水反射。

潜水反射做的第一件事
就是让你的心率下降。

我的心跳会在几秒钟内
从每分钟约 60-70 次下降到

每分钟约 30-40 次


几乎立即。

接下来,潜水反射会导致
外周血管收缩,

这意味着血液
会离开身体的四肢

,为最重要的器官提供食物

:肺、心脏和大脑。

这种机制是与生俱来的。

我无法控制它。

如果你去水下,
即使你以前从未做过,

你也会体验到完全相同的效果。

全人类
都有这个特点。

不同寻常的

是,我们
与海洋哺乳动物共享这种本能——

所有海洋哺乳动物:
海豚、鲸鱼、海狮等。

当它们潜入海洋深处时,
这些机制会被激活,

但程度更大。

而且,当然,
它对他们来说效果更好。

这绝对是迷人的。

当我离开水面时,

大自然给了我一个
正确的方向,

让我自信地下降。

所以当我潜入更深的蓝色时

,压力慢慢
开始挤压我的肺。

而且由于是肺中的空气
量使我漂浮

,所以我越往下走,
肺部的压力就越大

,它们所含的空气
就越少,我的身体就越容易跌倒。

有一次,
在大约 35 或 40 米深的地方,

我什至不需要游泳。

我的身体稠密而沉重,足以
自己落入深处

,我进入了所谓
的自由落体阶段。

自由落体阶段
是潜水的最佳部分。

这就是我仍然潜水的原因。

因为感觉就像
你被拉倒了

,你不需要做任何事情。

我可以从 35 米到 123 米,
而无需做任何动作。

我让自己被深渊拉着

,感觉就像在水下飞翔。

这真是一种奇妙的感觉——
一种非凡的自由感觉。

所以我慢慢地继续
滑到底部。

向下 40 米,

向下 50 米

,在 50 到 60 米之间
,第二个生理反应开始了。

我的肺达到了剩余体积

,理论上它们不
应该被压缩。

而这第二种反应
被称为血液转移,

或法语中的“肺勃起”。

我更喜欢“血变”。

(笑声)

所以血液转换——它是如何工作的?

肺部
的毛细血管充满了血液——

这是由吸力引起的——

因此肺部可以变硬

并保护整个胸腔
不被挤压。

它可以防止
肺的两个壁塌陷

、粘在一起和塌陷。

多亏了这种现象
,我们也与海洋哺乳动物分享了这种现象,

我才能够继续我的潜水。

60、70米下来,
我不断下坠,越来越快,

因为压力
越来越压垮我的身体。

在80米以下

,压力变得更大

,我开始感觉到它的身体。

我真的开始感到窒息。

你可以看到它的样子——一点
也不漂亮。

横膈膜完全塌陷
,胸腔被挤了进去

,精神上也发生了一些
事情。

你可能会想,
“这看起来并不令人愉快。

你是怎么做到的?”

如果我依靠我的世俗反应——当出现问题时,

我们在水面上做什么

我们抗拒,我们反对它。

我们吵架。

水下,那是行不通的。

如果你在水下尝试,
你可能会撕裂你的肺,

吐血,出现水肿

,你将不得不停止
潜水很长一段时间。

所以你需要做的,在精神上
,告诉

自己自然和
元素比你更强大。

所以我让水压碎了我。

我接受压力并顺其自然。

此时,我的身体
接收到这些信息

,我的肺开始放松。

我放弃所有控制,
彻底放松。

压力开始压垮我,
而且一点也不难受。

我什至觉得
我在一个茧里,受到保护。

潜水还在继续。

80、85 米向下,

90、100。100 米——神奇的数字。

在每一项运动中,它都是一个神奇的数字。

对于游泳运动员和运动员
以及我们自由潜水员来说,

这是每个人都梦寐以求的数字。

每个人都希望有一天
能够达到100米。

这对我们来说是一个象征性的数字,

因为在 1970 年代,
医生和生理学家做了他们的数学计算,

并预测
人体不能低于 100 米。

他们说,
在此之下,人体会内爆。

然后法国人雅克·马约尔——

你们都知道他
是“蓝色巨人”中的英雄——

出现并潜入了100米。

他甚至达到了105米。

那个时候,他是在做“不设限”。

他会用重物更快地下降,
然后带着气球回来,

就像电影里一样。

今天,我们
在无限制的自由潜水中下潜 200 米。


只需使用肌肉力量就可以完成123米。

在某种程度上,这一切都要归功于他,
因为他挑战了已知的事实,

并且一挥手,
就摆脱了我们喜欢强加给自己的理论信念

和所有精神限制

他向我们展示了人体
具有无限的适应能力。

所以我继续我的潜水。

105、110、115。

底部越来越近了。

120、123米。

我在底部。

而现在,我想请你加入我的
行列,并把你自己放在我的位置上。

闭上眼睛。

想象一下,你达到了 123 米。

表面很远很远。

你孤身一人。

几乎没有光。

天冷了——

冷得要命。

压力完全压垮你——

比表面强 13 倍。

我知道你在想什么:

“这太可怕了。

我到底要在这里做什么?

他疯了。”

但不是。

当我在下面时,这不是我的想法。

当我处于低谷时,我感觉很好。

我得到了这种非凡
的幸福感。

也许是因为我已经完全
释放了所有的紧张情绪

,放开了自己。

我感觉很好,不需要呼吸。

虽然,你会同意,
我应该担心。

我觉得自己就像一个小点,
一滴水,

漂浮在海洋的中央。

每次,我都画同样的图像。

[淡蓝色圆点]

就是箭头所指的那个小圆点。

你知道这是什么吗?

是地球。

航海者号探测器

在 40 亿公里外拍摄到的地球。

它表明我们的家
就是那边的那个小点,

漂浮在虚无之中。

这就是

我在底部 123 米时的感觉。

我感觉自己像一个小点,

一粒尘埃,星尘,

漂浮在宇宙

的中央,在虚无之中,
在浩瀚的太空中。

这是一种迷人的感觉,

因为当我向上、向下、
向左、向右、向前、向后看时,

我看到的都是一样的东西
:无限的深蓝色。

地球上其他任何地方
都无法体验到这一点——

环顾四周
,看到的都是同样的东西。

这是非同寻常的。

在那一刻,

我仍然每次都有那种感觉,
在我的内心建立起来——

谦卑的感觉。

看着这张照片,
我觉得自己很谦虚——

就像我
一路跌到谷底一样——

因为我什么都不是,

我是一个
迷失在所有时间和空间中的虚无。

它仍然非常迷人。

我决定回到地表,
因为这不是我所属的地方。

从表面上看,我属于那里。

所以我开始往回走。

当我决定上去的那一刻,我感到有些震惊。

首先,因为
要把自己从底部撕下来需要付出巨大的努力。

它在进入的过程中将您拉倒,并且在向上的过程中

也会这样做。

你必须用两倍的力气游泳。

然后,我遇到了另
一种称为麻醉的现象。

我不知道你是否听说过。

它被称为氮麻醉。

这是发生
在水肺潜水员身上的事情,

但也可能发生在自由潜水员身上。

它是由
溶解在血液中的氮引起的,

这会导致


意识和无意识之间的混乱。

一连串的想法
在你的脑海中旋转。

你无法控制它们
,你不应该尝试——

你必须让它发生。

你越想控制它
,它就越难管理。

然后,第三件事发生了:

呼吸的欲望。

我不是鱼,我是人

,呼吸的欲望
让我想起了这个事实。

大约 60、70 米时,

您开始感到需要呼吸。

随着其他一切的发生,

你很容易失去阵地

并开始恐慌。

当这种情况发生时,你会想,
“表面在哪里?

我想上去。我现在想呼吸。”

你不应该那样做。

永远不要抬头看表面——

不要用你的眼睛或你的头脑。

你永远不应该
想象自己在那里。

你必须活在当下。

我看着面前的绳索,把
我带回了水面。

我专注于这一点,
在当下。

因为如果我
想到表面,我会感到恐慌。

如果我惊慌失措,那就结束了。

时间就这样过得更快。

在 30 米处:释放。

我不再孤单了。

安全潜水员,
我的守护天使,加入我。

他们离开地面,
我们在 30 米处相遇

,他们护送
我到达最后几米,

那里可能会出现潜在问题。

每次看到他们,我都会想,

“多亏了你。”

多亏了他们,
我的团队,我才能来到这里。

它带回了谦卑的感觉。

没有我的团队,没有
我周围的所有人,

深入深海的冒险
是不可能的。

深入深海的旅程
首先是集体努力。

所以我很高兴能
和他们一起完成我的旅程,

因为如果没有他们,我就不会在这里

20米,10米,

我的肺慢慢恢复
到正常的体积。

浮力把我推到水面。

在水面以下五米处,
我开始呼气,

所以一旦我
到达水面,我所做的就是吸气

。所以我到达了水面。

(吸气)

空气涌入我的肺部。

就像重生一样,是一种解脱。

感觉真爽。

虽然旅程非同寻常,但

我确实需要感受那些为
我的身体提供能量的小氧分子。

这是一种非凡的感觉,
但同时也是一种创伤。 正如您

可以想象的那样,这对系统来说是一个冲击

我从完全的黑暗
走向白天的光明,

从近乎寂静的深处
走向顶部的骚动。

在触感方面,我从水的柔软
、天鹅绒般的感觉到

空气在我脸上的摩擦。

就气味而言,

有空气涌入我的肺部。

作为回报,我的肺张开了。

它们在
90 秒前被完全压扁,

而现在,它们又打开了。

所以所有这些都会影响
很多事情。

我需要几秒钟才能回来,

并再次感觉到“一切都在那里”。

但这需要尽快发生,

因为评委们会在
那里验证我的表现;

我需要向他们展示
我的身体状况良好。

你在视频中看到,
我在做一个所谓的退出协议。

到达水面后,我有 15 秒的时间
摘下鼻夹,

发出这个信号并说
(英语)“我很好”。

另外,你需要会双语。

笑声) 最重要的是——

那不是很好。

协议完成后
,评委给我看一张白卡

,这就是欢乐开始的时候。

我终于可以
庆祝刚刚发生的事情了。

所以,我刚才向你描述的旅程

是一个更极端的自由潜水版本。

幸运的是,远非如此。

在过去的几年里,

我一直在尝试展示
自由潜水的另一面,

因为媒体主要谈论的
是比赛和记录。

但自由潜水不止于此。

这是关于在水中轻松自在。

它非常美丽,
非常诗意和艺术。

所以我和我的妻子决定拍摄它

并尝试展示它的另一面,

主要是为了让人们
想要下水。

让我给你看一些图片
来完成我的故事。

这是一组美丽的水下照片。

(音乐)

我想让你知道,如果有一天
你试图停止呼吸,

你会意识到
当你停止呼吸时

,你也会停止思考。

它让你的心平静下来。

今天,在 21 世纪,
我们承受着巨大的压力。

我们的大脑过度劳累,
我们以每小时一百万英里的速度思考,

我们总是感到压力很大。

能够自由潜水
让您

放松一下。

在水下屏住呼吸

意味着让自己有
机会体验失重。

这意味着在水下,漂浮

,你的身体完全放松,
释放你所有的紧张。

这是我们在 21 世纪的困境:

我们的背痛,我们的脖子痛,
一切都痛,

因为我们一直处于压力
和紧张状态。

但是当你在水中时,

你让自己漂浮,
就像你在太空中一样。

你完全放开自己。

这是一种非凡的感觉。

你终于可以
接触到你的身体、思想和精神。

一切都感觉好起来了,一下子。

学习如何自由潜水也是
学习正确呼吸。

我们
出生时第一次呼吸,直到最后一次呼吸。

呼吸给我们的生活带来节奏。

学习如何更好地呼吸
就是学习如何更好地生活。

在海里屏住呼吸,
不一定是一百米,

也可能是两三米,

戴上你的护目镜,
一双脚蹼,

意味着你可以去看另一个世界,

另一个宇宙,完全神奇。

你可以看到小鱼,海藻
,动植物,

你可以小心翼翼地观看这一切,在

水下滑行,环顾四周,
再回到水面,不

留痕迹。

像这样与大自然融为一体是一种奇妙的感觉。

如果我可以再说一件事,

屏住呼吸,在水中,
找到这个海底世界——

这一切都是为了与自己建立联系。

你听到我谈论了很多
关于身体的记忆

可以追溯到数百万年前
,我们的海洋起源。

当你回到水中的那一天,

当你屏住呼吸
几秒钟时,

你将重新与那些起源联系起来。

我保证

这绝对是魔法。

我鼓励你尝试一下。

谢谢你。

(掌声)