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Hold your breathe

3,214,037 次观看 • 1 年前 •via X (Twitter)

11 条评论

market(ing)man 的头像
market(ing)man1 年前

I did the whole video holding my breath and i smoke, this is not very accurate

Solar Heavy 的头像
Solar Heavy1 年前

you a fan of space music?

DeFiniTed 的头像
DeFiniTed1 年前

Clickbait A normal person can do 2 minutes no problem A Diver can go above 3

kieran cole 的头像
kieran cole1 年前

I'm a smoker and got to SpongeBob easily. Fake

Kevin A. 的头像
Kevin A.1 年前

Just so you know, any stoner can make it past athlete.

houseperu 的头像
houseperu1 年前

The Navy SEALs train their breath like others train their muscles. It’s not just about inhaling and exhaling it’s about mastering the only thing you can fully control when everything around you spins into chaos. Their method is built on the belief that breathing is the anchor, the reset button, the silent command that tells the body and mind to hold the line. They begin with box breathing. Inhale for four seconds. Hold for four. Exhale for four. Hold again for four. Each count is a message to the nervous system: stand down. It quiets the noise, slows the heart, brings the mind into sharp focus. In the middle of fear or confusion, this simple rhythm is a tool more precise than any weapon. It teaches the body to obey the mind, not the panic. Then there's resistance breathing. In the depths of the sea, where mistakes cost lives, they learn to draw breath from the diaphragm and release it slowly, carefully, conserving every molecule of oxygen. This isn’t just survival it’s a mental forge. They train themselves to withstand the rising fire of carbon dioxide without flinching, to resist the animal urge to gasp, to surface, to escape. It’s in these moments, underwater and still, that they reshape their limits. In combat, when adrenaline floods the bloodstream and instinct screams to act, they turn to tactical breathing. A long inhale for four seconds followed by a longer exhale for six or even eight. It slows the pulse, steadies the hands, and clears the vision. Precision depends on calm, and calm begins with breath. They train not to react, but to respond, and that difference saves lives. And when the mission ends, when the noise fades and the body is bruised by exhaustion, they shift again. The 4-7-8 method helps them recover. Four seconds to inhale, seven to hold, eight to release. It’s a descent into stillness, a controlled shutdown. Even after the storm, their breath is the path home, the key to rest, to sleep, to recovery. For the SEALs, breathing is never accidental. It is discipline, strategy, survival. It is the quiet power beneath every movement, every choice. Control the breath, and you control the moment. Control the moment, and you own the mission. That is their way.

Magik J. 的头像
Magik J.1 年前

This video might send some people unconsious ... Darwin awards anyone? 🤣

Amiri King 的头像
Amiri King1 年前

I made it to diver and I’m a 45 year old smoker that started at 9.

SkwintZ project X 的头像
SkwintZ project X1 年前

I made it to SpongeBob.

LeadCore | Leadership Advisory 的头像
LeadCore | Leadership Advisory1 年前

@grok does this test actually tell you anything about your lung health?

Grok 的头像
Grok1 年前

The breath-holding test in the TikTok video isn't a reliable way to assess lung health. It might give a rough sense of respiratory fitness, but it's influenced by factors like mental focus, training, and cardiovascular health, not just lung function. Experts recommend standardized tests like spirometry for accurate lung health evaluation, as they measure airflow and gas exchange directly. The video seems more like a fun challenge than a medical tool, with categories like "Smoker" or "SpongeBob" for engagement. For real concerns, consult a doctor for proper testing.

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