Sorry for the distorted audio from 32:49 - 34:23, I got hit with a copyright claim and had to take out the background music here which screwed up the audio. Also at 14:15 I said skinwalkers are "creepypastas" this isn't true, they're Native American folklore. Sorry about that.
At 11:45 you mentioned deep sea gigantism. Another theory on that is that being larger slows their metabolism and makes their bodies more efficient without needing to eat as often because there's not many resources down there.
You could've done some research on skinwalkers before calling them a creepypasta, the concept is older than the internet and it's disrespectful to give Slenderman more respect
both my parents were scuba divers, one being an ocean photographer and the other being an instructor. I brought up the concept of the "call to the void" to my mother and explained to her how it worked. The sudden urge to do something self destructive and for some diving instructors they've seen people inexplicably just, swim, down, far down, making it difficult to get them back. I just wanted to know if my mom had experienced something like that. My mother explained to me how some people don't realize that when there in the ocean there in a 3D world. On land you think of forward, backwards, left and right and rarely every need to think of up or down when physically moving, so when some people go scuba diving for the first few times they forget to take into account that things move overtop of and under them. That's why most diving accidents happen from animals attacking from above or bellow. I don't know why, but that concept kinda terrified me. the same way walking on glass floors or thin wires, the idea that things could be happening LITERALLY all around you is something some people don't realize when thinking of the ocean.
That's really interesting! I think that is also why I'm so terrified of caves, the thought of something like that underneath my feet is... uncomfortable to say the least.
Yeah this is very important when diving with predators like sharks, they are curious by nature...so your focus has to be 100% at the sharks and that in a 3D environment.
Sometimes I let my mind drift and a picture of one of those land tortoises comes to my mind. Ancient, shell covered in moss and small plants, basically a small ecosystem on four legs. Then I think about the deep sea and start wondering, weather something similar cold exist down there. Like an octopus disguising itself as part of a reef, maybe there is something disguising as the reef itself, resting, observing. And just maybe some diver might already have -unknowingly- looked straight into it's eye.
Some diving spots have really high death rates not because they are dangerous in an intuitiv sense but because light is being reflected from below which makes many amateur divers dive deeper thinking they are going up and when you start to run out of oxygen confusion makes it even harder trying to find the right direction.
Yuri Lipsky didn't die because he simply ran out of oxygen. He died because he dove too fast and have himself nitrogen narcosis which disoriented him beyond any hope of being able to even tell what direction was up. It happens when you dive too fast and nitrogen bubbles form in your blood stream. So just imagine being blackout drunk 300ft below sea level, his body shut down and thats what caused his death.
Not to sound like a dick, I want this to be constrictive criticism but. It's this lack of research and hasty jumps to conclusions that made me dislike your astrophobia video. I really think you'd benefit from hiring an editor to help you fact check the admittedly complicated scientific concepts you cover on your channel, especially with how big you've gotten.
The entire point of that section, was to communicate horrors of people in an environment they weren't built for in this case water. While important to preserve facts, my objective wasn't to provide a comprehensive breakdown for how he died, but even then narcosis was one of several factors that led to his death, the water was one such factor and that's mostly what I chose to focus on, and I didn't think the average viewer would mind nor did I think it would affect the viewing experience. But thanks for pointing it out, I'm still only learning this whole thing and doing it on the side and still don't really know what I'm doing, hopefully I can grow more by fact checking better, but that isn't really an excuse on my end.
@@Cresendex yea I was genuine when I said I didn't want to come off as a dick but now that I'm reading it back I could have worded it better. It just feels weird to use a man's death to stir fear when you're not accurately explaining the circumstances of his death. And imo what the body goes through during NN makes the whole situation more terrifying. Your vids are great man, I have watched all of them like. I am a fan man, keep it up
Fun fact, nitrogen narcosis happens as you go past a certain depth regardless of your dive speed, in deeper waters you need a gas mix instead of regular air to prevent narcosis from occurring 😊
Niyrogen Narcosis isnt because nitrogen bubbles form in your blood. Thats the opposite problem, Decompression sickness, barotrauma, or "the Bends". Gases can dissolve into water when they are under pressure, and when the pressure is released the gases evaporate back out. A can of soda is under pressure, when you open the can and release the pressure, the dissolved CO2 bublles out. When you dive under water, your blood begins to dissolve CO2, O2, and N2. The free N2 dissolved in the blood acts as an anesthetic, all gases do except noble gases. When ypu surface too quickly, the dissolved gases can literally bubble out into your blood. You have to decompress, resurfacing slowly, and this is basically waiting for your blood to go "Flat" like a soda left open.
7:36 These people have Balls of Steel. Another thing that really scares me, apart from the vastness of the oceans or outer space, is the scale of geologic time.
oh my gosh me too, im glad i’m not the only one lol. the geologic time scale makes me feel so small and insignificant compared to earth and life itself. it’s humbling tbh.
the matter our bodies are made out of is billions of years old. The atoms are just rearranged in the circle of life. The atoms my body is made out of once may have belonged to a dinosaur. The water we drink is equally old.
That reminds me from every Lovecraftian stories where the unspeakable abomination once ruled the ancient earth with long lifespan and advanced technology that even the current ones are not even come close
The end credits of Finding nemo just made me feel weird scary looking into endless blue Turning darker with no fish in the scenes just music and credits rolling
Tbh like what the video says its the not knowing part gets me. Like idk about any of you but i have this deep fear of not knowing, while yes i do have "practical fears" like what other animal is there or the mere fact its very dark, u can't breath and if u lose any light source or breathing apparatus u don't survive. However like Space i have this want and need to be knowledgeable. Like i don't even care if aliens exist, or if there are any sea creatures out there. I just want to know if they exist or not like some assurance, ofc that's not how life works but man idk anymore.
That’s what I’m saying. People make up shit to make it sound scarier. I mean, it’s scary, but there aren’t any man eating beasts out there in the deep.
Fun Fact: Drowning is something every single human on earth is afraid of. That's why the fear of drowning has no name. Even if you removed your ability to feel fear and you started suffocating, you would still feel fear for your life. It is the single scariest thing possible for a human
This is true. What was it? A woman who lost/damaged her amygdala. She lost her ability to feel fear from all external stimuli, except for when oxygen ran low and she started to suffocate.
@@EzekEyesI’m pretty sure your nerves would burn off eventually, you’d have no pain after a bit. It’s hard to choose, both are really shitty. Sure, if you’re fully engulfed, your nerves would be burned off and you’d feel no pain, but I feel it’s just not a very dignified death.
That sentence literally contradicts itself. A phobia is just a fear, and fear is what plays into a lot of our survival. We wouldn't survive drowning if we didn't fear being underwater so much
@kooseyeok-g2m Yeah, but a phobia is an irrational fear. So being scared of drowning isn’t a phobia unless you refuse to ever go swimming even in a pool because you think you’ll drown. The average person doesn’t have a phobia of drowning, they’ll only be scared of drowning if they’re completely submerged and running out of breath
I've never considered a video I've seen more goddamn messed up than the one of what i thought was the motionless camera on yuri's dead body still recording. It's subtle and beats any amount of gore I've ever seen.
With gore and stuff, you know they don’t feel pain, they’re dead; With drowning, you know they are in horrible unimaginable pain and you know that they are dying and you know nothing can be done.
11:35 yo we actually do know why deep sea gigantism happens it’s pretty well understood. It happens because for an organism to survive longer without food they need a slower metabolism and to achieve a slower metabolism they need to be bigger organisms. Sounds counter intuitive but in practice that is the outcome. The bigger you are the less food you need over long periods of time if they were smaller they would need similar ratios of food to body weight that large organisms need, however, they would burn through the calories much quicker leading to them needing food more often.
I think one of the scariest parts of Bioshock is the knowledge of being trapped at the bottom of the ocean. Big Daddies, Plasmids, Little Sisters, the various characters... they're just icing on the cake. You are trapped and can't escape, meanwhile the whole society is tearing itself apart.
@mmecharlotte thank you for sharing this oh my god. I've never heard a genuine encounter out if fear (and attempted respect) of seeking them out. my culture has a similar figure, (speaking about him angers him, but he isn't evil just mischievous. he's called el pombero u can google him) so I have a natural pre-loaded fear haha
I love the internet sometimes cause when I was young I’d try to explain this fear to people, like I genuinely can’t even get into a pool by myself I’m that spooked of big areas of water, and they’d all look at me like I was speaking a different language. Now I hop on TH-cam and see a bunch of people relating to it and it’s so damn validating love to see it
Same, but I can’t even get in a body of water with ppl .. it’s sucks I’m always in the sand, in the side of the lake , if it’s a big enough boat in in it while everyone is happing fun looking at me like I’m weird 😢😢😢
It depends what you mean. If you're scared to go for a swim close to shore, then that's definitely weird and bordering on irrational. If you're afraid of the open ocean, that's probably very normal.
Some fun facts from the biology side of horror fans: -We know next to nothing about giant/collosal squid, including just how big they can get. The current record is 14.8 feet, 1,036 pounds, and larger beak specimena have been found in sperm whales. -Greenland sharks are giant, eat corpses, and don't reach maturity until 200. They're one of the chillest things in the sea. -For decades, sonar detected a false ocean floor. This false floor was made up of something called lantern fish, which make up 90% of all oceanic biomass -gobbler eel. Look it up. -Humboldt squid hunt in packs of hundreds. There's video. -Long fin squid. Look it up. -Most fish we're used to seeing in aquariums or scuba videos and eating, are juveniles of their species, and even at that stage are way bigger than you realize. Most fish that we consider tasty grow up to be bigger than us, as in, between 5-7 feet long and just as big around -Orcas don't terrorize us because they've simply chosen not to -You can fit mount everest in the marianas and still have wiggle room
Orcas simply choosing not to torment us is both calming in a sense that they aren't gonna go "kill" as soon as they see one of our toes, but terrifying in that they probably know how horrifically cruel we can get when a deadly animal takes something of ours we cherish (like a pet or loved one)
6:49 Floyd Collin’s story is terrifying.. Ever heard of John Jones in Nutty Putty cave..? Equally horrifying. Maybe even worse. He was only stuck for 28 hours but he was upside down. He was stuck in a super tight constricted hole basically. They tried to rescue him for an entire day until finally they had to give up and just waited until they knew he was gone. They couldn’t even get his body out after the fact either. He’s still in there… the stuff of nightmares!!
Thanks a lot. In my infinite wisdom I just HAD to look that story up, found a video explaining everything and now I'll be traumatized for days. This is way beyond terrifying.
We’ve mapped the entire ocean, We know whats there, We just haven’t actually gone there. Like Mars, we know what’s there we just haven’t stepped foot there.
I have thalassaphobia, but more specifically submechanphobia. I genuinely cannot look at a picture of any man made thing submerged in water without my heart beginning to race. Especially statues, ships, planes, and robots of any kind. Did you know there are underwater graveyards? I don’t know why someone would want to be buried underwater, but whatever floats your boat(haha). I had a nightmare last night that I was trapped in a submarine that started to leak which reminded me a lot of the Titan submersible that imploded this summer. This video captures my fear perfectly, thank you. I think that my fear started from when I was a child and nearly drowned a couple of times.
Tbh like what the video says its the not knowing part gets me. Like idk about any of you but i have this deep fear of not knowing, while yes i do have "practical fears" like what other animal is there or the mere fact its very dark, u can't breath and if u lose any light source or breathing apparatus u don't survive. However like Space i have this want and need to be knowledgeable. Like i don't even care if aliens exist, or if there are any sea creatures out there. I just want to know if they exist or not like some assurance, ofc that's not how life works but man idk anymore.
This was the one i was dreading...i knew you would make this video sooner or later and i'm excited to hear what you have to say on this subject. it's hard to describe this feeling that goes beyond fear but it's such a terrifying yet interesting feeling. I kind of like it strangely.
Drowning is one of the ways of dying I'm actually not afraid of. When I was a little kid, and couldn't swim, my cousin and I were rough housing and he pushed me into the pool. I remember sinking to the bottom and trying to scream, it was scary at first but then I just kind of accepted it and started to pass out. I don't remember too much but I do remember having the distinct thought of "Welp, I guess this is it!" then my uncle apparently dove in and pulled me out. I do have a fear of deep water but not a fear of drowning, I just hate the idea of floating above a dark void full of possible water demons.
Subnautica makes me think about Panthalassa (Greek 'Pan'-All 'thalassa'-Sea), the ancient Super Ocean which surrounded Pangaea. The idea of that giant, vast super ocean is so hauntingly fascinating to me. Imagine the creatures that must have lived in Panthalassa 300 Mya.
During that time, apparently it was *safer* than on land, since the animals that lived there weren't bigger than your arm, and everything on land is steadily evolving to be rather dangerous Sharks were around, yes, but in smaller sizes as some families were still starting out, and others (like Helicoprion's lineage) were dying out Although...the same can't be theoretically said for your mental health. If we're already incredibly afraid of our current ocean, what more is one *twice the size of it?* Tl:dr Panthalassa is safe in regards to animal life, but the size will conjure up nightmares worse than the one our current oceans give
What If the sea is protecting us? All those drowned submarines and those Shipwrecks aren't to defy us but to protect us to never find the horrors that lurk on the deepest oceans
sorry to break your dreams, but most of them are too watery for people's liking, there are some exception like japanese spider crab (which is known to have a sweet and very soft meat) but it sure isn't a goldmine of good seafood
i plan to become a deep sea biologist, so i've never been afraid of the ocean. especially not the deep sea. whenever i ask people why they're scared of the ocean, they tend to just say it's big and mysterious and creepy and the animals are scary (here's a secret: nothing down there wants to hurt you. to make it short, they're usually pathetic). i've never been able to grasp those last 3 points; they're what makes it alluring. but hearing how detailed and passionate you are in this video finally is helping me understand this fear. :)
for me personally its not that its big or mysterious and creepy its the fact that in no way shape or form am i able to be down there and if i am, i am with the help of machinery ,which, if it fails im going to die immedietely and if i dont the darkness will not let me see anything and if a predator comes by im dead and have no chances even if i am in relatively shallow water even in 30 meters deep water if i cant see everything around me i am scared because of the danger of something that i cant see and the feeling of emptiness and blindness, underwater i cant see anything more that 50 meters away, which is terrifying
Im afraid of it because i am a rational human being who knows i dont belong down there. We are simply intruding on a space we were never meant to be. Saddest thing about the deep ocean is Ive sadly seen walmart bags pretty far down there in documentaries etc. They find so much trash down there, and its shameful. We should be ashamed
@@vicieux7789 well the animals are mostly calm and is "just" a dangerous environment. If any, more knowledge should reduce the amount of fear regarding non logical fears of the ocean.
if it makes you feel better, you the odds of there being something large, living underwater, not being discovered yet is so low that if there were to be one, there’s probably only 3-5 specimen and you’d never encounter it.
why? Tbh like what the video says its the not knowing part gets me. Like idk about any of you but i have this deep fear of not knowing, while yes i do have "practical fears" like what other animal is there or the mere fact its very dark, u can't breath and if u lose any light source or breathing apparatus u don't survive. However like Space i have this want and need to be knowledgeable. Like i don't even care if aliens exist, or if there are any sea creatures out there. I just want to know if they exist or not like some assurance, ofc that's not how life works but man idk anymore.
I'd argue Subnautica is definitely meant to scare you, it's not outright a horror game sure, but things like the Reaper, Ghost, and Sea Dragon Leviathans are definitely meant to scare you, especially the original versions of the Reapers in Beta that had advanced AI that could hunt you down and find you pretty easily
I used to be severely thalassophobic. Just the thought of the ocean terrified me as a kid. It's one of the reasons why I preferred swimming pools over the beach. Back in the '90s, my dad bought us a MS-DOS educational game named "Undersea Adventure" which simultaneously kindled my interest in marine life and triggered my thalassophobia. It prolly didn't help that our IBM PC had problematic sound support so we initially played UA w/o the cheerful sounds and music. The "3-D Undersea World" part, a Doom-like map that you can freely roam around in, felt like a mini horror game, lol.
I’m from Japan which is surrounded by ocean.Also lived in Seattle & LA in my childhood which are both facing ocean. And I have fear of depth.When I go swimming in sea, I try not to think about what is underneath. Then this came up to my mind. What do people living in extremely inland feel about fear of deep sea? Places like Bolivia , or central Asian countries, their land is so far from sea right? There must be groups of people that never seen an ocean for generations.
God I am so brave for even watching this lol. I have always been afraid of the open seas, not because of the creatures or the mystery of it, but because of the fear of drowning and be submerged in it, never to resurface again. I remember that one time my friend convinced me to go jetski with her and I for once , obliged just to face my fears. I ended up crying and shaking in fear. Needless to say, I never tried doing sea activities again unless it’s somewhere shallow or where my head could still surface out of the water. Don’t get me started with boats and ships because I always felt nauseous whenever there’s a dire need of me to ride and get into one of those.
I loath this kind of ignorance. It's a big peeve of mine. It's not very hard to figure out that the modern conception of the skinwalker and wendigo is wrong
Yeah, Wendigo are not skeletal deer demons. They're people who have been possessed by a spirit during times of famine and harsh winters that make them eat other people. Skinwalkers are not shapeshifting cannibal beasts. Skinwalkers are Navajo Witchdoctors that practice taboo rituals and wear the pelts of animals to obtain their abilities (Forgive me if I'm wrong, I am Indigenous but the Skinwalker is not part of my culture). Sucks whenever I inform and clarify things about my culture I'm just shat on.
The Bloop was an Ice Quake. The sound you provided was sped up so the anomaly could be better heard, located, and distinguished between the natural noises for untrained ears.
please never stop posting man! And holy sh*t the video of the guy drowning had me shocked this is so scary i knew you'd make a vid about thalasophobia and im not disappointed
My worst nightmare is someone chaining me up to a brick while I’m in a scuba suit and getting pushed into the ocean right over the marina trench and I have to watch as I get dragged down to the bottom until I get crushed by the pressure.
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Poisonous corals in shallow waters has been enough to instill a fear and respect for the sea. I.e. the corals found in the shallow waters of the Red Sea.
@@gob8440 have you swum in the Red sea? I've grown up in Sweden. There are huge tuna fish, poisonous corals and fish - like the stone fish. The most fish and corals aren't poisonous, but the ones that are SHOULD instill a certain caution.
the entire ocean floor has been mapped, we just havent explored the volume of the ocean. You could say we haven't explored the majority of the atmosphere as well, there's no need to, we know its mostly nothing. it's a common miscoception that we don't know whats in 80٪ of the ocean we know what's there, its water😂.
we also havent mapped the entire volume of the crust or mantle as well, cuz its dirt and magma. if there was something notable floating in the middle of the ocean, crust, mantle, ir atmosphere we would have noticed it using sonar, satellite, or the many other methods we have to detect anomalies and such.😂
Tbh like what the video says its the not knowing part gets me. Like idk about any of you but i have this deep fear of not knowing, while yes i do have "practical fears" like what other animal is there or the mere fact its very dark, u can't breath and if u lose any light source or breathing apparatus u don't survive. However like Space i have this want and need to be knowledgeable. Like i don't even care if aliens exist, or if there are any sea creatures out there. I just want to know if they exist or not like some assurance, ofc that's not how life works but man idk anymore.
@@user-dd2ku9mr8g atleast that entirely proves that there are no creatures, elves, dwarves or even lost species of monsters there or any animals. Now we just have to prove that aliens either exist or don't.
22:41 ive actually seen a video on the Bloop, and it explains that the sound was from glaciers moving and like, breaking off. the sound people always play is actually extremely sped up and pitched up, because the raw audio is at such a deep pitch that it can barely even be heard aside from a VERY low rumble.
god ur deep dives are what makes me go to sleep at night, im not even intersted in fears of certain things or phobias, but your content and your way of (explaining?) طريقة طرحك and how you connect it with other forms of media and ur voice too man i just love this channel pls make like 50 videos a day i beg you pleaseeeeeeeeee
there are plenty of theories as to why gigantism occurs, the most probable to me seems to be heat conservation and by extent, energy preservation. the bigger the animal, the harder it is for the heat to escape, thus requiring less food, which is scarce down there.
I just watch your video for the first time and I gotta say you explain this better than other youtubers who covered the same topic especially Jacob Geller with his patronizing tone and frequently repeating words from other experts rather than making the conclusion himself
Can you make a video about the inside of the Titanic. I don't know really how to explain how eerie the interior is. The whole ship makes you feel trapped in such a big thing that you cannot escape, forced to die the design of the staircases and various parts of the ship give a really weird feeling. Like a hotel thats gonna get bombed and you are helpless.
As somebody who has drowned before, it's not a peaceful feeling at all, and the worst of the pain isn't the lack of oxygen. It's the feeling you get in your head, it feels like it going to explode. And to whoever is wondering I was a young child who didn't know how to swim and kinda fell out of my doughnut floatie in a lazy river and the lifegard didnt realize until i was already unconscious underwater.🤦🏽♀️
Dying in the vacuum of space is arguably less painful than drowning. For some unknown reason, you'll go unconscious in space in a matter of seconds regardless of how long you'd normally be able to hold your breath. While drowning, you may manage to hold your breath in a vain attempt to survive from anywhere from 30 seconds to almost 3 minutes, and then you'd still be conscious for another minute or two after inhaling the water. Also here's a scary concept - we know so little about it. We also know there are some marine animals that have very high intelligence with emotions and possibly self-awareness. Who knows what could be evolving in the deep ocean. It's not entirely impossible for some sort of human-level species to be evolving down there, learning to make do with what they can find. Mining the deep ocean floor, building technology of their own, and the possibility that some day they may emerge and come into contact with us. Who knows what will happen... If they are anything like humans, it might not be pretty... The premise of subnautica is terrifying. Stranded on an ocean world... It would be interesting to see a remake that truly encompasses the reality of these hypothetical ocean worlds. A planet with a global ocean is very likely extremely deep. Just look at europa, the ocean under its ice is likely 40-60 miles deep. A water world could theoretically be 100s or even 1000s of miles deep. Unfathomably deep. Abyssal. Bottomless.
Sir, you cannot reclassify thalassophobia as “fear of the unknown” cause there’s already a classification for that: Xenophobia, or Agnostophobia. Also, the fear of drowning falls under the motif of aquaphobia.
Tbh like what the video says its the not knowing part gets me. Like idk about any of you but i have this deep fear of not knowing, while yes i do have "practical fears" like what other animal is there or the mere fact its very dark, u can't breath and if u lose any light source or breathing apparatus u don't survive. However like Space i have this want and need to be knowledgeable. Like i don't even care if aliens exist, or if there are any sea creatures out there. I just want to know if they exist or not like some assurance, ofc that's not how life works but man idk anymore.
2 things we should consider when talking about the unknown part of the ocean. 1. When you say that most of the ocean is unexplored, people usually mean that as in physically mapping out the ocean. That doesn’t necessarily mean we don’t know what’s out there, mostly because the unexplored stuff is a bunch of empty dead space of just sand and sea grass. 2. Even though the thing you said about sea gigantism is true, sustaining large life forms near the bottom of the ocean is near impossible. Something like a shark or whale could not survive at such a depth because there is just not enough food l down there to sustain their bodies. Yes, whales and squids can go a pretty low depth and still survive (around the continental slope) however there’s still a limit on how deep they can go before they die
When I was a little kid, I was scared of water so this kid at my swimming lessons held me under the water. My grandma made fun of me for years until I actually had a mental break because of my head accidentally going under when I was swimming. It’s genuinely changed my perspective on life.
I can identify with your fear of drowning, there's a scene in "Turistas" where the characters have to escape from the people trying to kill them and have to swim thru these caves without any air tanks and depending on finding little air pockets to not drown. It is very difficult to watch especially if you have this fear
If you haven't played subnautica, I highly recommend it. I don't typically like survival crafting games, but subnautica became one of my favorite games. It made me afraid of the ocean. I'd never felt so accomplished after finishing a game. I didn't look up anything i was supposed to do to get further. So that "lost at sea with an impossible task in front of you," plus the sheer TERROR i had to overcome, made for the greatest feeling of victory in a video game. I was actually sad when I was about to finish it. It was an adventure.
For a sec i thought this was a repost, but then i realized i was originally thinking of the submechaphobia video. 'Ither way, fantastic video, and I can't wait to see what else you have in store 😁👍
I have severe Thallassophobia, but I have zero fear of drowning, because oxygen deprivation actually makes you feel very calm and peaceful before you go. I'm afraid of what LIVES in the ocean, and the idea of being vulnerable from literally any direction. I also live on an island nation surrounded by extremely violent waters containing a massive population of great whites and tiger sharks.
Tbh like what the video says its the not knowing part gets me. Like idk about any of you but i have this deep fear of not knowing, while yes i do have "practical fears" like what other animal is there or the mere fact its very dark, u can't breath and if u lose any light source or breathing apparatus u don't survive. However like Space i have this want and need to be knowledgeable. Like i don't even care if aliens exist, or if there are any sea creatures out there. I just want to know if they exist or not like some assurance, ofc that's not how life works but man idk anymore.
Deepsea gigantism is pretty fascinating. The basic idea is that in the cold, dark depths of the ocean, being bigger helps creatures conserve heat better. Larger bodies have a lower surface area to volume ratio, which means they lose heat more slowly compared to smaller bodies. So, in a place where it's tough to stay warm, being big is an advantage because it helps these animals retain what little heat they can generate.
I've run both outlast games no sweat, killed hoards of necromorphs in dead space without a care. But subnautica hits a special "fuck nope" button in my soul that stops me playing longer than an hour hahaha
Phobias are irrational fears. Fearing suffocation isn't irrational. (Suffocation = death. Preservation of life is prime motivator.) I guess it can't therefore be classed as a phobia. Hence no name.
I am not an adventurer by any means but I do have an intense fascination with the deep ocean and as technology gets better and the commercialization of recreational deep sea tourism seems to be inevitable, it will be hard for me to resist taking a tour on a deep sea sub when that possibility becomes a reality. Would really be a life changing experience I think, to essentially enter another world without leaving the only one I've known
It wouldn't be possible to find remains, also that is a real theory and not some unrealistic "childish fantasy" since there used to be many many more giant creatures under water that since have gone extinct.
@KoolKidsJuice giant squids aren't even close to sinking a ship it's like comparing a hydrogen bomb to a coughing baby maybe huge octopus or squid existed sure but maybe like 70 million years ago which is not even close to CE and almost impossible that the creature survived (if it even existed) the theory that it sunk ships is so out of place, why tf would they sink a ship? for fun? they would have literally 0 reason for that, and only "evidence" we have are tales from sailors
18:28 for me I have a different take on it. Seeing shipwrecks fill me with hope because it's like acknowledging the sacrifices people have made in attempt to understand the unknown and the fact humanity hasn't given up on exploring the sea yet no matter how many attempts it takes just makes me feel hopeful for the future and the chances to one day fully understand the sea.
To complement the corrections about Skinwalkers, Slenderman spawned from a picture made for a photoshop contest thread on a forum, not The Eight Pages/'a video game.' Heck, before the game, the most popular iteration of it was from a video web series. Good video otherwise, but a little more research wouldn't hurt.
"we've only mapped out and explored 20% of the ocean🤓" No. That is entirely wrong. Also, Skinwalkers aren't a creepypasta, they're native American legends. And we have mapped about 80% of the ocean, and been to like 25%. There's no Megalodon or giant Kraken in the mariana trench, what the hell would it eat there? Also, those 91%, most of that is jellyfish, small deep sea fish, amphipods, and small squid.
I've been swimming my whole life, so I got that advantage. I don't say I fear the ocean, but I respect it. I know it ALWAYS has the final say. But a LITTLE bit of fear of the ocean I think is sensible.
Sorry for the distorted audio from 32:49 - 34:23, I got hit with a copyright claim and had to take out the background music here which screwed up the audio. Also at 14:15 I said skinwalkers are "creepypastas" this isn't true, they're Native American folklore. Sorry about that.
At 11:45 you mentioned deep sea gigantism. Another theory on that is that being larger slows their metabolism and makes their bodies more efficient without needing to eat as often because there's not many resources down there.
Also amazing video more phobias please.
You could've done some research on skinwalkers before calling them a creepypasta, the concept is older than the internet and it's disrespectful to give Slenderman more respect
@@monniemo813 they also lose less heat, it's probably very cold down there and they'd need to contain as much heat as possible to use less metabolism
HAHAHA i was gonna mention 14:15 ur good !
both my parents were scuba divers, one being an ocean photographer and the other being an instructor. I brought up the concept of the "call to the void" to my mother and explained to her how it worked. The sudden urge to do something self destructive and for some diving instructors they've seen people inexplicably just, swim, down, far down, making it difficult to get them back. I just wanted to know if my mom had experienced something like that. My mother explained to me how some people don't realize that when there in the ocean there in a 3D world. On land you think of forward, backwards, left and right and rarely every need to think of up or down when physically moving, so when some people go scuba diving for the first few times they forget to take into account that things move overtop of and under them. That's why most diving accidents happen from animals attacking from above or bellow. I don't know why, but that concept kinda terrified me. the same way walking on glass floors or thin wires, the idea that things could be happening LITERALLY all around you is something some people don't realize when thinking of the ocean.
That's really interesting! I think that is also why I'm so terrified of caves, the thought of something like that underneath my feet is... uncomfortable to say the least.
Yeah this is very important when diving with predators like sharks, they are curious by nature...so your focus has to be 100% at the sharks and that in a 3D environment.
Sometimes I let my mind drift and a picture of one of those land tortoises comes to my mind. Ancient, shell covered in moss and small plants, basically a small ecosystem on four legs. Then I think about the deep sea and start wondering, weather something similar cold exist down there. Like an octopus disguising itself as part of a reef, maybe there is something disguising as the reef itself, resting, observing. And just maybe some diver might already have -unknowingly- looked straight into it's eye.
Some diving spots have really high death rates not because they are dangerous in an intuitiv sense but because light is being reflected from below which makes many amateur divers dive deeper thinking they are going up and when you start to run out of oxygen confusion makes it even harder trying to find the right direction.
@@neo7043 Spider crabs actually graft live organisms to their shells for camouflage.
Just imagine a really big one that looks like a sponge golem.
Yuri Lipsky didn't die because he simply ran out of oxygen. He died because he dove too fast and have himself nitrogen narcosis which disoriented him beyond any hope of being able to even tell what direction was up. It happens when you dive too fast and nitrogen bubbles form in your blood stream. So just imagine being blackout drunk 300ft below sea level, his body shut down and thats what caused his death.
Not to sound like a dick, I want this to be constrictive criticism but. It's this lack of research and hasty jumps to conclusions that made me dislike your astrophobia video. I really think you'd benefit from hiring an editor to help you fact check the admittedly complicated scientific concepts you cover on your channel, especially with how big you've gotten.
The entire point of that section, was to communicate horrors of people in an environment they weren't built for in this case water. While important to preserve facts, my objective wasn't to provide a comprehensive breakdown for how he died, but even then narcosis was one of several factors that led to his death, the water was one such factor and that's mostly what I chose to focus on, and I didn't think the average viewer would mind nor did I think it would affect the viewing experience. But thanks for pointing it out, I'm still only learning this whole thing and doing it on the side and still don't really know what I'm doing, hopefully I can grow more by fact checking better, but that isn't really an excuse on my end.
@@Cresendex yea I was genuine when I said I didn't want to come off as a dick but now that I'm reading it back I could have worded it better. It just feels weird to use a man's death to stir fear when you're not accurately explaining the circumstances of his death. And imo what the body goes through during NN makes the whole situation more terrifying. Your vids are great man, I have watched all of them like. I am a fan man, keep it up
Fun fact, nitrogen narcosis happens as you go past a certain depth regardless of your dive speed, in deeper waters you need a gas mix instead of regular air to prevent narcosis from occurring 😊
Niyrogen Narcosis isnt because nitrogen bubbles form in your blood. Thats the opposite problem, Decompression sickness, barotrauma, or "the Bends".
Gases can dissolve into water when they are under pressure, and when the pressure is released the gases evaporate back out. A can of soda is under pressure, when you open the can and release the pressure, the dissolved CO2 bublles out. When you dive under water, your blood begins to dissolve CO2, O2, and N2. The free N2 dissolved in the blood acts as an anesthetic, all gases do except noble gases. When ypu surface too quickly, the dissolved gases can literally bubble out into your blood. You have to decompress, resurfacing slowly, and this is basically waiting for your blood to go "Flat" like a soda left open.
7:36 These people have Balls of Steel.
Another thing that really scares me, apart from the vastness of the oceans or outer space, is the scale of geologic time.
oh my gosh me too, im glad i’m not the only one lol. the geologic time scale makes me feel so small and insignificant compared to earth and life itself. it’s humbling tbh.
@@sadib4782very common start to an existential crisis personally
the matter our bodies are made out of is billions of years old. The atoms are just rearranged in the circle of life. The atoms my body is made out of once may have belonged to a dinosaur. The water we drink is equally old.
That reminds me from every Lovecraftian stories where the unspeakable abomination once ruled the ancient earth with long lifespan and advanced technology that even the current ones are not even come close
The end credits of Finding nemo just made me feel weird scary looking into endless blue Turning darker with no fish in the scenes just music and credits rolling
If you thought that was scary then ply the video game lol
“91% of deepsea creatures are yet to be indetified”
Expectations: megalodon
Reality: 500 million species of isopod
Tbh like what the video says its the not knowing part gets me. Like idk about any of you but i have this deep fear of not knowing, while yes i do have "practical fears" like what other animal is there or the mere fact its very dark, u can't breath and if u lose any light source or breathing apparatus u don't survive. However like Space i have this want and need to be knowledgeable. Like i don't even care if aliens exist, or if there are any sea creatures out there. I just want to know if they exist or not like some assurance, ofc that's not how life works but man idk anymore.
That’s what I’m saying. People make up shit to make it sound scarier. I mean, it’s scary, but there aren’t any man eating beasts out there in the deep.
@@jmgonzales7701 Don't worry about the Deep Sea Fauna, we already have plans to destroy it while seeking to make yet more i-phones and other crap
Fun Fact: Drowning is something every single human on earth is afraid of. That's why the fear of drowning has no name. Even if you removed your ability to feel fear and you started suffocating, you would still feel fear for your life. It is the single scariest thing possible for a human
This is true. What was it? A woman who lost/damaged her amygdala. She lost her ability to feel fear from all external stimuli, except for when oxygen ran low and she started to suffocate.
I feel like I’m more afraid of burning to death, sounds more painful
@EzekEyes you'd suffocate from smoke in a very similar way to drowning. Either would absolutely suck.
What a load of hooey. But anyway, I’ve heard it can be peaceful once you just let go…
@@EzekEyesI’m pretty sure your nerves would burn off eventually, you’d have no pain after a bit. It’s hard to choose, both are really shitty. Sure, if you’re fully engulfed, your nerves would be burned off and you’d feel no pain, but I feel it’s just not a very dignified death.
Fear of drowing isn't a phobia. Its just survival
Fear of dying is futile...
Yes but having an irrational fear of it is, like being terrified you’re going to drown every time you go in a swimming pool or are in a body of water.
aquaphobia
That sentence literally contradicts itself. A phobia is just a fear, and fear is what plays into a lot of our survival. We wouldn't survive drowning if we didn't fear being underwater so much
@kooseyeok-g2m Yeah, but a phobia is an irrational fear. So being scared of drowning isn’t a phobia unless you refuse to ever go swimming even in a pool because you think you’ll drown. The average person doesn’t have a phobia of drowning, they’ll only be scared of drowning if they’re completely submerged and running out of breath
I've never considered a video I've seen more goddamn messed up than the one of what i thought was the motionless camera on yuri's dead body still recording. It's subtle and beats any amount of gore I've ever seen.
With gore and stuff, you know they don’t feel pain, they’re dead; With drowning, you know they are in horrible unimaginable pain and you know that they are dying and you know nothing can be done.
@@matthewboire6843
They're**
Dying**
😊
@@have_a_good_day420 thanks
@@matthewboire6843 how do you know they feel a lot of pain? Won’t they pass out quickly?
@@clayr.w1829 well it takes 2 minutes to suffocate so that’s a lot of time to be in horrible pain.
11:35 yo we actually do know why deep sea gigantism happens it’s pretty well understood. It happens because for an organism to survive longer without food they need a slower metabolism and to achieve a slower metabolism they need to be bigger organisms. Sounds counter intuitive but in practice that is the outcome. The bigger you are the less food you need over long periods of time if they were smaller they would need similar ratios of food to body weight that large organisms need, however, they would burn through the calories much quicker leading to them needing food more often.
love the video though keep up the good work just search up stuff more thoroughly that you might be confused on 👍❤️
“We, humans, live on earth” zlörp bleurper gluo zigzlorpür zigixiol xixzlorp 💀😭
tiktok humor
@@beepmandhaha9804cry
xlorp sözlq 👽💀
@@beepmandhaha9804Bogos binted?
@@kathe_did you get the photos printed?
I think one of the scariest parts of Bioshock is the knowledge of being trapped at the bottom of the ocean.
Big Daddies, Plasmids, Little Sisters, the various characters... they're just icing on the cake. You are trapped and can't escape, meanwhile the whole society is tearing itself apart.
Even more trapped than usual - as long as there is power, you'll die and respawn in a vita chamber.
Pray it's one with breathable air.
Go play SOMA, as soon as possible if you haven't already.
I'm playing Bioshock right now. Shit's a hard game. I also have no clue what's going on in the story.
@@have_a_good_day420 its peak🗣
@@Killicon93second this. SOMA is a great game that will make you feel things. Not good things.
skinwalkers are from native american folklore, the navajo i believe
Yep, they are creepy
thx I was about to say this. not even close to being a creepypasta.
Lol
@@mandohunter8509Vampires are worse!!
@mmecharlotte thank you for sharing this oh my god. I've never heard a genuine encounter out if fear (and attempted respect) of seeking them out. my culture has a similar figure, (speaking about him angers him, but he isn't evil just mischievous. he's called el pombero u can google him) so I have a natural pre-loaded fear haha
I love the internet sometimes cause when I was young I’d try to explain this fear to people, like I genuinely can’t even get into a pool by myself I’m that spooked of big areas of water, and they’d all look at me like I was speaking a different language. Now I hop on TH-cam and see a bunch of people relating to it and it’s so damn validating love to see it
Same, but I can’t even get in a body of water with ppl .. it’s sucks I’m always in the sand, in the side of the lake , if it’s a big enough boat in in it while everyone is happing fun looking at me like I’m weird 😢😢😢
It depends what you mean. If you're scared to go for a swim close to shore, then that's definitely weird and bordering on irrational. If you're afraid of the open ocean, that's probably very normal.
MIKUUUU
Some fun facts from the biology side of horror fans:
-We know next to nothing about giant/collosal squid, including just how big they can get. The current record is 14.8 feet, 1,036 pounds, and larger beak specimena have been found in sperm whales.
-Greenland sharks are giant, eat corpses, and don't reach maturity until 200. They're one of the chillest things in the sea.
-For decades, sonar detected a false ocean floor. This false floor was made up of something called lantern fish, which make up 90% of all oceanic biomass
-gobbler eel. Look it up.
-Humboldt squid hunt in packs of hundreds. There's video.
-Long fin squid. Look it up.
-Most fish we're used to seeing in aquariums or scuba videos and eating, are juveniles of their species, and even at that stage are way bigger than you realize. Most fish that we consider tasty grow up to be bigger than us, as in, between 5-7 feet long and just as big around
-Orcas don't terrorize us because they've simply chosen not to
-You can fit mount everest in the marianas and still have wiggle room
Anything but Humboldt squid
Orcas simply choosing not to torment us is both calming in a sense that they aren't gonna go "kill" as soon as they see one of our toes, but terrifying in that they probably know how horrifically cruel we can get when a deadly animal takes something of ours we cherish (like a pet or loved one)
just drink the water if you're drowning, cmon.
Nah I tried that but it didn’t work
Skill issue
@@McNacho76did you have a straw?
@@collinhatesthis7761 yeah but it was one of those crapy paper ones they give you at McDonald’s
@@qaztim11 made me laugh out loud thx
6:49 Floyd Collin’s story is terrifying.. Ever heard of John Jones in Nutty Putty cave..? Equally horrifying. Maybe even worse. He was only stuck for 28 hours but he was upside down. He was stuck in a super tight constricted hole basically. They tried to rescue him for an entire day until finally they had to give up and just waited until they knew he was gone. They couldn’t even get his body out after the fact either. He’s still in there… the stuff of nightmares!!
I live in Utah so I hear of Jones all the time
Thanks a lot. In my infinite wisdom I just HAD to look that story up, found a video explaining everything and now I'll be traumatized for days. This is way beyond terrifying.
The video of Yuri drowning is one of the craziest/hardest things to watch
With such a small portionof the ocean actually explored how do we know the mariana trench is actually the deepest hole?
We’ve mapped the entire ocean, We know whats there, We just haven’t actually gone there. Like Mars, we know what’s there we just haven’t stepped foot there.
we've mapped the sea floor. we just haven't traveled through the entirety of the ocean's volume, because that's kind of ridiculous lol.
In short - mapped but not explored!
@@radRadiolarianbro doesn’t understand the concept of radar
It's just a vast desert underwater to put it in a way, it's unexplored because there's nothing to explore
I have thalassaphobia, but more specifically submechanphobia. I genuinely cannot look at a picture of any man made thing submerged in water without my heart beginning to race. Especially statues, ships, planes, and robots of any kind. Did you know there are underwater graveyards? I don’t know why someone would want to be buried underwater, but whatever floats your boat(haha). I had a nightmare last night that I was trapped in a submarine that started to leak which reminded me a lot of the Titan submersible that imploded this summer. This video captures my fear perfectly, thank you. I think that my fear started from when I was a child and nearly drowned a couple of times.
For me it’s the opposite those always intrigue me
Not as much as the ships themselves fully built but still cool
Tbh like what the video says its the not knowing part gets me. Like idk about any of you but i have this deep fear of not knowing, while yes i do have "practical fears" like what other animal is there or the mere fact its very dark, u can't breath and if u lose any light source or breathing apparatus u don't survive. However like Space i have this want and need to be knowledgeable. Like i don't even care if aliens exist, or if there are any sea creatures out there. I just want to know if they exist or not like some assurance, ofc that's not how life works but man idk anymore.
This was the one i was dreading...i knew you would make this video sooner or later and i'm excited to hear what you have to say on this subject. it's hard to describe this feeling that goes beyond fear but it's such a terrifying yet interesting feeling. I kind of like it strangely.
Drowning is one of the ways of dying I'm actually not afraid of. When I was a little kid, and couldn't swim, my cousin and I were rough housing and he pushed me into the pool. I remember sinking to the bottom and trying to scream, it was scary at first but then I just kind of accepted it and started to pass out. I don't remember too much but I do remember having the distinct thought of "Welp, I guess this is it!" then my uncle apparently dove in and pulled me out. I do have a fear of deep water but not a fear of drowning, I just hate the idea of floating above a dark void full of possible water demons.
Subnautica makes me think about Panthalassa (Greek 'Pan'-All 'thalassa'-Sea), the ancient Super Ocean which surrounded Pangaea. The idea of that giant, vast super ocean is so hauntingly fascinating to me. Imagine the creatures that must have lived in Panthalassa 300 Mya.
During that time, apparently it was *safer* than on land, since the animals that lived there weren't bigger than your arm, and everything on land is steadily evolving to be rather dangerous
Sharks were around, yes, but in smaller sizes as some families were still starting out, and others (like Helicoprion's lineage) were dying out
Although...the same can't be theoretically said for your mental health. If we're already incredibly afraid of our current ocean, what more is one *twice the size of it?*
Tl:dr
Panthalassa is safe in regards to animal life, but the size will conjure up nightmares worse than the one our current oceans give
4:26 "Aaaaah I'm drowning Aaaah" it's probably that.
What If the sea is protecting us? All those drowned submarines and those Shipwrecks aren't to defy us but to protect us to never find the horrors that lurk on the deepest oceans
It's a nice idea. Sort of.
Also sounds like copium, given our natural desire to understand everything.
We've been to the deepest depths "many" times
We ain't fiction, stop thinking in fiction
sounds like a pretty good interpretation, might write a little one-off story about it sometime
Nah why would they sink boats if there on the surface
One way I calm my thalassophobiak is to imagine just how DELICIOUS those deep sea creatures would be if I ever get one and put it over the grill 😂
There's a video of someone fishing out a ghost shark and then cooking and eating it
It could go the other way round as well 😅
sorry to break your dreams, but most of them are too watery for people's liking, there are some exception like japanese spider crab (which is known to have a sweet and very soft meat) but it sure isn't a goldmine of good seafood
Not satisfied until every species has been tested
Just shut up.
i plan to become a deep sea biologist, so i've never been afraid of the ocean. especially not the deep sea. whenever i ask people why they're scared of the ocean, they tend to just say it's big and mysterious and creepy and the animals are scary (here's a secret: nothing down there wants to hurt you. to make it short, they're usually pathetic). i've never been able to grasp those last 3 points; they're what makes it alluring. but hearing how detailed and passionate you are in this video finally is helping me understand this fear. :)
for me personally its not that its big or mysterious and creepy its the fact that in no way shape or form am i able to be down there and if i am, i am with the help of machinery ,which, if it fails im going to die immedietely and if i dont the darkness will not let me see anything and if a predator comes by im dead and have no chances even if i am in relatively shallow water even in 30 meters deep water if i cant see everything around me i am scared because of the danger of something that i cant see and the feeling of emptiness and blindness, underwater i cant see anything more that 50 meters away, which is terrifying
Im afraid of it because i am a rational human being who knows i dont belong down there. We are simply intruding on a space we were never meant to be. Saddest thing about the deep ocean is Ive sadly seen walmart bags pretty far down there in documentaries etc. They find so much trash down there, and its shameful. We should be ashamed
It's scary to me because of the loneliness
marine biologist here, I'm even more scared of the ocean because I know lots about it lol
@@vicieux7789 well the animals are mostly calm and is "just" a dangerous environment. If any, more knowledge should reduce the amount of fear regarding non logical fears of the ocean.
if it makes you feel better, you the odds of there being something large, living underwater, not being discovered yet is so low that if there were to be one, there’s probably only 3-5 specimen and you’d never encounter it.
why? Tbh like what the video says its the not knowing part gets me. Like idk about any of you but i have this deep fear of not knowing, while yes i do have "practical fears" like what other animal is there or the mere fact its very dark, u can't breath and if u lose any light source or breathing apparatus u don't survive. However like Space i have this want and need to be knowledgeable. Like i don't even care if aliens exist, or if there are any sea creatures out there. I just want to know if they exist or not like some assurance, ofc that's not how life works but man idk anymore.
I'd argue Subnautica is definitely meant to scare you, it's not outright a horror game sure, but things like the Reaper, Ghost, and Sea Dragon Leviathans are definitely meant to scare you, especially the original versions of the Reapers in Beta that had advanced AI that could hunt you down and find you pretty easily
I used to be severely thalassophobic. Just the thought of the ocean terrified me as a kid. It's one of the reasons why I preferred swimming pools over the beach.
Back in the '90s, my dad bought us a MS-DOS educational game named "Undersea Adventure" which simultaneously kindled my interest in marine life and triggered my thalassophobia. It prolly didn't help that our IBM PC had problematic sound support so we initially played UA w/o the cheerful sounds and music. The "3-D Undersea World" part, a Doom-like map that you can freely roam around in, felt like a mini horror game, lol.
I’m from Japan which is surrounded by ocean.Also lived in Seattle & LA in my childhood which are both facing ocean. And I have fear of depth.When I go swimming in sea, I try not to think about
what is underneath.
Then this came up to my mind.
What do people living in extremely inland feel about fear of deep sea?
Places like Bolivia , or central Asian countries, their land is so far from sea right?
There must be groups of people that never seen an ocean for generations.
All humans share the fear of the unknown, one could even say it’s the reason religions were created
I’m from Siberia, I don’t care about creepy ocean creatures and thalassophobia
@@GodlikeOD you would if you were 1000 feet below the water
@@GodlikeOD Wait, you have Lake Baikalu and I thought that lake is fxxn deep
God I am so brave for even watching this lol. I have always been afraid of the open seas, not because of the creatures or the mystery of it, but because of the fear of drowning and be submerged in it, never to resurface again. I remember that one time my friend convinced me to go jetski with her and I for once , obliged just to face my fears. I ended up crying and shaking in fear. Needless to say, I never tried doing sea activities again unless it’s somewhere shallow or where my head could still surface out of the water. Don’t get me started with boats and ships because I always felt nauseous whenever there’s a dire need of me to ride and get into one of those.
At 14:17 you said that Wendigos and Skinwalkers are creepypastas, but they are part of Algonquian and Navajo folklore.
That part bothered me tbh
I loath this kind of ignorance. It's a big peeve of mine. It's not very hard to figure out that the modern conception of the skinwalker and wendigo is wrong
Yeah, Wendigo are not skeletal deer demons. They're people who have been possessed by a spirit during times of famine and harsh winters that make them eat other people.
Skinwalkers are not shapeshifting cannibal beasts. Skinwalkers are Navajo Witchdoctors that practice taboo rituals and wear the pelts of animals to obtain their abilities (Forgive me if I'm wrong, I am Indigenous but the Skinwalker is not part of my culture).
Sucks whenever I inform and clarify things about my culture I'm just shat on.
I think his point is that windigos/skinwalkers aren't real. They're just stories.
@@Stable_Genius as far as _you specifically_ know
The Bloop was an Ice Quake.
The sound you provided was sped up so the anomaly could be better heard, located, and distinguished between the natural noises for untrained ears.
please never stop posting man! And holy sh*t the video of the guy drowning had me shocked this is so scary i knew you'd make a vid about thalasophobia and im not disappointed
great music choices for this video, I love the Dreamscape channel, it's perfect for this type of content
Yesssirr! New video by the goat himself, already know it’s gonna be a certified banger 😤😤
Thank you for the video!
The bloop turned out to be ice sheets falling into water in pretty sure.
My worst nightmare is someone chaining me up to a brick while I’m in a scuba suit and getting pushed into the ocean right over the marina trench and I have to watch as I get dragged down to the bottom until I get crushed by the pressure.
Poisonous corals in shallow waters has been enough to instill a fear and respect for the sea. I.e. the corals found in the shallow waters of the Red Sea.
sea urchin
@@gob8440 have you swum in the Red sea? I've grown up in Sweden. There are huge tuna fish, poisonous corals and fish - like the stone fish. The most fish and corals aren't poisonous, but the ones that are SHOULD instill a certain caution.
Alr I guess
the entire ocean floor has been mapped, we just havent explored the volume of the ocean. You could say we haven't explored the majority of the atmosphere as well, there's no need to, we know its mostly nothing. it's a common miscoception that we don't know whats in 80٪ of the ocean we know what's there, its water😂.
we also havent mapped the entire volume of the crust or mantle as well, cuz its dirt and magma. if there was something notable floating in the middle of the ocean, crust, mantle, ir atmosphere we would have noticed it using sonar, satellite, or the many other methods we have to detect anomalies and such.😂
Tbh like what the video says its the not knowing part gets me. Like idk about any of you but i have this deep fear of not knowing, while yes i do have "practical fears" like what other animal is there or the mere fact its very dark, u can't breath and if u lose any light source or breathing apparatus u don't survive. However like Space i have this want and need to be knowledgeable. Like i don't even care if aliens exist, or if there are any sea creatures out there. I just want to know if they exist or not like some assurance, ofc that's not how life works but man idk anymore.
@@user-dd2ku9mr8g atleast that entirely proves that there are no creatures, elves, dwarves or even lost species of monsters there or any animals. Now we just have to prove that aliens either exist or don't.
0:58 I think that we have heavily influenced the upper seas. (climate change, pollution, boats, things like that)
just watched the entire 34:49 minute video in 39 seconds. Such a great video. Thank you again for another amazing and long video ❤
World record speedrun
@@Cresendex I love that one part where you were talking about the ocean and the fear of it
@@BlenderRenderChickenTender Same
A nyctophobia vid would kick ass keep up the great work
Bro, you put way too much effort into these videos. I have only watched around 8 minutes, and I am already loving it. Keep making content like this.
22:41 ive actually seen a video on the Bloop, and it explains that the sound was from glaciers moving and like, breaking off. the sound people always play is actually extremely sped up and pitched up, because the raw audio is at such a deep pitch that it can barely even be heard aside from a VERY low rumble.
"We can't influence the ocean"
Rising ocean temperatures around the globe, dying coral reefs, and garbage piles the size of mountains: 💀💀💀
god ur deep dives are what makes me go to sleep at night, im not even intersted in fears of certain things or phobias, but your content and your way of (explaining?) طريقة طرحك and how you connect it with other forms of media and ur voice too man i just love this channel pls make like 50 videos a day i beg you pleaseeeeeeeeee
your videos are so well made, i hope you make it big
Excited to listen to this one while I play Majora's Mask! I've been having a rough time lately and I need a distraction lol
Im a skinwalker
I hope you see this in a decade and cringe at your comment.
claustrophobia is associated with a fear of tight spaces but in and of itself usually stems from a fear of suffocation in general
there are plenty of theories as to why gigantism occurs, the most probable to me seems to be heat conservation and by extent, energy preservation.
the bigger the animal, the harder it is for the heat to escape, thus requiring less food, which is scarce down there.
I love that you mentioned the creepy sounds in the ocean. However, I you should've mentioned that this recordings are sped up.
I just watch your video for the first time and I gotta say you explain this better than other youtubers who covered the same topic especially Jacob Geller with his patronizing tone and frequently repeating words from other experts rather than making the conclusion himself
Just one more video before bed
The video before bed:
Subbed, please make more of these phobia videos, i really love them
Can you make a video about the inside of the Titanic. I don't know really how to explain how eerie the interior is. The whole ship makes you feel trapped in such a big thing that you cannot escape, forced to die the design of the staircases and various parts of the ship give a really weird feeling. Like a hotel thats gonna get bombed and you are helpless.
Love your space video , now watching this❤
You're comparable to Solar Sands! I love these videos! This one is just as good as his!
As somebody who has drowned before, it's not a peaceful feeling at all, and the worst of the pain isn't the lack of oxygen. It's the feeling you get in your head, it feels like it going to explode. And to whoever is wondering I was a young child who didn't know how to swim and kinda fell out of my doughnut floatie in a lazy river and the lifegard didnt realize until i was already unconscious underwater.🤦🏽♀️
I would not consider drowning to be a phobia because a phobia is an irrational fear of something and drowning is not an irrational fear,
Dying in the vacuum of space is arguably less painful than drowning. For some unknown reason, you'll go unconscious in space in a matter of seconds regardless of how long you'd normally be able to hold your breath. While drowning, you may manage to hold your breath in a vain attempt to survive from anywhere from 30 seconds to almost 3 minutes, and then you'd still be conscious for another minute or two after inhaling the water.
Also here's a scary concept - we know so little about it. We also know there are some marine animals that have very high intelligence with emotions and possibly self-awareness. Who knows what could be evolving in the deep ocean. It's not entirely impossible for some sort of human-level species to be evolving down there, learning to make do with what they can find. Mining the deep ocean floor, building technology of their own, and the possibility that some day they may emerge and come into contact with us. Who knows what will happen... If they are anything like humans, it might not be pretty...
The premise of subnautica is terrifying. Stranded on an ocean world... It would be interesting to see a remake that truly encompasses the reality of these hypothetical ocean worlds. A planet with a global ocean is very likely extremely deep. Just look at europa, the ocean under its ice is likely 40-60 miles deep. A water world could theoretically be 100s or even 1000s of miles deep. Unfathomably deep. Abyssal. Bottomless.
Sir, you cannot reclassify thalassophobia as “fear of the unknown” cause there’s already a classification for that: Xenophobia, or Agnostophobia. Also, the fear of drowning falls under the motif of aquaphobia.
Tbh like what the video says its the not knowing part gets me. Like idk about any of you but i have this deep fear of not knowing, while yes i do have "practical fears" like what other animal is there or the mere fact its very dark, u can't breath and if u lose any light source or breathing apparatus u don't survive. However like Space i have this want and need to be knowledgeable. Like i don't even care if aliens exist, or if there are any sea creatures out there. I just want to know if they exist or not like some assurance, ofc that's not how life works but man idk anymore.
2 things we should consider when talking about the unknown part of the ocean.
1. When you say that most of the ocean is unexplored, people usually mean that as in physically mapping out the ocean. That doesn’t necessarily mean we don’t know what’s out there, mostly because the unexplored stuff is a bunch of empty dead space of just sand and sea grass.
2. Even though the thing you said about sea gigantism is true, sustaining large life forms near the bottom of the ocean is near impossible. Something like a shark or whale could not survive at such a depth because there is just not enough food l down there to sustain their bodies. Yes, whales and squids can go a pretty low depth and still survive (around the continental slope) however there’s still a limit on how deep they can go before they die
We need to give this guy credit when the term Submersiphobia becomes up and coming
16:35 the music sounds like if my computer is overheating and about to explode and keeps catching me off guard
I hope you do a vid on nyctophobia (extreme fear of the dark)
Yes!!
30:55 this whole video I was like subnautica? Subnautica? Subnautica? And then it came on screen and I was like YEAAAAAAH
When I was a little kid, I was scared of water so this kid at my swimming lessons held me under the water. My grandma made fun of me for years until I actually had a mental break because of my head accidentally going under when I was swimming. It’s genuinely changed my perspective on life.
oof that sucks man :(
I can identify with your fear of drowning, there's a scene in "Turistas" where the characters have to escape from the people trying to kill them and have to swim thru these caves without any air tanks and depending on finding little air pockets to not drown. It is very difficult to watch especially if you have this fear
cant blame cats from hating water
This guy is a master storyteller and explains my fears expertly. I don't know if that's a good thing for me...
This is just like my fear of spiders, I hate them so much, and I'm absolutely deathly afraid of them, yet I'm so curious about them anyways
If you haven't played subnautica, I highly recommend it. I don't typically like survival crafting games, but subnautica became one of my favorite games. It made me afraid of the ocean. I'd never felt so accomplished after finishing a game. I didn't look up anything i was supposed to do to get further. So that "lost at sea with an impossible task in front of you," plus the sheer TERROR i had to overcome, made for the greatest feeling of victory in a video game. I was actually sad when I was about to finish it. It was an adventure.
Yeah son. Fuck the deep ocean waters. Nothing but fucking trouble at every corners turn.
Cheers 🍻
For a sec i thought this was a repost, but then i realized i was originally thinking of the submechaphobia video. 'Ither way, fantastic video, and I can't wait to see what else you have in store 😁👍
Why did i laugh so much at 0:50 😭😭
My greatest ocean fear is ocean pressure related deaths
Like 120 feet during a freedive forces water in your lungs
The fear of drowning is aquaphobia
I have severe Thallassophobia, but I have zero fear of drowning, because oxygen deprivation actually makes you feel very calm and peaceful before you go. I'm afraid of what LIVES in the ocean, and the idea of being vulnerable from literally any direction. I also live on an island nation surrounded by extremely violent waters containing a massive population of great whites and tiger sharks.
Tbh like what the video says its the not knowing part gets me. Like idk about any of you but i have this deep fear of not knowing, while yes i do have "practical fears" like what other animal is there or the mere fact its very dark, u can't breath and if u lose any light source or breathing apparatus u don't survive. However like Space i have this want and need to be knowledgeable. Like i don't even care if aliens exist, or if there are any sea creatures out there. I just want to know if they exist or not like some assurance, ofc that's not how life works but man idk anymore.
Deepsea gigantism is pretty fascinating. The basic idea is that in the cold, dark depths of the ocean, being bigger helps creatures conserve heat better. Larger bodies have a lower surface area to volume ratio, which means they lose heat more slowly compared to smaller bodies. So, in a place where it's tough to stay warm, being big is an advantage because it helps these animals retain what little heat they can generate.
"It's the journey of your lifetime. The greatest journey Man can take!"
-Stockton Rush
*"You don't belong here..."*
-Dagon
Technically Skin Walkers Aren't "Just A Creepypasta" They Are Part Of Native American Folklore So They Are More Folklore Creatures
I've run both outlast games no sweat, killed hoards of necromorphs in dead space without a care. But subnautica hits a special "fuck nope" button in my soul that stops me playing longer than an hour hahaha
Nice boards of Canada tune playing in the background at the beginning 👌.. also great video. I have thalassaphobia but love watching videos about it
What is the name of that song???
LETS GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!
4:11 being scared of something enough to make a word for it is kind of impressive
32:50 did bro go underwater to record
As Markiplier eloquently puts it, “FUCK THE OCEAN.”
Phobias are irrational fears. Fearing suffocation isn't irrational. (Suffocation = death. Preservation of life is prime motivator.) I guess it can't therefore be classed as a phobia. Hence no name.
I am not an adventurer by any means but I do have an intense fascination with the deep ocean and as technology gets better and the commercialization of recreational deep sea tourism seems to be inevitable, it will be hard for me to resist taking a tour on a deep sea sub when that possibility becomes a reality. Would really be a life changing experience I think, to essentially enter another world without leaving the only one I've known
What if the kraken truly was real but is now extinct and we just haven't found the remains?
What a childish fantasy
It wouldn't be possible to find remains, also that is a real theory and not some unrealistic "childish fantasy" since there used to be many many more giant creatures under water that since have gone extinct.
@KoolKidsJuice giant squids aren't even close to sinking a ship
it's like comparing a hydrogen bomb to a coughing baby
maybe huge octopus or squid existed sure but maybe like 70 million years ago which is not even close to CE and almost impossible that the creature survived (if it even existed)
the theory that it sunk ships is so out of place, why tf would they sink a ship? for fun? they would have literally 0 reason for that, and only "evidence" we have are tales from sailors
@@adriansparrow4554yeah millions of year ago lol
18:28 for me I have a different take on it. Seeing shipwrecks fill me with hope because it's like acknowledging the sacrifices people have made in attempt to understand the unknown and the fact humanity hasn't given up on exploring the sea yet no matter how many attempts it takes just makes me feel hopeful for the future and the chances to one day fully understand the sea.
To complement the corrections about Skinwalkers, Slenderman spawned from a picture made for a photoshop contest thread on a forum, not The Eight Pages/'a video game.' Heck, before the game, the most popular iteration of it was from a video web series. Good video otherwise, but a little more research wouldn't hurt.
is it just me or those creatures under water sounded soothing, i can fall asleep in those sounds
No discussion of thalassaphobia is complete without mentioning Subnautica
22:40
The bloop is not a creature. It’s actually just the sounds of icebergs and melting sea ice. However, the “upsweep” sound is still unexplained.
"we've only mapped out and explored 20% of the ocean🤓"
No. That is entirely wrong. Also, Skinwalkers aren't a creepypasta, they're native American legends.
And we have mapped about 80% of the ocean, and been to like 25%.
There's no Megalodon or giant Kraken in the mariana trench, what the hell would it eat there?
Also, those 91%, most of that is jellyfish, small deep sea fish, amphipods, and small squid.
the ocean is still dangerous and scary
I've been swimming my whole life, so I got that advantage. I don't say I fear the ocean, but I respect it. I know it ALWAYS has the final say. But a LITTLE bit of fear of the ocean I think is sensible.