I just came from Daily Dose of Internet video, where was only a fragment with rescuing you, and for me it looked like scary situation and very dangerous. I'm happy to see full video and explanation and also see, that there were people to help immediately
Glad you found us for the full explqination! We want to highlight the importance to everyone with this video of diving with people trained in freediving rescue procedures :) Lilly learned a lot from this and hasn't had another incident in the past 3 years of diving even further distances 🥰
@@androopr I just came from the same video because I recognized you and knew from your Facebook that you were also a freediver. Hey Lilly it's Shems from Apple!
That's exactly why I wanted to share my blackout experience 🙂 people may not realize this could happen so it's important to have a buddy who knows how to rescue swiftly - really happy to hear this was helpful information 🥰
@@cpypcy yes you can if you ignore your brain telling you to get oxygen after 20 seconds of diving and keep diving normally like these divers do then you can hold your breath for 1-2 minutes but its dangerous because you even professional divers can pass out at that point lol
@@peregrinefalcon9513 So when you listen to your body and you start to feel pressure on your lungs and return to the surface, do you always avoid black out 100 %?
Wow I got chills seeing Lilly blackout with her eyes open. It looked... well, it looked a lot worse than it was. I would be a lot less calm than the safety divers if something like that happened in front of me! I'm really glad to hear she was fine and has never gone through that experience again.
For sure! We never aim to blackout but when mistakes are made they can happen. With a properly trained team the diver will come to from a blackout quickly and experience no ill effects except for potentially a short term headache and a lot of embarrassment 🙂
Thank you! I am embarrassed a bit by the video, but think it is important to show how important it is to dive with people trained to rescue a freediving blackout. And wanted to share the mistakes I made to help others avoid them 🙂
@@androopr I thinks this is very good content. Because it shows what many freedivers know can happen (when pushing the limit etc) And how to react to black out. As long as you have buddie(s) to watch you. Great video. Thanks for sharing😊
Absolutely! I really appreciate your feedback :) I think we will share Andrew’s massive LMC from 4 years ago of his first mini-competition. We dug up the footage and will probably share in a few weeks too for the same reasons.
This is definitely one of those things that scares the HELL out of me. It's something with not being able to breathe that scares me in free diving, or any sort of water sport.
For sure! We wanted to share this video so that everyone can realize how much trouble could happen without people there who knew what to do, even though the video is embarassing 🥰
Thank you for your excellent explanation of your experience. I grew up doing lots of snorkeling and probably pushed myself way to far many times. Now that I'm older and wanting to start free diving and spearfishing, knowing about the blackout, I'm wanting to go about this new experience safely and your video and dialogue is outstanding. Glad you were safe during your blackout.
Thank you for sharing your experience Yesterday I also blacked out during a local freediving competition. The symptoms were very similar to what you described. I watched your video earlier and your explanations poped up in mind during my attempt. But still I was thinking that I'm doing fine)) Thanks to our wonderful rescue team, I'm fine and going to learn from that.
amazing what people can do, but so scary :D I almost died as a child during a storm at sea. fear of water did not appear, but being under water for a long time is not very comfortable, and my maximum is about 1 minute. but it's really amazing what training can achieve , hope all your dives will be successful 👍
Thank you so much! After swimming regularly for a few months I started to scuba dive, and after a few months of doing that regularly I tried freediving for the first time! Swimming and scuba helped me lose my fear from the water and then I completely fell in love with being underwater! Thank you so much for the kind words
Glad to hear you learned something 🙂without someone around who can rescue you it could be deadly so make sure you have someone with you who is trained 🥰I appreciate you sharing that!
I'm very interested in medical stuff, so I hope this doesn't sound cruel. It's super interesting and very fascinating to me how fast you lost colour in the face and how pale your eyes were after coming back. Really shows what's going on in the body and how certain mechanics immediately stop. Your eyes looked very disoriented. I only blacked out once in my life so far and it sure is a mean feeling. It's scary but super fascinating. To make this a bit less creepy though: I'm very glad you're ok and nothing happened. It is absolutely impressive how far you made it and how long you held your breath.
Very good comment and observations - I was very confused right after coming too and then realized after a few seconds and felt so embarassed! The blackout is the body's amazing protective mechanism to conserve remaining O2 to support the brain and vitals from damage. When muscles and consiouness are shut down then it buys time for safety team to rescue, but if this process is delayed significantly then major problems coming back will occur! Thanks so much for your thoughtful comment and I didn't take it as creepy at all!
Damnn glad you’re okay. I had this experience once when me and my friends spin ourselves till we get dizzy then we get pushed to the pool. I went first and I almost drowned and no one helped me because they thought I was faking it because I am an excellent swimmer. Kinda traumatizing lol
@@androopr I was drowning for like a minute 💀💀 Luckily I was able to hold out. Usually I can last 2 minutes submerged but I was panicking like a headless chicken 😂 They never believed me till they tried which was funny 😂😂
@@androopr The pool wasn’t deep, It was only like 5.5 feet. It’s just that when you’re dizzy you don’t know where the top is, like the world was tilting or sumth 😂 It’s a hell of an experience for sure
Wow, I'm impressed. I enjoy apnea swimming. Completing laps is very satisfaying. That kinda makes me scared but also it makes me want to find actual training to prevent it from happening.
Absolutely! Freediving is such a rewarding experience, and that's why we wanted to show this video - so that people can see the risk of doing this without someone around who knows how to rescue you 🥰
This happened to me when casually training too. Thank christ I was with a buddy othwrwise I would have drowned. How quickly I went from feeling like I wanted to breath into the euphoric state was literally 10 seconds. No warning contractions. ALWAYS DIVE WITH A BUDDY!!!!
I know the memory gap issues from martial arts, when you choke someone out. When the brain shuts down it doesn't shut down everything at once. First off, colour fades. Then you get tunnel vision as a black curtain closes in from your peripheral vision. Then your short time memory shuts down. And another second later you are out. In self defense this is also an actual problem, since an attacker who has literally been choked unconscious often doesn't grasp that he was already out cold.
This same thing happened to me a year ago, except it was at the bottom of a 15ft deep pool. I purged myself of CO2 and did back and forth laps at the bottom of the pool. Then I woke up in the hospital. Doctors told me that after passing out, the lack of air triggered a seizure which I was experiencing even after the lifeguards pulled me out and I arrived at the hospital. Because the lifeguards were so used to seeing me hold my breath, it wasn’t until after 5 minutes lying at the bottom that they realized I was asleep.
Wow that's nuts! 5 mins blacked out is no joke, and really glad you are still alive. There are a few world champion freedivers who have passed away in the same manner - lifeguards didn't think much of it because they're so used to seeing them under forever. Lifeguards aren't trained enough on freediving blackouts but here in Canada it's getting better
Great question! Competition rules disqualify your performance if you have a blackout. Even though I went farther than I was planning it doesn't count, which is a good rule though so that it promotes safe diving 😊
imagine had no one been there. we watched this woman dance on the rim of death, twirling until the divers helped her pick a side. this is as terrifying as it is informative.
Definitely! I just read of someone who was doing this with no one around a few days ago and unfortunately had a blackout and didn't make it 😕 happens too often which is why we were ok with sharing such an embarassing video !
It was scary seeing it the first time, but it is interesting seeing how quick the recovery is with proper rescue procedures, and very interesting experience :D
Wow I also freedive alone, super thank you for this information. By the way, if I feel uncomfortable feelings is that the sign that i need to get out in the water?
Your very welcome, glad to hear it was helpful! Uncomfortable feelings usually start long before you actually are too low on oxygen - but either way don't freedive alone anymore because we can misjudged our bodies from time to time and that would be deadly alone :(
That is spooky. I have seen other swimmers black out like this. Their training at not breathing is so intense they will, as seen, literally swim until they drown given a chance. The average person, like me, can go only so far before we lose our air and come up without ever being truly low on oxygen. It is how we are wired and how our software works. Training to get good at something is great. Training to the level of suicide takes a different mindset. It is good they have safety people nearby.
Why is it taboo to show blackouts? i think they are very educational to watch and look at multiple times. And even better when you get the diver as the narrating the video
Good question, the answer is too long to be able to properly type here, but to briefly summarize: Cause- When we hold our breath underwater our oxygen levels slowly deplete to a point where it is too low to sustain consciousness. The blackout is our bodies' protective measure to prevent damage to our vitals, as it preserves the little remaining oxygen to protect the brain and vital organs. Prevent - by training and progressing in slow increments, and learning to recognize the warning signs (tunnel vision, fuzzy thoughts, warm feelings, feel like you can go forever, etc)
Can I always avoid unconsiousness when I dont go beyond my limits, lets say I will be underwater 3 minutes, then my body feels pressure, so I immediately return to the surface? Thank you for an answer.
Andrew can hold my breath for 7:25 and Lilly can for 4:30 without moving :) the world record is by an amazing athlete Branko Petrovic who can do about 12 minutes on regular air!!!
Just thinking of doing free dive makes me scared. Tho it'll be an "Achievement Unlocked" once a person gets the hang of it. It'll be awesome! 💪🏽 Thanks for these kinds of videos! ❤️
Definitely! That's how I felt after being terrified of the water all my life! In about 6 months I went to feeling comfortable, then to falling in love with any second in the water 🥰
If this was helpful, be sure to watch Andrew explain the time he needed to be rescued th-cam.com/video/zqC2DkLvanQ/w-d-xo.html
I just came from Daily Dose of Internet video, where was only a fragment with rescuing you, and for me it looked like scary situation and very dangerous. I'm happy to see full video and explanation and also see, that there were people to help immediately
Glad you found us for the full explqination! We want to highlight the importance to everyone with this video of diving with people trained in freediving rescue procedures :)
Lilly learned a lot from this and hasn't had another incident in the past 3 years of diving even further distances 🥰
Me too!!
Same
@@androopr I just came from the same video because I recognized you and knew from your Facebook that you were also a freediver. Hey Lilly it's Shems from Apple!
same here
Until I saw the video, I didn't even know there's possibility of blackout while diving by yourself. It's great info, thank you.
That's exactly why I wanted to share my blackout experience 🙂 people may not realize this could happen so it's important to have a buddy who knows how to rescue swiftly - really happy to hear this was helpful information 🥰
@@androopr yes, and it's definitely dangerous if no one else there to help you. Glad now I know it.
@@androopr Hah! Joke's on you, I can't hold my breath long enough for blackout.
@@cpypcy yes you can if you ignore your brain telling you to get oxygen after 20 seconds of diving and keep diving normally like these divers do then you can hold your breath for 1-2 minutes but its dangerous because you even professional divers can pass out at that point lol
@@peregrinefalcon9513 So when you listen to your body and you start to feel pressure on your lungs and return to the surface, do you always avoid black out 100 %?
Even when Lily smiled after blacking out, her smile was so bright and beautiful . Much love and I’m glad these safety protocols are being shown!
Thank youuu so much! I was embarrassed that I had a blackout but very grateful for the safety team doing a great job! 🥰🥰🥰
Listen carefully as Lilly explains the mistakes leading up to her first (and only) blackout from 3 years ago so you can avoid them in your diving.
Wow I got chills seeing Lilly blackout with her eyes open. It looked... well, it looked a lot worse than it was. I would be a lot less calm than the safety divers if something like that happened in front of me! I'm really glad to hear she was fine and has never gone through that experience again.
For sure! We never aim to blackout but when mistakes are made they can happen. With a properly trained team the diver will come to from a blackout quickly and experience no ill effects except for potentially a short term headache and a lot of embarrassment 🙂
Thats a long distance underwater! Smiling after blackout aswell. Good suport by your team there. Quick respons👌
Thank you! I am embarrassed a bit by the video, but think it is important to show how important it is to dive with people trained to rescue a freediving blackout.
And wanted to share the mistakes I made to help others avoid them 🙂
@@androopr I thinks this is very good content. Because it shows what many freedivers know can happen (when pushing the limit etc) And how to react to black out. As long as you have buddie(s) to watch you. Great video. Thanks for sharing😊
Absolutely! I really appreciate your feedback :) I think we will share Andrew’s massive LMC from 4 years ago of his first mini-competition. We dug up the footage and will probably share in a few weeks too for the same reasons.
This is definitely one of those things that scares the HELL out of me. It's something with not being able to breathe that scares me in free diving, or any sort of water sport.
Maybe scuba is for you - it's a lotta fun too!
Phewww I'm relieved! I'm glad there was a lot of people readily available to help you and that you're fine ☺️ that looked scary...
For sure! We wanted to share this video so that everyone can realize how much trouble could happen without people there who knew what to do, even though the video is embarassing 🥰
Thank you for your excellent explanation of your experience. I grew up doing lots of snorkeling and probably pushed myself way to far many times. Now that I'm older and wanting to start free diving and spearfishing, knowing about the blackout, I'm wanting to go about this new experience safely and your video and dialogue is outstanding. Glad you were safe during your blackout.
Excellent breakdown of events, thanks for making this.
Thank you! Appreciate it 😊 I'd rather not have this video but since it happened I wanted to share what went wrong and what I learned😀
That is amazing you didnt even know how to swim and then you learn and start freediving!
Amazing work underwater! Glad you are okay! This video definitely strengthens knowledge on safety!
Thank you for your kind words, I'm happy to hear you feel it's a helpful video too 😊
I saw you on daily dose of internet.....
😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
Welcome!! Hopefully you learned something from the full explanation in this longer version! 🥰🙂
Thank you for sharing your experience
Yesterday I also blacked out during a local freediving competition.
The symptoms were very similar to what you described.
I watched your video earlier and your explanations poped up in mind during my attempt. But still I was thinking that I'm doing fine))
Thanks to our wonderful rescue team, I'm fine and going to learn from that.
amazing what people can do, but so scary :D
I almost died as a child during a storm at sea. fear of water did not appear, but being under water for a long time is not very comfortable, and my maximum is about 1 minute. but it's really amazing what training can achieve
, hope all your dives will be successful 👍
Thank you so much! After swimming regularly for a few months I started to scuba dive, and after a few months of doing that regularly I tried freediving for the first time! Swimming and scuba helped me lose my fear from the water and then I completely fell in love with being underwater! Thank you so much for the kind words
Oh man, I use to do as many under water laps by myself across a pool, until I ran out of breath. Not doing that anymore lol
Glad to hear you learned something 🙂without someone around who can rescue you it could be deadly so make sure you have someone with you who is trained 🥰I appreciate you sharing that!
I came from daily dose of internet
☺️, and left by learning something new 😄.
Thank you 💝🙏
I'm very interested in medical stuff, so I hope this doesn't sound cruel. It's super interesting and very fascinating to me how fast you lost colour in the face and how pale your eyes were after coming back. Really shows what's going on in the body and how certain mechanics immediately stop. Your eyes looked very disoriented. I only blacked out once in my life so far and it sure is a mean feeling. It's scary but super fascinating.
To make this a bit less creepy though: I'm very glad you're ok and nothing happened. It is absolutely impressive how far you made it and how long you held your breath.
Very good comment and observations - I was very confused right after coming too and then realized after a few seconds and felt so embarassed!
The blackout is the body's amazing protective mechanism to conserve remaining O2 to support the brain and vitals from damage. When muscles and consiouness are shut down then it buys time for safety team to rescue, but if this process is delayed significantly then major problems coming back will occur!
Thanks so much for your thoughtful comment and I didn't take it as creepy at all!
Damnn glad you’re okay. I had this experience once when me and my friends spin ourselves till we get dizzy then we get pushed to the pool. I went first and I almost drowned and no one helped me because they thought I was faking it because I am an excellent swimmer. Kinda traumatizing lol
Wow! That's quite the game haha. No doubt that would have been traumatizing - how long till they realized something was wrong?
@@androopr I was drowning for like a minute 💀💀 Luckily I was able to hold out. Usually I can last 2 minutes submerged but I was panicking like a headless chicken 😂
They never believed me till they tried which was funny 😂😂
Wow that's crazy! A minute under when you're not doing it intentionally is a very long time and that wouldn't have been a good experience! 😮
@@androopr The pool wasn’t deep, It was only like 5.5 feet. It’s just that when you’re dizzy you don’t know where the top is, like the world was tilting or sumth 😂 It’s a hell of an experience for sure
😂😂
thank you for sharing.
You are welcome 🙂🥰
Wow, I'm impressed. I enjoy apnea swimming. Completing laps is very satisfaying. That kinda makes me scared but also it makes me want to find actual training to prevent it from happening.
Absolutely! Freediving is such a rewarding experience, and that's why we wanted to show this video - so that people can see the risk of doing this without someone around who knows how to rescue you 🥰
Thanks for sharing
You're welcome again - hope the analysis was helpful information 🥰
This happened to me when casually training too. Thank christ I was with a buddy othwrwise I would have drowned. How quickly I went from feeling like I wanted to breath into the euphoric state was literally 10 seconds. No warning contractions. ALWAYS DIVE WITH A BUDDY!!!!
I know the memory gap issues from martial arts, when you choke someone out.
When the brain shuts down it doesn't shut down everything at once.
First off, colour fades. Then you get tunnel vision as a black curtain closes in from your peripheral vision. Then your short time memory shuts down. And another second later you are out.
In self defense this is also an actual problem, since an attacker who has literally been choked unconscious often doesn't grasp that he was already out cold.
I came from the TikTok. Wanted to see the full story. Thank you!
Really glad you found it :) hope you learned something from Lilly's examination of what went wrong!
Hello everyone this is your daily dose of INTERNET
Welcome everyone! Hope you are learning lots with the full explanation by Lilly 😁
lol how did u know
This same thing happened to me a year ago, except it was at the bottom of a 15ft deep pool. I purged myself of CO2 and did back and forth laps at the bottom of the pool. Then I woke up in the hospital. Doctors told me that after passing out, the lack of air triggered a seizure which I was experiencing even after the lifeguards pulled me out and I arrived at the hospital. Because the lifeguards were so used to seeing me hold my breath, it wasn’t until after 5 minutes lying at the bottom that they realized I was asleep.
Wow that's nuts! 5 mins blacked out is no joke, and really glad you are still alive. There are a few world champion freedivers who have passed away in the same manner - lifeguards didn't think much of it because they're so used to seeing them under forever. Lifeguards aren't trained enough on freediving blackouts but here in Canada it's getting better
Really appreciate you sharing with everyone 🤙
@@androopr Thank you 🙏 best of luck - and safety - to all who brave the water!
Good job
The safety team acted did a great job acting so quickly and kept me safe 🥰
Thank you 🙂
Who came from daily dose of internet?
Lots of people already! 🤙
me
Me lol
me
XD
Wow! I was REALLY scared at 2:16...
It's why we always dive with people we can trust our lives with - just in case!
2:41 wow that‘s crazy how you because of your blackout thought that you completed the dive 😳. But you did very good tho.
It's so crazy how you just get so confused and out of it and then after 15 seconds of breathing back to normal!
Since you blacked out during the competition does that disqualify you? I mean I think you did an amazing job and surpassed what u were reaching for.
Great question! Competition rules disqualify your performance if you have a blackout. Even though I went farther than I was planning it doesn't count, which is a good rule though so that it promotes safe diving 😊
I'm so sorry but I'm glad it promotes safe diving. You were a winner that day
@@androopr I was wondering about this too... Good luck in your future competitions and thank you for posting the video!
@@Shullf2011 thanks so much!
daily dose of interest
Ya!
Yes ma'am I'm glad you face your fear and conquer the water my mom's a grown woman and still scared to learn how to swim lol
It was one of the best decisions I ever made! Thank you so much 🥰
- Lilly
imagine had no one been there. we watched this woman dance on the rim of death, twirling until the divers helped her pick a side. this is as terrifying as it is informative.
Definitely! I just read of someone who was doing this with no one around a few days ago and unfortunately had a blackout and didn't make it 😕 happens too often which is why we were ok with sharing such an embarassing video !
We were just watching a random Daily Dose of Internet Video and I said “That looks like Lilly!” Very impressed with everything!
Black out is scary but once you experience it and THANK GOD survive its kinda cool experience isn't it
It was scary seeing it the first time, but it is interesting seeing how quick the recovery is with proper rescue procedures, and very interesting experience :D
Daily dose of internet crew! Pretty scary ngl, but u did sick. Stay safe
Thank you! I learned a lot from this and can now go further without incident 🥰
Thank you👍👌👌
You're Welcome 😊 wish I didn't have a video like this to share though :D
Thank god one of ur buddies reacted quickly
Yeah! The safety team did a great job and I'm very grateful for them!
Thank you for the info when I am diving I will make sure I have more air in the water thank you
You're welcome, glad it was helpful!
this is so crazy 😲
You’re a beast 🫡
Daily dose brought me
Welcome! 😁 Hope you found the full explanation insightful
Wow I also freedive alone, super thank you for this information. By the way, if I feel uncomfortable feelings is that the sign that i need to get out in the water?
Your very welcome, glad to hear it was helpful! Uncomfortable feelings usually start long before you actually are too low on oxygen - but either way don't freedive alone anymore because we can misjudged our bodies from time to time and that would be deadly alone :(
That is spooky. I have seen other swimmers black out like this. Their training at not breathing is so intense they will, as seen, literally swim until they drown given a chance. The average person, like me, can go only so far before we lose our air and come up without ever being truly low on oxygen. It is how we are wired and how our software works. Training to get good at something is great. Training to the level of suicide takes a different mindset. It is good they have safety people nearby.
I was in a pool 3 days ago on the 3ft foot side and I was too scared to hold my head under water for longer than 3-5 seconds
Why is it taboo to show blackouts? i think they are very educational to watch and look at multiple times. And even better when you get the diver as the narrating the video
Can someone tell me how to prevent blackout and what causes blackout
Good question, the answer is too long to be able to properly type here, but to briefly summarize:
Cause- When we hold our breath underwater our oxygen levels slowly deplete to a point where it is too low to sustain consciousness. The blackout is our bodies' protective measure to prevent damage to our vitals, as it preserves the little remaining oxygen to protect the brain and vital organs.
Prevent - by training and progressing in slow increments, and learning to recognize the warning signs (tunnel vision, fuzzy thoughts, warm feelings, feel like you can go forever, etc)
Not a fun trip. I have my blackout posted as well, good learning experience.😁
Just watched your blackout video , not fun! But good reaction by your safety team 🤙
Can I always avoid unconsiousness when I dont go beyond my limits, lets say I will be underwater 3 minutes, then my body feels pressure, so I immediately return to the surface? Thank you for an answer.
Unforuntely there is no foolproof way. There is a host of factors that can influence a blackout which is why you always want to dive with a buddy.
How long can you last without breathing but not moving?? I always wondered how long freedivers could hold their breath for
Andrew can hold my breath for 7:25 and Lilly can for 4:30 without moving :) the world record is by an amazing athlete Branko Petrovic who can do about 12 minutes on regular air!!!
Been to an event where many freedivers were around 7mins too. That can be reached with good training and perfect lifestyle.
Holding your breath is hard
Very hard at first - especially mentally because it is not what we are naturally used to 🙂
Came from DailyDoseOnTheInternet TH-cam channel. Got curious, and so here i am. 🥰
Welcome! Hope the full video explanation was an interesting look into what went wrong :)
Just thinking of doing free dive makes me scared. Tho it'll be an "Achievement Unlocked" once a person gets the hang of it. It'll be awesome! 💪🏽
Thanks for these kinds of videos! ❤️
Definitely! That's how I felt after being terrified of the water all my life! In about 6 months I went to feeling comfortable, then to falling in love with any second in the water 🥰
Watch his hand :O
Good eye :D it's just incidental and his wife is actually the girl on the pool deck at the end :)
@@androopr Good point, It didn't look bad per say, but just caught my eye lol
Funny what other people notice that we miss- I've watched the video dozens of times and never noticed 😂
Do you free-dive with no fins? If so, what’s your PB?
We do a bit but never seriously trained for it because bifins is our favourite!
Andrew's on is 100m and Lillys is about 75m 🙂
@@androopr cool results! I used to be a swimmer and my best was 50m. can't imagine what it takes to dive twice as much. well done, keep it up!
@@Nebuchadnezzar_ll thanks!!! 50m is a very good start with no formal training! 🤙
Who else hold their breath when watching this, trying to compete with her?))
P.S. I've lost miserably though, on 50 meters))
50m/ about 50s is a really good start for your first try!! Maybe you will compete against Lilly in the next competition 😁
I made it to 70! But it’s much different when you’re just sitting holding your breath than it is when you’re expending lots of energy swimming.
@@simplicitylost that's great! Really good for having no formal training!
@@androopr No free diving training but I’ve done scuba 🤿 so I know some tricks for maximizing breath ability.
@@simplicitylost 😂😂😂 this is my favourite comment!!!
daily dose of interent?
Woohoo! 🤙
I came here from tiktok
Welcome! I hope you learned even more from the in depth analysis 🥰
I hope you don't have to experience this accident anymore:(
🥰 I haven't since! It has been 3 years now and I can go farther safely 😁
@@androopr Nice :))
everytime i jump into a body water or just showering and close my eyes ,I always see a great white shark staring at me :(
Try finding Nemo next time 🥰
@@androopr i wish hahaha
😁😂
Wth
your mind tricks you to dive forever.
Yeah you think you can just keep going forever but really your mind is just too low on oxygen to think clearly!
dAilY dOsE of InterNEt
😂😁
DDOI
Yayy! Hope you were able to learn something interesting 🙂
@@androopr hmmm
Is Lilly cross-eyed from having just blacked out or does she have a strabismus?
Who also came from Daily Dose of Internet?
Lots of people already! Hope you found the full explqination helpful 🤙
Who came here after watching daily dose of Internet video
Welcome everyone! Hope the full version is insightful to hear what went wrong! 🥰🤙
anyone here from daily dose of internet ?
Welcome! Hopefully the full video with Lilly's in depth perspective was helpful 🥰🤙
oh no,anyways :v
:D She hasn't had this happen again over the past 3 years of training and going even farther safely :)
ddoi
Yeah!! 🤙
Bad safetys
I never blackout but drowning is another story for me
Thank you for sharing