How I held my breath for 17 minutes | David Blaine | TED

22,567,638 views ・ 2010-01-19

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:15
As a magician, I try to create images that make people stop and think.
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I also try to challenge myself
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to do things that doctors say are not possible.
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I was buried alive in New York City in a coffin,
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buried alive in a coffin in April, 1999, for a week.
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I lived there with nothing but water.
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And it ended up being so much fun
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that I decided I could pursue doing more of these things.
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The next one is I froze myself in a block of ice
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for three days and three nights in New York City.
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That one was way more difficult than I had expected.
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The one after that, I stood on top of a hundred-foot pillar
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for 36 hours.
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I began to hallucinate so hard
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that the buildings that were behind me started to look like big animal heads.
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So, next I went to London.
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In London I lived in a glass box for 44 days
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with nothing but water.
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It was, for me, one of the most difficult things I'd ever done,
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but it was also the most beautiful.
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There was so many skeptics, especially the press in London,
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that they started flying cheeseburgers on helicopters around my box to tempt me.
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(Laughter)
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So, I felt very validated
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when the New England Journal of Medicine actually used the research for science.
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My next pursuit was I wanted to see how long I could go without breathing,
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like how long I could survive with nothing, not even air.
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I didn't realize that it would become the most amazing journey of my life.
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As a young magician,
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I was obsessed with Houdini and his underwater challenges.
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So, I began, early on, competing against the other kids,
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seeing how long I could stay underwater while they went up and down to breathe,
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you know, five times, while I stayed under on one breath.
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By the time I was a teenager,
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I was able to hold my breath for three minutes and 30 seconds.
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I would later find out that was Houdini's personal record.
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In 1987 I heard of a story
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about a boy that fell through ice and was trapped under a river.
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He was underneath, not breathing for 45 minutes.
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When the rescue workers came,
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they resuscitated him and there was no brain damage.
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His core temperature had dropped to 77 degrees.
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As a magician, I think everything is possible.
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And I think if something is done by one person,
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it can be done by others.
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I started to think,
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if the boy could survive without breathing for that long,
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there must be a way that I could do it.
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So, I met with a top neurosurgeon.
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And I asked him, how long is it possible to go without breathing,
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like how long could I go without air?
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And he said to me that anything over six minutes
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you have a serious risk of hypoxic brain damage.
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So, I took that as a challenge, basically.
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(Laughter)
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My first try, I figured that I could do something similar,
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and I created a water tank,
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and I filled it with ice and freezing cold water.
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And I stayed inside of that water tank
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hoping my core temperature would start to drop.
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And I was shivering.
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In my first attempt to hold my breath, I couldn't even last a minute.
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So, I realized that was completely not going to work.
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I went to talk to a doctor friend --
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and I asked him, "How could I do that?"
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"I want to hold my breath for a really long time. How could it be done?"
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And he said, "David, you're a magician,
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create the illusion of not breathing, it will be much easier."
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(Laughter)
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So, he came up with this idea of creating a rebreather,
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with a CO2 scrubber,
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which was basically a tube from Home Depot,
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with a balloon duct-taped to it,
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that he thought we could put inside of me,
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and somehow be able to circulate the air and rebreathe
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with this thing in me.
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This is a little hard to watch.
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But this is that attempt.
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So, that clearly wasn't going to work.
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(Laughter)
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Then I actually started thinking about liquid breathing.
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There is a chemical that's called perflubron.
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And it's so high in oxygen levels that in theory you could breathe it.
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So, I got my hands on that chemical,
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filled the sink up with it, and stuck my face in the sink
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and tried to breathe that in, which was really impossible.
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It's basically like trying to breathe, as a doctor said,
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while having an elephant standing on your chest.
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So, that idea disappeared.
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Then I started thinking,
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would it be possible to hook up a heart/lung bypass machine
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and have a surgery where it was a tube going into my artery,
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and then appear to not breathe while they were oxygenating my blood?
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Which was another insane idea, obviously.
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Then I thought about the craziest idea of all the ideas:
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to actually do it.
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(Laughter)
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To actually try to hold my breath past the point
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that doctors would consider you brain dead.
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So, I started researching into pearl divers.
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You know, because they go down for four minutes on one breath.
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And when I was researching pearl divers, I found the world of free-diving.
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It was the most amazing thing that I ever discovered, pretty much.
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There is many different aspects to free-diving.
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There is depth records, where people go as deep as they can.
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And then there is static apnea.
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That's holding your breath as long as you can
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in one place without moving.
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That was the one that I studied.
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The first thing that I learned is when you're holding your breath,
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you should never move at all; that wastes energy.
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And that depletes oxygen,
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and it builds up CO2 in your blood.
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So, I learned never to move.
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And I learned how to slow my heart rate down.
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I had to remain perfectly still and just relax
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and think that I wasn't in my body, and just control that.
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And then I learned how to purge.
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Purging is basically hyperventilating.
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You blow in and out --
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(Breathing loudly)
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You do that, you get lightheaded, you get tingling.
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And you're really ridding your body of CO2.
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So, when you hold your breath, it's infinitely easier.
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Then I learned that you have to take a huge breath,
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and just hold and relax and never let any air out,
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and just hold and relax through all the pain.
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Every morning, this is for months,
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I would wake up and the first thing that I would do
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is I would hold my breath
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for, out of 52 minutes, I would hold my breath for 44 minutes.
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So, basically what that means is I would purge,
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I'd breathe really hard for a minute.
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And I would hold, immediately after, for five and a half minutes.
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Then I would breathe again for a minute, purging as hard as I can,
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then immediately after that I would hold again for five and a half minutes.
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I would repeat this process eight times in a row.
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Out of 52 minutes, you're only breathing for eight minutes.
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At the end of that you're completely fried, your brain.
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You feel like you're walking around in a daze.
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And you have these awful headaches.
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Basically, I'm not the best person to talk to when I'm doing that stuff.
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I started learning about the world-record holder.
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His name is Tom Sietas.
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And this guy is perfectly built for holding his breath.
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He's six foot four. He's 160 pounds.
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And his total lung capacity is twice the size of an average person.
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I'm six foot one, and fat.
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We'll say big-boned.
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(Laughter)
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I had to drop 50 pounds in three months.
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So, everything that I put into my body, I considered as medicine.
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Every bit of food was exactly what it was for its nutritional value.
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I ate really small controlled portions throughout the day.
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And I started to really adapt my body.
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[Individual results may vary]
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(Laughter)
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The thinner I was, the longer I was able to hold my breath.
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And by eating so well and training so hard,
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my resting heart-rate dropped to 38 beats per minute.
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Which is lower than most Olympic athletes.
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In four months of training,
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I was able to hold my breath for over seven minutes.
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I wanted to try holding my breath everywhere.
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I wanted to try it in the most extreme situations
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to see if I could slow my heart rate down under duress.
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(Laughter)
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I decided that I was going to break the world record
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live on prime-time television.
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The world record was eight minutes and 58 seconds,
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held by Tom Sietas, that guy with the whale lungs I told you about.
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I assumed that I could put a water tank at Lincoln Center
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and if I stayed there a week not eating,
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I would get comfortable in that situation and I would slow my metabolism,
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which I was sure would help me hold my breath
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longer than I had been able to do it.
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I was completely wrong.
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I entered the sphere a week before the scheduled air date.
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And I thought everything seemed to be on track.
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Two days before my big breath-hold attempt, for the record,
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the producers of my television special
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thought that just watching somebody holding their breath, and almost drowning,
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is too boring for television.
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(Laughter)
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So, I had to add handcuffs, while holding my breath, to escape from.
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This was a critical mistake.
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Because of the movement, I was wasting oxygen.
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And by seven minutes I had gone into these awful convulsions.
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By 7:08, I started to black out.
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And by seven minutes and 30 seconds,
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they had to pull my body out and bring me back.
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I had failed on every level.
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(Laughter)
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So, naturally, the only way out of the slump that I could think of was,
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I decided to call Oprah.
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(Laughter)
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I told her that I wanted to up the ante
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and hold my breath longer than any human being ever had.
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This was a different record.
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This was a pure O2 static apnea record
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that Guinness had set the world record at 13 minutes.
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So, basically you breathe pure O2 first, oxygenating your body, flushing out CO2,
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and you are able to hold much longer.
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I realized that my real competition was the beaver.
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(Laughter)
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(Laughter ends)
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In January of '08,
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Oprah gave me four months to prepare and train.
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So, I would sleep in a hypoxic tent every night.
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A hypoxic tent is a tent that simulates altitude at 15,000 feet.
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So, it's like base camp, Everest.
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What that does is, you start building up the red bloodcell count in your body,
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which helps you carry oxygen better.
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Every morning, again, after getting out of that tent,
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your brain is completely wiped out.
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My first attempt on pure O2, I was able to go up to 15 minutes.
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So, it was a pretty big success.
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The neurosurgeon pulled me out of the water
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because in his mind, at 15 minutes your brain is done, you're brain dead.
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So, he pulled me up, and I was fine.
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There was one person there that was definitely not impressed.
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It was my ex-girlfriend.
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While I was breaking the record underwater for the first time,
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she was sifting through my Blackberry, checking all my messages.
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(Laughter)
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My brother had a picture of it. It is really --
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(Laughter)
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(Laughter ends)
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I then announced that I was going to go for Sietas' record, publicly.
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And what he did in response, is he went on Regis and Kelly,
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and broke his old record.
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Then his main competitor went out and broke his record.
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So, he suddenly pushed the record up to 16 minutes and 32 seconds.
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Which was three minutes longer than I had prepared.
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It was longer than the record.
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I wanted to get the Science Times to document this.
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I wanted to get them to do a piece on it.
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So, I did what any person
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seriously pursuing scientific advancement would do.
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I walked into the New York Times offices and did card tricks to everybody.
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(Laughter)
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So, I don't know if it was the magic or the lure of the Cayman Islands,
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but John Tierney flew down
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and did a piece on the seriousness of breath-holding.
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While he was there, I tried to impress him, of course.
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And I did a dive down to 160 feet,
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which is basically the height of a 16 story building,
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and as I was coming up, I blacked out underwater,
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which is really dangerous; that's how you drown.
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Luckily, Kirk had seen me and he swam over and pulled me up.
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So, I started full focus.
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I completely trained to get my breath-hold time up
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for what I needed to do.
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But there was no way to prepare for the live television aspect of it,
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being on Oprah.
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But in practice, I would do it face down, floating on the pool.
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But for TV they wanted me to be upright so they could see my face, basically.
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The other problem was the suit was so buoyant
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that they had to strap my feet in to keep me from floating up.
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So, I had to use my legs to hold my feet into the straps that were loose,
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which was a real problem for me.
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That made me extremely nervous, raising the heart rate.
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Then, what they also did was,
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which we never did before, is there was a heart-rate monitor.
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And it was right next to the sphere.
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So, every time my heart would beat, I'd hear the beep-beep-beep-beep,
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you know, the ticking, really loud.
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Which was making me more nervous.
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And there was no way to slow my heart rate down.
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Normally, I would start at 38 beats per minute,
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and while holding my breath, it would drop to 12 beats per minute,
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which is pretty unusual.
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(Laughter)
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This time it started at 120 beats, and it never went down.
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I spent the first five minutes underwater
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desperately trying to slow my heart rate down.
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I was just sitting there thinking,
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"I've got to slow this down. I'm going to fail."
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And I was getting more nervous.
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And the heart rate just kept going up and up,
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all the way up to 150 beats.
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Basically it's the same thing that created my downfall at Lincoln Center.
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It was a waste of O2.
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16:06
When I made it to the halfway mark, at eight minutes,
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I was 100 percent certain
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that I was not going to be able to make this.
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There was no way for me to do it.
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I figured, Oprah had dedicated an hour
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16:19
to doing this breath-hold thing, if I had cracked early,
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16:22
it would be a whole show about how depressed I am.
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16:25
(Laughter)
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16:27
So, I figured I'm better off just fighting and staying there until I black out,
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16:31
at least then they can pull me out and take care of me and all that.
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16:34
(Laughter)
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I kept pushing to 10 minutes.
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At 10 minutes you start getting all these really strong tingling sensations
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16:44
in your fingers and toes.
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16:45
And I knew that that was blood shunting,
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16:47
when the blood rushes away from your extremities
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to provide oxygen to your vital organs.
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At 11 minutes I started feeling throbbing sensations in my legs,
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16:59
and my lips started to feel really strange.
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17:03
At minute 12 I started to have ringing in my ears,
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17:07
and I started to feel my arm going numb.
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17:10
And I'm a hypochondriac, and I remember arm numb means heart attack.
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17:13
So, I started to really get really paranoid.
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17:17
Then at 13 minutes, maybe because of the hypochondria,
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17:20
I started feeling pains all over my chest.
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It was awful.
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17:25
(Laughter)
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17:26
At 14 minutes, I had these awful contractions,
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17:30
like this urge to breathe.
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17:32
(Laughter)
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17:38
(Laughter ends)
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17:40
At 15 minutes I was suffering major O2 deprivation to the heart.
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17:45
And I started having ischemia to the heart.
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17:48
My heartbeat would go from 120 to 50,
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17:51
to 150, to 40, to 20, to 150 again.
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17:56
It would skip a beat.
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17:58
It would start. It would stop. And I felt all this.
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18:00
And I was sure that I was going to have a heart attack.
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18:03
So, at 16 minutes what I did is I slid my feet out
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18:06
because I knew that if I did go out, if I did have a heart attack,
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18:10
they'd have to jump into the binding and take my feet out
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18:13
before pulling me up.
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18:14
I was really nervous.
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18:16
I let my feet out, and I started floating to the top.
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18:18
And I didn't take my head out.
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18:20
But I was just floating there waiting for my heart to stop,
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18:23
just waiting.
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18:24
They had doctors with the "Pst," you know, sitting there waiting.
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18:28
And then suddenly I hear screaming.
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18:30
And I think that there is some weird thing --
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18:32
that I had died or something had happened.
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18:35
And then I realized that I had made it to 16:32.
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18:39
So, with the energy of everybody that was there,
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18:42
I decided to keep pushing.
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18:44
And I went to 17 minutes and four seconds.
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18:46
(Applause)
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18:54
(Applause ends)
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18:56
As though that wasn't enough, what I did immediately after
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18:59
is I went to Quest Labs
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19:00
and had them take every blood sample that they could
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19:02
to test for everything and to see where my levels were,
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19:05
so the doctors could use it, once again.
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19:07
I also didn't want anybody to question it.
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2016
19:09
I had the world record and I wanted to make sure it was legitimate.
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19:13
So, I get to New York City the next day,
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19:16
I'm walking out of the Apple store,
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19:19
and this kid walks up to me he's like, "Yo, D!"
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19:21
I'm like "Yeah?"
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19:23
He said, "If you really held your breath that long,
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19:26
why'd you come out of the water dry?"
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19:28
I was like "What?"
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19:30
(Laughter)
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19:32
And that's my life. So --
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19:34
(Laughter)
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19:39
As a magician, I try to show things to people
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19:41
that seem impossible.
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19:43
And I think magic,
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19:44
whether I'm holding my breath or shuffling a deck of cards,
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19:48
is pretty simple.
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19:50
It's practice, it's training, and it's -- (Sobs)
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19:54
It's practice, it's training and experimenting,
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19:57
(Sobs)
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19:58
while pushing through the pain to be the best that I can be.
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20:01
And that's what magic is to me, so, thank you.
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20:05
(Applause)
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About this website

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