1 00:00:08,299 --> 00:00:10,802 (OMINOUS MUSIC PLAYING) 2 00:00:34,200 --> 00:00:36,494 What we thought we’d do Chris, is just talk you through the plan, 3 00:00:36,661 --> 00:00:39,205 so you’ve got a rough idea as to what you’re getting into. 4 00:00:40,206 --> 00:00:44,210 So, the main risk is really that the longer you spend in the water, 5 00:00:44,294 --> 00:00:47,797 the risk goes up exponentially. If you push yourself beyond the point 6 00:00:47,922 --> 00:00:50,800 at which you should be coming out, there is a real risk you could die. 7 00:00:52,802 --> 00:00:54,054 Yup. 8 00:00:55,638 --> 00:00:56,890 CHRIS: As you can tell, 9 00:00:57,348 --> 00:01:00,685 the safety team have one or two concerns about what I’m about to do. 10 00:01:01,811 --> 00:01:03,063 So do I. 11 00:01:05,231 --> 00:01:07,067 ROSS: Right, this is where we switch it on now, okay? 12 00:01:08,568 --> 00:01:11,196 CHRIS: Somehow, I’ve been talked into an open water swim... 13 00:01:11,529 --> 00:01:12,614 Good. 14 00:01:14,365 --> 00:01:15,658 CHRIS: ...in the Arctic. 15 00:01:16,409 --> 00:01:18,119 ROSS: Impose your will on the sea. 16 00:01:19,829 --> 00:01:21,748 Two minutes! Two minutes! 17 00:01:23,792 --> 00:01:26,461 CHRIS: And if there’s one thing I really, really hate... 18 00:01:30,131 --> 00:01:31,257 it’s the cold. 19 00:01:34,260 --> 00:01:38,640 Why am I doing this? Why am I doing this? Why am I doing this? (CHUCKLES) 20 00:01:39,140 --> 00:01:40,225 (SQUEALS) 21 00:01:41,810 --> 00:01:43,311 (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) 22 00:01:48,775 --> 00:01:50,318 (CHRIS CHEERS) 23 00:01:51,027 --> 00:01:53,738 -Special change of scenery. -LIAM: Epic surroundings. 24 00:01:53,988 --> 00:01:55,865 I'll say, there's no mangoes falling off the trees here! 25 00:01:56,074 --> 00:01:57,283 Yeah. (CHUCKLES) 26 00:01:59,536 --> 00:02:03,623 As part of my mission to live longer, I’ve traded the warmth of Australia 27 00:02:04,415 --> 00:02:05,625 for the frozen north. 28 00:02:08,336 --> 00:02:10,213 And along for the ride, I’ve got these jokers. 29 00:02:11,005 --> 00:02:13,883 My younger brother Liam, and my older brother Luke. 30 00:02:16,010 --> 00:02:18,138 When I invited them to hang out at the beach, 31 00:02:18,304 --> 00:02:20,223 not quite sure this is what they imagined. 32 00:02:21,141 --> 00:02:22,475 Feather that clutch, mate. 33 00:02:22,851 --> 00:02:25,520 Dude, I can’t feel the floor. These boots are a bit thick. 34 00:02:25,812 --> 00:02:27,856 We’ve let the worst driver of all drive us. 35 00:02:27,981 --> 00:02:29,482 -Why is Chris driving, mate? -CHRIS: Are you kidding? 36 00:02:29,566 --> 00:02:31,025 I’m the best driver ever, dude. 37 00:02:31,192 --> 00:02:32,569 (LAUGHS) 38 00:02:35,738 --> 00:02:38,825 CHRIS: We’re here with a man who says extreme temperatures are actually 39 00:02:38,908 --> 00:02:42,495 gonna be good for me. Sports scientist, Ross Edgley. 40 00:02:42,829 --> 00:02:45,874 I mean, it doesn’t get much better than this really, does it? 41 00:02:45,957 --> 00:02:49,669 I mean, as a training ground, as a sports lab... 42 00:02:50,128 --> 00:02:51,838 I'm in my element. 43 00:02:51,921 --> 00:02:53,965 (LAUGHS) I don't know how comfortable I am with that! 44 00:02:54,132 --> 00:02:55,258 (LAUGHS) 45 00:02:55,967 --> 00:02:59,762 Ross Edgley is one of the fittest humans on the planet. 46 00:02:59,929 --> 00:03:02,307 (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) 47 00:03:02,932 --> 00:03:05,268 CHRIS: The kind of guy who takes everything to the limit. 48 00:03:05,393 --> 00:03:07,020 (LAUGHS) 49 00:03:08,021 --> 00:03:12,025 CHRIS: He's the only person in the world to swim all the way around Great Britain. 50 00:03:13,193 --> 00:03:16,029 And he did it in 157 days straight. 51 00:03:16,321 --> 00:03:18,448 (CROWD CHEERING) 52 00:03:21,159 --> 00:03:23,494 CHRIS: But then he takes it even further... 53 00:03:24,245 --> 00:03:26,956 (CHUCKLES) ...you know, with, like, swimming in ice-cold water. 54 00:03:27,165 --> 00:03:29,334 (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) 55 00:03:33,880 --> 00:03:37,050 I believe we humans only really thrive in the face of adversity. 56 00:03:38,259 --> 00:03:41,930 You find out about your physiology, you find out about your mentality... 57 00:03:42,805 --> 00:03:46,476 and there are now theories that subjecting your body to extreme temperatures 58 00:03:46,684 --> 00:03:48,603 could even help you live longer. 59 00:03:49,062 --> 00:03:51,564 (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) 60 00:03:54,234 --> 00:03:57,028 CHRIS: And that is why I signed up for this Arctic adventure. 61 00:04:00,406 --> 00:04:04,160 Ross might love the cold, but I'm more like Goldilocks. 62 00:04:04,911 --> 00:04:07,664 Not too hot, not too cold, I'm happiest right in the middle. 63 00:04:09,374 --> 00:04:12,168 And you’d think that staying in a comfortable temperature 64 00:04:12,418 --> 00:04:15,129 is also the best way to keep healthy for the long haul. 65 00:04:15,922 --> 00:04:20,343 But new science says embracing extreme cold, and extreme heat... 66 00:04:22,095 --> 00:04:24,389 could force your body to upgrade its defenses... 67 00:04:26,724 --> 00:04:29,644 and power up its microscopic repair systems... 68 00:04:31,688 --> 00:04:36,192 which could cut the risks of disease, and maybe add years to your life. 69 00:04:39,112 --> 00:04:42,573 So, it’s time for some serious shock therapy. 70 00:04:42,699 --> 00:04:45,076 (MYSTICAL MUSIC PLAYING) 71 00:04:46,077 --> 00:04:49,747 ROSS: After three days of training, Chris will attempt a cold-water swim 72 00:04:49,914 --> 00:04:52,709 that's going to test his body to the absolute limit. 73 00:04:54,085 --> 00:04:58,339 Two hundred and fifty yards across a bone-chilling Arctic Fjord, 74 00:04:58,840 --> 00:05:01,592 wearing nothing but swimming trunks and a smile. 75 00:05:04,053 --> 00:05:08,683 If he can endure that, then maybe he could fall in love with the cold... 76 00:05:10,601 --> 00:05:12,603 and make it part of his life. 77 00:05:19,110 --> 00:05:21,904 (MYSTICAL MUSIC CONTINUES) 78 00:05:50,308 --> 00:05:54,062 (SEAGULLS SQUAWKING) 79 00:06:02,695 --> 00:06:06,449 ROSS: So, how’s your Australian physiology coping with this? 80 00:06:06,532 --> 00:06:10,661 It's in complete shock right now. My ears are about to snap off. 81 00:06:12,705 --> 00:06:16,501 They’re like little icicles and I’m a little concerned. 82 00:06:18,252 --> 00:06:21,047 (FOREBODING MUSIC PLAYING) 83 00:06:26,511 --> 00:06:28,763 ROSS: This is the plunge. 84 00:06:30,681 --> 00:06:31,724 Yeah. 85 00:06:31,849 --> 00:06:34,018 And I want you to basically get down to your trunks, get in, 86 00:06:34,143 --> 00:06:37,313 and I just want you to experience the cold at its rawest form. 87 00:06:37,480 --> 00:06:39,357 -CHRIS: Yeah. -Think of it almost like a baptism. 88 00:06:39,482 --> 00:06:41,442 That’s what we’re doing. Because you need to understand 89 00:06:41,526 --> 00:06:43,319 what's going on inside the body. So... 90 00:06:43,403 --> 00:06:45,780 Oh, it knows it's gonna freeze in a second, yeah. 91 00:06:45,988 --> 00:06:47,323 -Yes. Yeah. This is it. -CHRIS: Yeah. (LAUGHS) 92 00:06:47,573 --> 00:06:49,826 This is it. No, no, no. But it's gonna be a shock to the body. 93 00:06:49,909 --> 00:06:50,952 I’m not gonna lie. 94 00:06:51,035 --> 00:06:52,829 -CHRIS: Yeah. -I’m gonna be so honest with you. 95 00:06:53,246 --> 00:06:54,288 ROSS: To prepare for the swim, 96 00:06:54,372 --> 00:06:57,458 the first step is subjecting Chris to full immersion. 97 00:06:58,042 --> 00:07:02,630 The problem is that cold water triggers some really powerful survival mechanisms. 98 00:07:03,047 --> 00:07:05,925 But if you’re training for an ice swim, they actually work against you. 99 00:07:06,759 --> 00:07:09,846 I need Chris to understand what those reactions feel like, 100 00:07:10,096 --> 00:07:12,140 and then start to tame them. 101 00:07:13,015 --> 00:07:14,642 One of the first things that we're gonna experience 102 00:07:14,725 --> 00:07:16,185 is this gasp reflex. 103 00:07:16,310 --> 00:07:17,687 -The body's basically just going... -(GASPS) 104 00:07:17,770 --> 00:07:20,857 Is exactly it. You wanna gasp, perfectly normal. That is... 105 00:07:20,940 --> 00:07:22,859 -It’s just self-preservation. -Mm-hmm. Perfectly normal. 106 00:07:22,942 --> 00:07:25,194 -Yeah. Once we start the timer... -CHRIS: Yeah. Yeah. 107 00:07:25,278 --> 00:07:26,946 ...once we’re in, make no mistake, 108 00:07:27,029 --> 00:07:29,157 we basically started the timer on hypothermia, 109 00:07:29,365 --> 00:07:32,452 and to put it bluntly, consciousness and dying. 110 00:07:32,535 --> 00:07:35,746 And saying, "goodbye, life." Yeah. All right. 111 00:07:36,372 --> 00:07:38,916 Oh, yeah. (GROANS) Here we go! 112 00:07:40,126 --> 00:07:42,462 ROSS: Before we let Chris loose in open water, 113 00:07:42,587 --> 00:07:45,214 I want to see if he can get through the initial shock 114 00:07:45,631 --> 00:07:48,968 and tough it out for at least a couple of minutes here in the harbor. 115 00:07:49,927 --> 00:07:54,015 Do I reckon this warm-blooded Aussie can do it? I don't know. 116 00:07:55,057 --> 00:07:56,642 Oh, yes, this is a great idea! 117 00:07:56,767 --> 00:07:58,686 -Here we go. -(LAUGHS) Follow my lead. 118 00:07:58,895 --> 00:08:02,398 (BREATHES DEEPLY) 119 00:08:03,649 --> 00:08:04,692 CHRIS: All right. 120 00:08:06,235 --> 00:08:08,905 (CHRIS BREATHES DEEPLY) 121 00:08:12,950 --> 00:08:16,454 -ROSS: That's it. Breathe, breathe. -Oh, boy. 122 00:08:18,164 --> 00:08:20,082 -ROSS: Good. Good. Really good. -Whoo! 123 00:08:20,500 --> 00:08:21,542 -ROSS: Breathe. -Wow! 124 00:08:21,792 --> 00:08:24,003 ROSS: Okay, there you go, okay. There you go. So that's that gasp reflex. 125 00:08:24,295 --> 00:08:26,923 You know, that hyperventilation. Control it. Control it. 126 00:08:27,048 --> 00:08:28,216 (EXHALES) Don’t let it bully me. 127 00:08:28,466 --> 00:08:30,343 ROSS: Self-preservation, your body is going, "get out!" 128 00:08:30,468 --> 00:08:31,928 -But override that. -(EXHALES) 129 00:08:32,637 --> 00:08:34,096 -How we feeling? -Oh, freezing. 130 00:08:34,222 --> 00:08:35,306 -Okay. (CHUCKLES) -Yeah. 131 00:08:35,598 --> 00:08:37,725 -Feels like I’m in the fire. -(LAUGHS) 132 00:08:37,934 --> 00:08:41,479 -Okay, breathe! We are at one minute. -(EXHALES, BLOWS RASPBERRY) 133 00:08:41,562 --> 00:08:42,813 -ROSS: So, now, what's happening? -(EXHALES) 134 00:08:42,897 --> 00:08:44,148 ROSS: Now we’ve got over that gasp reflex. 135 00:08:44,273 --> 00:08:45,316 No, no, we haven’t. 136 00:08:45,399 --> 00:08:47,610 -It's still going? (LAUGHS) -CHRIS: I haven’t got over anything! 137 00:08:48,110 --> 00:08:49,570 ROSS: Someone forgot to put the hot tap on. 138 00:08:49,695 --> 00:08:51,572 -Oh, God! Oh, God! -CHRIS: As if things weren’t bad enough, 139 00:08:52,448 --> 00:08:55,493 Luke and Liam, and our buddy, Mick, have got front row seats. 140 00:08:56,285 --> 00:08:57,286 Summer swim? 141 00:08:57,370 --> 00:08:58,913 -(CHRIS YELLING) -ROSS: Yes, boys! 142 00:08:58,996 --> 00:09:00,039 Oh, God! 143 00:09:00,164 --> 00:09:01,958 CHRIS: Now, why did I invite them, again? 144 00:09:02,166 --> 00:09:03,751 (LAUGHS) How is it? 145 00:09:04,168 --> 00:09:05,962 Oh, it’s amazing, it’s so warm in here. 146 00:09:06,128 --> 00:09:07,463 What’s the level of shrinkage? 147 00:09:07,713 --> 00:09:09,465 (LAUGHS) 148 00:09:10,258 --> 00:09:12,802 How would you feel if I said, "Let’s put our face under?" 149 00:09:13,553 --> 00:09:15,721 Okay, let's go. (EXHALES) 150 00:09:17,682 --> 00:09:19,267 -LIAM: Oh, boy. -LUKE: Oh, wow! 151 00:09:19,475 --> 00:09:21,143 -Terrible idea. -(CHRIS YOWLS) 152 00:09:21,269 --> 00:09:22,895 -LUKE: Yeah. I'm impressed. -(YOWLS) 153 00:09:23,229 --> 00:09:25,231 All right, I think we’ve proved our point, right? Can we get out? 154 00:09:25,314 --> 00:09:26,691 ROSS: Right. Hang on, give me 30 more seconds. 155 00:09:26,774 --> 00:09:27,692 Oh, what? 156 00:09:27,817 --> 00:09:29,443 Can you feel that blood going away from your extremities? 157 00:09:29,527 --> 00:09:30,987 CHRIS: Yeah, I can feel all sorts of pain. 158 00:09:31,070 --> 00:09:32,238 -So, quick test. -Yeah. 159 00:09:32,321 --> 00:09:33,739 -Quick dexterity test for me. -(GROANS) Yeah. 160 00:09:33,990 --> 00:09:35,032 -How's that? -They feel like... 161 00:09:35,157 --> 00:09:36,867 -How quickly can you move your hands? -...pins and needles! 162 00:09:37,159 --> 00:09:39,412 (GRUNTS, BREATHES HEAVILY) 163 00:09:39,537 --> 00:09:41,247 -ROSS: (LAUGHS) Shit. -(BREATHES HEAVILY, GROANS) 164 00:09:41,581 --> 00:09:42,540 -We are at... -CHRIS: Awesome. 165 00:09:42,707 --> 00:09:44,834 -...two minutes, 50. -(CHRIS EXHALES) 166 00:09:45,126 --> 00:09:47,545 -Talk to me. How are we feeling? -(EXHALES HEAVILY) I feel like I’m dying. 167 00:09:47,670 --> 00:09:49,505 -Okay... -(LIAM SPEAKING INDISTINCTLY) 168 00:09:49,714 --> 00:09:50,965 You actually probably are. 169 00:09:51,090 --> 00:09:52,550 (LAUGHS) 170 00:09:52,925 --> 00:09:54,552 -Let’s just get out! -ROSS: No, no, no, no, 171 00:09:54,760 --> 00:09:56,470 -give me 30 more seconds. -(ALL LAUGHING) 172 00:09:56,554 --> 00:09:58,055 -LUKE: No, don't get out. -(GROANS) Stop saying that! 173 00:09:58,139 --> 00:09:59,390 -ROSS: Five minutes. -Just another 30. 174 00:09:59,473 --> 00:10:01,100 We're done, we're done, you did good, man. You're good. 175 00:10:01,183 --> 00:10:02,560 CHRIS: I don't think I can get out. (GRUNTS) 176 00:10:02,685 --> 00:10:04,812 -Nice, big man, nice. -CHRIS: I can't... 177 00:10:04,937 --> 00:10:06,105 -Let's go. -LUKE: You got it, Chris. 178 00:10:06,188 --> 00:10:07,565 (GROANS) My hands, I can’t feel them. 179 00:10:07,690 --> 00:10:09,984 Go on, straight into push-ups, Chris! 180 00:10:10,109 --> 00:10:12,069 -(GROANS) -ROSS: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. 181 00:10:12,320 --> 00:10:15,323 Oh, my God, is there a towel somewhere? 182 00:10:15,531 --> 00:10:17,366 -ROSS: I got it, I got it. Here you go. -(CHRIS GROANS) 183 00:10:17,450 --> 00:10:18,951 -What’s that towel? -(ROSS) What are you... (LAUGHS) 184 00:10:19,076 --> 00:10:20,786 The world’s smallest towel! 185 00:10:22,538 --> 00:10:25,291 -It's okay, it's a warm wind. -LIAM: Oh, God. Wow. 186 00:10:25,541 --> 00:10:28,961 LIAM: Fifty-year storm's coming in, guys, we've got to get to safety! 187 00:10:29,170 --> 00:10:31,047 (UPBEAT PERCUSSIVE MUSIC PLAYING) 188 00:10:33,132 --> 00:10:36,677 To safely recover from the shock, we have to bring Chris's core temperature 189 00:10:36,802 --> 00:10:38,512 back to normal gradually. 190 00:10:39,013 --> 00:10:42,391 Man. (EXHALES) My toes, mate. 191 00:10:42,516 --> 00:10:43,851 (INDISTINCT CHATTER) 192 00:10:44,560 --> 00:10:45,978 ROSS: Keep it going, keep it going. 193 00:10:46,187 --> 00:10:47,271 Yeah, good. There you go. 194 00:10:47,563 --> 00:10:49,148 -CHRIS: Whoo! -ROSS: All right, on three. 195 00:10:49,315 --> 00:10:50,858 My fingers just don’t exist right now. 196 00:10:50,941 --> 00:10:52,234 ROSS: They'll recover, don't worry about it. 197 00:10:52,318 --> 00:10:53,569 That was the hardest thing I’ve ever done. 198 00:10:53,653 --> 00:10:55,738 -(ROSS LAUGHS) -I'm fine. (SNIFFS) Yeah, by far. 199 00:10:56,197 --> 00:10:57,740 -That was... -ROSS: That was terrific. 200 00:10:57,823 --> 00:10:59,283 -...the most awful thing. -(ALL LAUGH) 201 00:10:59,450 --> 00:11:01,535 You know when you, like, regret moments in your career? 202 00:11:01,619 --> 00:11:03,245 (ALL LAUGH) 203 00:11:03,371 --> 00:11:04,747 That was one, Ross. 204 00:11:05,623 --> 00:11:06,749 (CHEERS) 205 00:11:07,291 --> 00:11:10,961 -Wow! That’s something else, Ross. -(INDISTINCT CHATTER) 206 00:11:11,712 --> 00:11:13,047 (ROSS SPEAKING INDISTINCTLY) 207 00:11:13,172 --> 00:11:15,675 CHRIS: Being that cold, it’s just so intense. 208 00:11:18,052 --> 00:11:20,471 And I feel like I’m outside of my comfort zone 209 00:11:20,554 --> 00:11:22,014 further than I've probably ever been. 210 00:11:22,223 --> 00:11:24,225 -LIAM: Do you want me to hug you? -CHRIS: My arms are cold. 211 00:11:24,392 --> 00:11:26,227 My arms are like freezing. 212 00:11:26,769 --> 00:11:28,229 -Thank you. -LIAM: There you go. 213 00:11:29,146 --> 00:11:30,856 (CHUCKLES SOFTLY) Finger in there. Is that boiling? Yeah? 214 00:11:30,940 --> 00:11:31,982 -(ALL LAUGH) -No idea. 215 00:11:32,066 --> 00:11:33,651 (IMITATES SIZZLING NOISE, SCREAMS) 216 00:11:35,528 --> 00:11:36,779 ROSS: That was a struggle. 217 00:11:37,988 --> 00:11:41,200 And out in open water, it's only gonna get harder. 218 00:11:42,827 --> 00:11:46,539 To stand any chance of doing this swim, Chris has to start taming those reactions. 219 00:11:46,914 --> 00:11:48,207 (SINISTER MUSIC PLAYING) 220 00:11:48,332 --> 00:11:51,627 ROSS: And there are scientists who believe controlling the body’s response 221 00:11:51,794 --> 00:11:55,464 to the cold could also have huge health benefits down the line. 222 00:11:56,674 --> 00:11:58,884 (TENSE UPBEAT MUSIC PLAYING) 223 00:12:00,094 --> 00:12:03,848 CHRIS: As I get older, one quirk to look forward to is that my built-in 224 00:12:03,931 --> 00:12:05,474 defense system could get trigger happy. 225 00:12:05,599 --> 00:12:07,476 (ALARM BLARING) 226 00:12:07,727 --> 00:12:09,395 CHRIS: Throughout the body's blood vessels, 227 00:12:09,478 --> 00:12:14,066 an unwelcome surge of immune cells can cause collateral damage... 228 00:12:17,611 --> 00:12:19,321 doing more harm than good. 229 00:12:21,282 --> 00:12:24,785 The resulting breakdown in tissues and organs is called "inflammaging." 230 00:12:26,036 --> 00:12:28,956 And it fuels two of the biggest killers in the modern world. 231 00:12:33,294 --> 00:12:36,464 But there’s a theory that dialing down our reactions to the cold... 232 00:12:38,340 --> 00:12:41,927 could also help to reset that rogue immune system, 233 00:12:43,304 --> 00:12:46,140 and cut the risks of deadly disease in old age. 234 00:12:47,558 --> 00:12:49,977 -(WAVES CRASHING) -(SEAGULLS SCREECHING) 235 00:12:50,102 --> 00:12:54,982 CHRIS: So, I’ve gotta subject myself to regular blasts of icy pain, 236 00:12:55,399 --> 00:12:57,651 and I might not even see the benefits for years? 237 00:12:59,320 --> 00:13:00,362 Fantastic. 238 00:13:01,238 --> 00:13:04,575 (FOREBODING MUSIC PLAYING) 239 00:13:04,658 --> 00:13:06,327 CHRIS: Fortunately, there is another upside 240 00:13:06,869 --> 00:13:08,537 that can kick in much sooner. 241 00:13:18,214 --> 00:13:21,467 After Johanna Nordblad smashed her leg in a cycling accident, 242 00:13:21,926 --> 00:13:25,763 her fractures healed, but the pain never stopped. 243 00:13:28,182 --> 00:13:30,100 JOHANNA: (IN FINNISH) It felt like fire in my bones. 244 00:13:31,143 --> 00:13:33,813 I couldn't sleep. 245 00:13:42,613 --> 00:13:45,658 My leg had been in agony for three years. 246 00:13:47,117 --> 00:13:50,287 I was ready to try anything. 247 00:13:58,546 --> 00:14:00,256 CHRIS: (IN ENGLISH) Conventional drugs didn’t cut through. 248 00:14:01,298 --> 00:14:03,509 So, doctors prescribed a radical alternative. 249 00:14:07,721 --> 00:14:12,893 A new treatment, based on the theory that cold water can scramble pain signals 250 00:14:13,561 --> 00:14:14,854 before they reach the brain. 251 00:14:15,855 --> 00:14:17,481 (BREATHES HEAVILY) 252 00:14:20,568 --> 00:14:22,570 JOHANNA: (IN FINNISH) When I put my leg in the water 253 00:14:22,695 --> 00:14:27,449 for the first time since the accident, it stopped hurting. 254 00:14:30,619 --> 00:14:35,165 Tears welled in my eyes, and I cried. 255 00:14:35,457 --> 00:14:40,671 (INHALES DEEPLY) 256 00:14:40,838 --> 00:14:42,756 CHRIS: (IN ENGLISH) Johanna got her life back... 257 00:14:44,216 --> 00:14:45,426 but she didn’t stop there. 258 00:14:51,056 --> 00:14:53,559 (ATMOSPHERIC MUSIC PLAYING) 259 00:14:56,020 --> 00:14:58,105 CHRIS: She was already a free diver... 260 00:14:59,565 --> 00:15:01,233 but taking on these frozen lakes... 261 00:15:02,067 --> 00:15:04,320 has allowed her to not only to endure the cold, 262 00:15:05,404 --> 00:15:06,697 but to embrace it. 263 00:15:07,615 --> 00:15:10,868 (MYSTERIOUS SYNTH MUSIC PLAYING) 264 00:15:12,494 --> 00:15:16,081 JOHANNA: (IN FINNISH) The treatment took away my fear of the cold. 265 00:15:22,004 --> 00:15:27,259 If you keep calm, you can stay in much longer. 266 00:15:32,139 --> 00:15:36,185 This has brought more than just pain relief. 267 00:15:42,775 --> 00:15:46,820 By swimming in cold water, you get ill far less often. 268 00:15:49,073 --> 00:15:52,159 I feel healthier and full of energy. 269 00:15:52,242 --> 00:15:55,663 (UPLIFTING MUSIC PLAYING) 270 00:16:15,724 --> 00:16:16,976 CHRIS: (IN ENGLISH) The right dose of shock 271 00:16:17,101 --> 00:16:19,269 could enhance your ability to fight off infection. 272 00:16:20,479 --> 00:16:22,731 And you don’t have to be an ice-diver. 273 00:16:25,651 --> 00:16:29,738 In one study, people who flipped to cold for the last 30 seconds 274 00:16:29,863 --> 00:16:34,785 of their daily shower, ended up taking almost 30 percent fewer sick days. 275 00:16:35,411 --> 00:16:36,704 That’s pretty impressive. 276 00:16:37,746 --> 00:16:39,790 (TRANSCENDENTAL MUSIC PLAYING) 277 00:16:42,543 --> 00:16:47,297 JOHANNA: (IN FINNISH) It's good to be outside your comfort zone. 278 00:16:50,050 --> 00:16:53,470 Open your mind. 279 00:16:54,763 --> 00:16:56,849 Embrace the feeling of the cold. 280 00:16:58,017 --> 00:17:01,145 (EXHALES, GRUNTS) 281 00:17:03,814 --> 00:17:05,899 (SOMBER MUSIC PLAYING) 282 00:17:08,235 --> 00:17:09,987 CHRIS: (IN ENGLISH) As more benefits come to light, 283 00:17:10,070 --> 00:17:13,490 people are finding their own ways to harness extreme temperatures. 284 00:17:16,243 --> 00:17:18,579 And as we take my training to the next level, 285 00:17:19,163 --> 00:17:23,042 Ross has come up with the perfect way to lure me back into the water. 286 00:17:24,293 --> 00:17:26,420 The one thing he knows I can’t resist. 287 00:17:35,554 --> 00:17:36,764 CHRIS: Whoo! 288 00:17:37,264 --> 00:17:41,852 It’s absolutely beautiful, but your brain’s going, 289 00:17:42,519 --> 00:17:44,521 "What’s going on here? Why are we heading to the water, 290 00:17:44,646 --> 00:17:46,648 "Why are we trudging through snow?" (GROANS) 291 00:17:47,149 --> 00:17:50,027 -MICK: You’re gonna feel alive after this. -(CHRIS LAUGHS) 292 00:17:53,197 --> 00:17:57,242 CHRIS: Back in Australia, I surf a lot, but going out in these conditions... 293 00:18:00,162 --> 00:18:01,246 now, that's gnarly. 294 00:18:02,456 --> 00:18:04,708 Luckily, I've got my good buddy here. 295 00:18:05,167 --> 00:18:07,878 Three-time world champion surfer, Mick Fanning. 296 00:18:08,295 --> 00:18:10,422 Who Ross has roped in to keep me on track. 297 00:18:14,635 --> 00:18:16,303 MICK: Coming to a place like this... 298 00:18:17,179 --> 00:18:19,431 it’s such a different experience than what we’re used to at home. 299 00:18:19,515 --> 00:18:20,516 Yeah. 300 00:18:20,682 --> 00:18:22,351 -It’s so easy at home, you know? -CHRIS: Yeah. 301 00:18:22,476 --> 00:18:25,521 You have board shorts, it’s warm, you can park right at the beach. 302 00:18:25,687 --> 00:18:28,565 When here, you gotta think about your warmth, you gotta think 303 00:18:28,690 --> 00:18:30,400 about getting through the waves and... 304 00:18:31,276 --> 00:18:33,821 With the elements just so raw and real, 305 00:18:34,196 --> 00:18:35,823 you have to zero in in these conditions. 306 00:18:36,448 --> 00:18:37,825 Otherwise, you’ll end up on the rocks over there, 307 00:18:37,908 --> 00:18:39,827 -somewhere. -Yeah. (LAUGHS) 308 00:18:41,245 --> 00:18:44,498 (FOREBODING MUSIC PLAYING) 309 00:18:49,128 --> 00:18:52,047 CHRIS: Let's get on with it, shall we? (GROANS) 310 00:18:57,636 --> 00:19:00,597 I want Chris to experience prolonged exposure. 311 00:19:01,223 --> 00:19:02,266 (CHRIS GRUNTS) 312 00:19:02,391 --> 00:19:06,270 ROSS: But in these conditions, half an hour in his trunks could kill him. 313 00:19:09,731 --> 00:19:11,650 So, this is the wetsuit test. 314 00:19:12,359 --> 00:19:13,527 (CHRIS GROANS) 315 00:19:13,735 --> 00:19:17,030 As he steadily cools down, he’s gonna experience a significant loss 316 00:19:17,114 --> 00:19:20,576 in muscle strength, and his coordination is gonna go to pieces. 317 00:19:23,203 --> 00:19:24,746 -(LUKE CHUCKLES) -ROSS: I’m keeping warm, 318 00:19:24,872 --> 00:19:26,957 -with Liam and Luke. -What are they doing? 319 00:19:27,374 --> 00:19:31,003 I wanna see if Chris can hold it all together and stay mobile. 320 00:19:31,420 --> 00:19:33,422 (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) 321 00:19:37,384 --> 00:19:38,760 (GROANS) 322 00:19:40,387 --> 00:19:43,140 MICK: Let's see how much harder it is to paddle, eh? 323 00:19:46,977 --> 00:19:48,478 All right, here you go. Here goes Mick. 324 00:19:56,904 --> 00:19:58,071 (CHRIS SCREAMS) 325 00:20:10,500 --> 00:20:11,585 LIAM: Wow! 326 00:20:15,214 --> 00:20:17,132 -Little boost on the end. Epic! -Whoo! 327 00:20:24,598 --> 00:20:27,935 I started surfing when I was about ten, ten years old. 328 00:20:32,689 --> 00:20:34,524 It's not a bad obsession to have. 329 00:20:34,691 --> 00:20:36,151 (LOUD MUTED THUDDING) 330 00:20:38,987 --> 00:20:41,448 But this is like being on another planet. 331 00:20:44,201 --> 00:20:47,454 -A pretty brutal experience. -(HIGH-PITCHED RINGING) 332 00:20:48,580 --> 00:20:51,291 You, go. You, go! Jump on. 333 00:20:53,502 --> 00:20:55,420 (DARK MUSIC PLAYING) 334 00:20:58,465 --> 00:20:59,549 ROSS: It's Chris. 335 00:21:00,384 --> 00:21:02,552 LUKE: There you go! Oh, I can't believe it! 336 00:21:04,346 --> 00:21:06,556 Oh! Yes! 337 00:21:09,309 --> 00:21:12,145 -Oh, yes, mate! -(LIAM LAUGHS) 338 00:21:12,813 --> 00:21:14,898 -That's an actual turn! (LAUGHS) -An actual good wave! Oh! 339 00:21:15,941 --> 00:21:18,944 (UPLIFTING MUSIC PLAYING) 340 00:21:25,742 --> 00:21:27,536 -Yeah! -That's huge! 341 00:21:33,375 --> 00:21:35,085 I’m not easily impressed by Chris’s surfing... 342 00:21:35,168 --> 00:21:37,963 -Right. Yeah. Yeah. -...but that was pretty impressive. 343 00:21:46,013 --> 00:21:48,807 CHRIS: To begin with, you feel like you’re winning. 344 00:21:54,104 --> 00:21:55,147 (GRUNTS) 345 00:21:55,314 --> 00:21:57,607 -MICK: You all right? -CHRIS: It's just so hard to swim. 346 00:21:58,525 --> 00:21:59,901 But eventually... 347 00:22:01,361 --> 00:22:03,196 you start to get so cold. 348 00:22:04,281 --> 00:22:05,699 They're so far out now. 349 00:22:07,034 --> 00:22:08,785 LUKE: It’s so mental out there. 350 00:22:12,539 --> 00:22:15,042 CHRIS: I can feel it sucking the strength out of my arms. 351 00:22:18,545 --> 00:22:20,005 It’s harder to maneuver. 352 00:22:21,131 --> 00:22:22,674 My balance is off... 353 00:22:24,009 --> 00:22:25,802 and I'm feeling pretty vulnerable at this point. 354 00:22:29,181 --> 00:22:31,641 (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) 355 00:22:33,977 --> 00:22:37,522 -LUKE: He’s taking a break. -LIAM: Oh, my God. 356 00:22:39,775 --> 00:22:41,151 LUKE: Oof! Oh! 357 00:22:41,485 --> 00:22:43,945 -LIAM: I think he's... -ROSS: He got poleaxed on that one. 358 00:22:46,531 --> 00:22:47,657 CHRIS: Oh, my God. 359 00:22:48,075 --> 00:22:49,368 It's absolutely freezing. 360 00:22:50,744 --> 00:22:53,288 And at this point, I’ve had enough. 361 00:22:57,167 --> 00:22:59,711 -LIAM: How was it? -CHRIS: It was so intense. 362 00:23:00,504 --> 00:23:02,589 -It's like... It's kind of scary. -ROSS: Yeah. 363 00:23:03,048 --> 00:23:04,966 CHRIS: The storm kicked back in and started hailing, 364 00:23:05,258 --> 00:23:06,301 couldn’t even see the waves. 365 00:23:06,468 --> 00:23:08,136 -The hail was hitting me in the eye. -ROSS: Yeah. 366 00:23:08,220 --> 00:23:10,305 -It's a completely different, you know... -And I’ve noticed as well... 367 00:23:10,389 --> 00:23:11,765 -...game, right? -...the wind chill. Did you feel 368 00:23:11,890 --> 00:23:13,100 -that out there as well? -CHRIS: For sure. 369 00:23:13,225 --> 00:23:14,351 Yeah. -MICK: Yeah. 370 00:23:14,476 --> 00:23:15,977 -CHRIS: At the end, not catching waves... -ROSS: Yeah. 371 00:23:16,061 --> 00:23:17,145 ...I started to get a little colder. 372 00:23:17,312 --> 00:23:19,064 And when you get cold, it just hurts, right? 373 00:23:19,231 --> 00:23:22,442 Yeah. It was... Feels like knives in your fingers and your toes. 374 00:23:22,651 --> 00:23:24,903 Generally speaking, you’d probably do everything that you can to avoid 375 00:23:25,028 --> 00:23:26,947 -a surf like that, but... -Yeah. 376 00:23:27,155 --> 00:23:28,782 ...hats off to you, guys. 377 00:23:30,367 --> 00:23:32,619 (SOMBER MUSIC PLAYING) 378 00:23:34,704 --> 00:23:36,248 CHRIS: It was pretty wild out there. 379 00:23:36,957 --> 00:23:41,503 That kind of cold is completely ridiculous and alien to anything I've ever done. 380 00:23:43,922 --> 00:23:48,218 So, the idea of now going and swimming without all of that gear and the wet suits 381 00:23:48,343 --> 00:23:49,511 and so on... 382 00:23:51,763 --> 00:23:52,973 has become a really... 383 00:23:54,057 --> 00:23:55,809 intense, scary reality. 384 00:24:00,856 --> 00:24:02,899 ROSS: I think Chris has earned a break from the cold. 385 00:24:05,986 --> 00:24:09,197 And up here, there’s another way to boost longevity. 386 00:24:09,823 --> 00:24:11,992 At the other end of the temperature scale. 387 00:24:18,582 --> 00:24:19,583 CHRIS: Whoo! 388 00:24:20,625 --> 00:24:24,588 Ross has hooked me up with longevity expert, Dr. Peter Attia. 389 00:24:26,214 --> 00:24:27,507 All right. 390 00:24:29,926 --> 00:24:31,011 It's intense. 391 00:24:31,678 --> 00:24:35,932 But Peter's convinced that regular saunas can boost my long-term health. 392 00:24:36,641 --> 00:24:38,977 DR. PETER: You know, now that we just got in here, Chris, 393 00:24:39,060 --> 00:24:40,145 let's take your pulse. 394 00:24:40,520 --> 00:24:41,605 All right. 395 00:24:44,024 --> 00:24:46,943 DR. PETER: Yeah, you're about 64 beats per minute. 396 00:24:47,527 --> 00:24:49,654 But we've got this temperature cranked up to about 397 00:24:49,779 --> 00:24:51,406 -hundred and ninety-five degrees... -CHRIS: Yeah. 398 00:24:51,490 --> 00:24:52,532 DR. PETER: ...Fahrenheit. 399 00:24:54,159 --> 00:24:56,203 So, let's see where you are in a couple of minutes. 400 00:24:56,328 --> 00:24:59,164 I guess I gotta get used to this heat. (CHUCKLES) 401 00:24:59,456 --> 00:25:01,833 Yeah, we're uncomfortable right now because we're hot. 402 00:25:02,083 --> 00:25:05,420 And in response to that, our body is trying to cool us off. 403 00:25:05,712 --> 00:25:07,839 -CHRIS: Yeah. -And so, it's pumping harder 404 00:25:08,089 --> 00:25:11,760 so that your heart can quickly get the blood to the outside of your body. 405 00:25:11,927 --> 00:25:15,138 And just as exercise is known to help with cardiovascular disease, 406 00:25:15,514 --> 00:25:18,058 I think sauna has a number of those benefits as well. 407 00:25:18,808 --> 00:25:21,186 -Like a workout. Yeah. -Yeah, exactly. 408 00:25:22,437 --> 00:25:24,940 Yeah, you're about 135 right now. 409 00:25:25,357 --> 00:25:27,526 About twice what you were when we started. 410 00:25:27,901 --> 00:25:29,402 -It also... -CHRIS: It goes back to how beneficial 411 00:25:29,611 --> 00:25:30,737 -stress is, right? -Yeah. Yeah. 412 00:25:30,820 --> 00:25:32,197 I mean, stressing our bodies in any way 413 00:25:32,280 --> 00:25:34,783 is... It forces us to adapt and evolve and change. 414 00:25:34,866 --> 00:25:39,162 Yeah. Well, we just... Our body wants to stay in a certain temperature range. 415 00:25:39,663 --> 00:25:42,541 And right now, we're pushing ourselves way outside that comfort zone. 416 00:25:43,124 --> 00:25:46,670 And in the process of adaptation, our body protects us by increasing 417 00:25:46,795 --> 00:25:50,382 the production of these special molecules called heat shock proteins, 418 00:25:50,674 --> 00:25:53,468 which are extremely effective in the fight against disease. 419 00:25:54,052 --> 00:25:55,303 (PENSIVE MUSIC PLAYING) 420 00:25:55,387 --> 00:25:57,639 CHRIS: I like to think I look healthy on the outside. 421 00:25:59,516 --> 00:26:02,602 But on the inside, deep in my cells... 422 00:26:03,770 --> 00:26:07,607 heaps of molecular junk piling up from the wear and tear of age. 423 00:26:09,025 --> 00:26:12,279 Hoarding all that trash could lead to serious problems when I'm older. 424 00:26:16,825 --> 00:26:20,829 But the blistering heat of the sauna tells my body to send in a cleanup crew... 425 00:26:22,455 --> 00:26:23,582 heat shock proteins. 426 00:26:24,833 --> 00:26:28,086 And these tiny heroes get to work fixing up the junk 427 00:26:28,962 --> 00:26:31,464 to give my cells the ultimate spring cleaning. 428 00:26:38,430 --> 00:26:41,683 By upping my heart rate and releasing heat shock proteins, 429 00:26:42,017 --> 00:26:43,893 getting this hot can work wonders. 430 00:26:45,729 --> 00:26:49,399 The two places where sauna is having the most benefit 431 00:26:49,774 --> 00:26:54,321 is in cardiovascular disease, where it is about a 50 percent reduction 432 00:26:54,404 --> 00:26:57,949 in risk of death, and Alzheimer's disease, where it's about 433 00:26:58,033 --> 00:27:01,036 -a 65, 66 percent reduction. -Wow. 434 00:27:01,745 --> 00:27:06,207 DR. PETER: Yeah, this exceeds that of virtually any drug that we can imagine. 435 00:27:06,666 --> 00:27:07,792 Incredible. 436 00:27:08,793 --> 00:27:10,378 (TRANSCENDENTAL MUSIC PLAYING) 437 00:27:10,670 --> 00:27:12,839 CHRIS: That's from simply taking frequent saunas, 438 00:27:13,465 --> 00:27:16,384 fired up to around 170 degrees Fahrenheit. 439 00:27:18,303 --> 00:27:20,388 Now, that's the kind of prescription I can handle. 440 00:27:22,265 --> 00:27:23,350 But right now... 441 00:27:25,226 --> 00:27:27,187 I've got some unfinished business with the cold. 442 00:27:31,691 --> 00:27:34,069 (FOREBODING MUSIC PLAYING) 443 00:27:43,912 --> 00:27:46,122 Yes, boys, how we feeling? 444 00:27:46,414 --> 00:27:47,957 -Wow, mate. -That's what I'm saying, mate. 445 00:27:48,041 --> 00:27:49,209 -Yeah, Rossy! -(ROSS LAUGHS) 446 00:27:49,376 --> 00:27:52,629 CHRIS: With the swim looming, there’s no let-up in the training. 447 00:27:52,879 --> 00:27:55,131 -CHRIS: Are you plotting something? -ROSS: I just think... (LAUGHS) 448 00:27:55,256 --> 00:27:56,800 I’m gonna be completely honest, now we’re out here. 449 00:27:56,883 --> 00:27:59,511 I just... I don’t think there’s such a thing as too much acclimatization. 450 00:27:59,678 --> 00:28:02,931 I just think we need to get you as cold as possible, as often as possible. 451 00:28:05,767 --> 00:28:07,560 Let’s go, let's go, let's go! 452 00:28:07,769 --> 00:28:10,397 -All right. All right. -(ALL SPEAKING INDISTINCTLY) 453 00:28:10,605 --> 00:28:12,774 (GROANS, YELLS) 454 00:28:13,233 --> 00:28:16,903 CHRIS: All my brothers and my friends have done so far is laugh at me. 455 00:28:17,362 --> 00:28:19,489 So, this is payback time. 456 00:28:19,781 --> 00:28:22,575 -Let's do it! -(ALL LAUGH, SPEAK INDISTINCTLY) 457 00:28:25,787 --> 00:28:29,040 (UPBEAT MUSIC PLAYING) 458 00:28:32,252 --> 00:28:35,630 CHRIS: Ross says that each blast of the cold will help tame my reactions. 459 00:28:39,300 --> 00:28:41,219 And here’s another kind of Arctic torture. 460 00:28:41,302 --> 00:28:42,595 -We're going. -ROSS: Let's go. 461 00:28:42,804 --> 00:28:45,807 CHRIS: We're going. (WHISTLES, GROANS) 462 00:28:45,932 --> 00:28:48,685 My brothers and I, we love a bit of pointless competition. 463 00:28:48,768 --> 00:28:50,270 (GROANS, LAUGHS) 464 00:28:50,562 --> 00:28:52,355 So, we’re going all in. 465 00:28:52,480 --> 00:28:54,566 -All right, let's go, fellas. -CHRIS: Let's do it. 466 00:28:56,484 --> 00:28:59,279 Go, get him. Where's he going with it? (GRUNTS, GROANS) 467 00:28:59,487 --> 00:29:00,947 (INDISTINCT CHATTER) 468 00:29:01,698 --> 00:29:04,033 CHRIS: I’ve got to keep using my muscles in the cold... 469 00:29:04,117 --> 00:29:05,201 (YELLING INCOHERENTLY) 470 00:29:07,954 --> 00:29:09,622 ...and maintain that coordination. 471 00:29:10,498 --> 00:29:11,916 Oh! (LAUGHS) 472 00:29:12,041 --> 00:29:13,543 Or try to, anyway. 473 00:29:16,629 --> 00:29:19,841 And according to Ross, repeating these doses... 474 00:29:21,301 --> 00:29:24,137 should eventually break the body’s resistance to the cold. 475 00:29:24,262 --> 00:29:27,390 (INDISTINCT CHATTER) 476 00:29:34,898 --> 00:29:36,357 (CHRIS GROANS) 477 00:29:36,566 --> 00:29:38,234 -Oh, boy. (CHUCKLES) -How do we feel, boys? 478 00:29:38,651 --> 00:29:40,820 -(EXHALES) I feel... -(GROANS) 479 00:29:41,237 --> 00:29:43,156 -I feel actually... -I felt like I was gonna vomit. 480 00:29:43,281 --> 00:29:45,200 -For me, it’s like absolute agony. -CHRIS: Yeah. Yeah. 481 00:29:45,408 --> 00:29:48,411 Does training for this actually make any difference? 482 00:29:49,037 --> 00:29:52,332 Well, it's... I don't know if it's any less uncomfortable 483 00:29:52,457 --> 00:29:55,251 or you're just more familiar with being uncomfortable, 484 00:29:55,543 --> 00:29:57,170 and I feel like definitely having done it 485 00:29:57,253 --> 00:29:59,172 -a few times, you're like, "Okay..." -Yeah. 486 00:29:59,339 --> 00:30:01,007 -"...this is what it is." But... -LIAM: Yeah. 487 00:30:01,216 --> 00:30:03,802 ...I don't know that there's a massive change in my body 488 00:30:03,885 --> 00:30:05,386 because it's still pretty uncomfortable, but... 489 00:30:05,553 --> 00:30:07,013 -Yeah. -Still pretty incredible. 490 00:30:07,180 --> 00:30:08,181 -Yeah. -CHRIS: It's... Thanks. 491 00:30:08,348 --> 00:30:09,557 (LAUGHS) 492 00:30:10,266 --> 00:30:13,561 Yeah, I think doing things that hurt, there's a benefit, right? 493 00:30:13,686 --> 00:30:15,313 There's doing things that test you, doing things that... 494 00:30:15,396 --> 00:30:16,481 -Yeah. -...are hard. 495 00:30:16,564 --> 00:30:19,526 You know? Really pushing beyond the boundaries of what you think 496 00:30:19,609 --> 00:30:21,653 -is possible. And that really is... -LIAM: Yeah. And also a mental thing 497 00:30:21,778 --> 00:30:24,531 when you have to reeducate your mind, you have to change your mind to be like, 498 00:30:24,614 --> 00:30:27,659 "No. I just need to find a way to get through it." 499 00:30:27,742 --> 00:30:28,952 CHRIS: Yeah. 500 00:30:29,077 --> 00:30:32,664 You know, keep moving and don't sort of let things fall apart. 501 00:30:32,789 --> 00:30:38,294 Yeah. You wanna get every opportunity possible to live a longer, 502 00:30:38,461 --> 00:30:39,838 -healthier, happier life. And... -LUKE: Yeah. 503 00:30:40,046 --> 00:30:45,969 And also not just living longer, but living longer and strong. 504 00:30:46,219 --> 00:30:48,638 Especially having kids, you wanna be able to play with the grandchildren 505 00:30:49,138 --> 00:30:51,349 -and still be active and... -LUKE: Yeah. 506 00:30:51,474 --> 00:30:54,519 ...and run down in the snow, and jump in the ocean. You know? 507 00:30:54,602 --> 00:30:56,896 -The emotional strength that comes... -Yeah, there's a real sense of achievement 508 00:30:56,980 --> 00:30:58,189 -from doing that too. -CHRIS: Yeah. 509 00:30:58,273 --> 00:31:02,193 Just the reward from actually run through the snow and diving into this... 510 00:31:02,277 --> 00:31:03,653 -Yeah. -...you know, three degrees water... 511 00:31:03,736 --> 00:31:05,613 -LIAM: I think it also... It's... Yeah. -...and running back again. 512 00:31:05,738 --> 00:31:07,949 And I do think there's something to what Ross is saying about just... 513 00:31:08,116 --> 00:31:11,578 We've just become far too comfortable in everything... 514 00:31:11,661 --> 00:31:12,829 -Yeah. -...the temperature of our house, 515 00:31:12,912 --> 00:31:14,372 -our clothing. We're not used to... -Yeah. 516 00:31:14,497 --> 00:31:17,750 ...any discomfort. And that initial handbrake is really 517 00:31:17,834 --> 00:31:20,753 an emotional response of your body trying to preserve itself. 518 00:31:21,045 --> 00:31:24,507 You know, whereas actually the body has a whole lot more in the tank... 519 00:31:24,591 --> 00:31:26,676 -Yeah. Yeah. -...and you just gotta get past that. 520 00:31:29,762 --> 00:31:32,557 I guess it’s easy to talk about embracing the cold 521 00:31:32,640 --> 00:31:33,850 when you’re sitting in a hot tub. 522 00:31:34,058 --> 00:31:37,145 (WIND HOWLING) 523 00:31:37,937 --> 00:31:41,399 CHRIS: In reality, this swim is gonna take it to another level. 524 00:31:43,985 --> 00:31:47,405 And if I’m honest, it’s a pretty daunting prospect. 525 00:31:50,408 --> 00:31:53,328 (FOREBODING MUSIC PLAYING) 526 00:31:54,120 --> 00:31:56,998 (SHUGENDO MONK CHANTING BUDDHIST SUTRA) 527 00:31:57,290 --> 00:32:01,794 CHRIS: But for one community in Japan, the fact that the cold is daunting 528 00:32:02,170 --> 00:32:06,591 is the whole point and leads to benefits that go beyond the physical. 529 00:32:13,014 --> 00:32:14,390 MR. SHINBO: (IN JAPANESE) Entering the mountains 530 00:32:14,766 --> 00:32:20,313 you can test your capacity for all kinds of suffering. 531 00:32:30,698 --> 00:32:33,451 CHRIS: (IN ENGLISH) Becoming a Shugendo monk takes years of training. 532 00:32:35,244 --> 00:32:37,246 For some, it's a fresh start. 533 00:32:38,748 --> 00:32:42,585 Like Mr. Shinbo, who joined the order after the death of his wife. 534 00:32:43,878 --> 00:32:48,633 (IN JAPANESE) I couldn’t see the point in life anymore. 535 00:32:52,011 --> 00:32:54,389 I was in great distress. 536 00:32:55,473 --> 00:32:59,602 Then I encountered the Shugendo. 537 00:33:00,061 --> 00:33:03,106 (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) 538 00:33:04,273 --> 00:33:07,819 -(WATER LAPPING) -(MONK CHANTING) 539 00:33:15,326 --> 00:33:17,036 CHRIS: (IN ENGLISH) Today, for the very first time, 540 00:33:17,620 --> 00:33:20,456 Mr. Shinbo faces a truly terrifying test. 541 00:33:29,507 --> 00:33:30,717 The waterfall. 542 00:33:32,301 --> 00:33:36,347 Fresh from the snowfields upstream, this torrent of meltwater 543 00:33:36,597 --> 00:33:39,058 is so cold it can cause heart failure. 544 00:33:52,030 --> 00:33:54,574 (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) 545 00:33:54,657 --> 00:33:58,119 CHRIS: To pass, he needs to withstand this freezing cascade... 546 00:33:59,954 --> 00:34:02,373 -until his master is satisfied. -(MEN SPEAKING INDISTINCTLY) 547 00:34:12,508 --> 00:34:15,720 (CHANTS BUDDHIST SUTRA) 548 00:34:17,972 --> 00:34:21,184 MR. SHINBO: (IN JAPANESE) The effect of the cold water... 549 00:34:22,393 --> 00:34:25,480 is like an electric shock. 550 00:34:27,231 --> 00:34:33,321 (CHANTS BUDDHIST SUTRA) 551 00:34:40,203 --> 00:34:46,417 MR. SHINBO: Putting yourself in a place where you feel fear. 552 00:34:46,834 --> 00:34:49,128 That’s the test. 553 00:34:49,670 --> 00:34:52,965 (TRANSCENDENTAL MUSIC PLAYING) 554 00:34:55,885 --> 00:34:59,847 MR. SHINBO: There’s a story about baby eels. 555 00:35:02,141 --> 00:35:06,312 If you add a predator like a catfish to the tank... 556 00:35:07,230 --> 00:35:10,399 they say more of the young eels will survive. 557 00:35:11,526 --> 00:35:15,196 (INAUDIBLE) 558 00:35:17,782 --> 00:35:21,869 MR. SHINBO: Humans also excel in the face of adversity. 559 00:35:24,413 --> 00:35:27,083 That’s what we’re trying to achieve. 560 00:35:32,255 --> 00:35:33,256 (GRUNTS) 561 00:35:50,940 --> 00:35:55,319 MR. SHINBO: I have experienced huge trauma, 562 00:35:55,653 --> 00:35:58,823 but through these tests, I’ve come to terms with the past. 563 00:36:02,827 --> 00:36:05,913 If I met my younger self, I’d say, 564 00:36:06,164 --> 00:36:08,166 "It’s going to be all right." 565 00:36:08,332 --> 00:36:10,960 Even if you endure suffering, 566 00:36:11,085 --> 00:36:13,004 you’re going to be all right. 567 00:36:16,716 --> 00:36:18,509 CHRIS: (IN ENGLISH) I know extreme temperatures could help 568 00:36:18,593 --> 00:36:20,052 combat physical decline. 569 00:36:21,679 --> 00:36:25,433 But during a long life, there are bound to be mental challenges too. 570 00:36:27,476 --> 00:36:30,438 The Shugendo rituals show that confronting fear 571 00:36:30,855 --> 00:36:34,442 and enduring the cold can build a stronger mindset. 572 00:36:37,737 --> 00:36:40,281 To do it with such focus and such grace... 573 00:36:42,116 --> 00:36:43,492 that’s truly inspiring. 574 00:36:48,289 --> 00:36:54,795 (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYING) 575 00:36:58,591 --> 00:37:01,928 -What happens if you don’t make it? -You’re gonna be there to fish me out! 576 00:37:02,053 --> 00:37:04,513 -(CHUCKLES) Although, I’m not getting in. -(CHRIS CHUCKLING) 577 00:37:05,181 --> 00:37:07,099 LUKE: You know, it’s snowing right now, too? 578 00:37:07,266 --> 00:37:08,434 It is snowing, yeah. 579 00:37:08,935 --> 00:37:11,187 -Oh, good luck with that. -(LAUGHS) Thanks. 580 00:37:11,687 --> 00:37:13,022 -LIAM: Exhilarating. -CHRIS: Yeah. Hmm. 581 00:37:13,189 --> 00:37:14,273 (LUKE LAUGHING) 582 00:37:15,483 --> 00:37:16,567 Yeah, I think I’ve lost my mind. 583 00:37:16,651 --> 00:37:18,069 -LIAM: Yeah. (LAUGHS) -(CHUCKLES) 584 00:37:18,277 --> 00:37:21,072 (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYING) 585 00:37:21,864 --> 00:37:23,866 CHRIS: My challenge is to reach that buoy. 586 00:37:25,243 --> 00:37:29,497 Two-hundred and fifty yards in water close to freezing. 587 00:37:33,584 --> 00:37:35,211 But I know why I’m here. 588 00:37:35,962 --> 00:37:39,882 Enduring extreme conditions could help me fight inflammaging, 589 00:37:40,299 --> 00:37:43,511 manage pain and boost my immune system. 590 00:37:45,346 --> 00:37:49,725 It can trigger repairs inside my cells, and even improve my mental wellbeing. 591 00:37:53,396 --> 00:37:55,398 So, it’s time to step up, 592 00:37:56,023 --> 00:37:57,817 and just get this thing done. 593 00:38:03,072 --> 00:38:07,493 (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYING) 594 00:38:09,120 --> 00:38:11,956 -(INDISTINCT CHATTER) -ROSS: Here we are. 595 00:38:13,416 --> 00:38:18,546 And I have got to admit, I'm nervous, because despite all the training, 596 00:38:19,046 --> 00:38:20,715 this is now uncharted territory... 597 00:38:21,549 --> 00:38:23,259 and so much could go wrong. 598 00:38:24,343 --> 00:38:26,554 -CHRIS: Hey, boys. How are ya? -Hi, Andy, safety team doctor. 599 00:38:26,637 --> 00:38:28,472 -CHRIS: I see, yeah. Hey, mate. -TOM: How you doing? I'm Tom. 600 00:38:28,556 --> 00:38:30,683 -ANDY: Hi, Ross. How are you? -ROSS: Andy, how are we, mate, we good? 601 00:38:30,766 --> 00:38:32,143 -You good? -TOM: Hey, mate, you all right? 602 00:38:32,727 --> 00:38:33,769 Oh, yeah! 603 00:38:34,895 --> 00:38:37,940 So, when you’re swimming, you’re gonna have a tow-float tied to you. 604 00:38:38,107 --> 00:38:40,443 And so, any issues, you can obviously just grab that and hold that. 605 00:38:40,901 --> 00:38:42,361 Do we have to have that or to... What? 606 00:38:42,570 --> 00:38:44,655 Yeah, I mean... And especially on ice swimming as well. 607 00:38:44,780 --> 00:38:47,199 It just means if something goes completely wrong and you go under, 608 00:38:47,325 --> 00:38:48,659 -you’re still attached to it... -CHRIS: Yeah. 609 00:38:48,743 --> 00:38:50,536 ...so we can then find you, we grab the float. 610 00:38:50,619 --> 00:38:53,289 Obviously, it’ll be a lot harder than anything you’ve done so far 611 00:38:53,456 --> 00:38:57,585 and your muscles are gonna get very stiff, cold, and you'll become uncoordinated. 612 00:38:58,210 --> 00:39:00,838 And when you get out of the water, we don’t want you to warm up too fast, 613 00:39:01,005 --> 00:39:04,383 because your limbs are gonna have lots of cold blood in, 614 00:39:04,633 --> 00:39:07,303 and if that all disappears back to your heart quickly, 615 00:39:07,386 --> 00:39:08,929 that can cause significant problems. 616 00:39:09,347 --> 00:39:11,057 So, we need to warm you up slowly and gradually. 617 00:39:11,640 --> 00:39:15,102 ROSS: Please make no mistakes. It's a brutal swim. 618 00:39:15,353 --> 00:39:17,938 You’re gonna be gasping for air into a headwind. 619 00:39:18,064 --> 00:39:20,232 It’s literally coming straight down the barrel. 620 00:39:20,358 --> 00:39:22,026 -CHRIS: Hmm. -So, you’re gonna be pushing off there, 621 00:39:22,151 --> 00:39:23,527 gasp reflex, going, 622 00:39:23,778 --> 00:39:27,323 "Oh, good God, what’s going on?" So, if all of a sudden if I say, 623 00:39:27,490 --> 00:39:31,410 "Now, you’re coming out." Believe us. It'll be for your own safety. 624 00:39:32,870 --> 00:39:36,707 If you overegg this, if you push yourself beyond the point 625 00:39:36,791 --> 00:39:39,752 at which you should be coming out, there is a real risk you could die. 626 00:39:39,835 --> 00:39:42,004 (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) 627 00:39:42,088 --> 00:39:43,214 Yep. 628 00:39:51,097 --> 00:39:53,182 (INDISTINCT CHATTER) 629 00:39:57,561 --> 00:40:02,149 (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYING) 630 00:40:04,610 --> 00:40:07,488 -ROSS: From here. Yeah. -CHRIS: Here? Right. 631 00:40:08,364 --> 00:40:10,282 ROSS: That's where we switch it on now, okay? 632 00:40:14,120 --> 00:40:15,663 CHRIS: I mean, even having all these things in place 633 00:40:15,746 --> 00:40:17,123 and having the people around. 634 00:40:17,706 --> 00:40:18,707 I'm really nervous. 635 00:40:18,833 --> 00:40:21,460 (EXHALES HEAVILY) 636 00:40:23,921 --> 00:40:26,674 (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYING) 637 00:40:27,425 --> 00:40:29,135 CHRIS: There is a whole lot of weather coming 638 00:40:29,385 --> 00:40:31,303 and, you know, it’s quite choppy and windy. 639 00:40:34,682 --> 00:40:35,724 (EXHALES DEEPLY) 640 00:40:35,850 --> 00:40:37,309 CHRIS: It's absolutely freezing cold. 641 00:40:40,271 --> 00:40:42,189 You know, the reality is really kicking in. 642 00:40:43,441 --> 00:40:45,651 Two minutes. Two minutes! 643 00:40:45,860 --> 00:40:48,237 (SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC PLAYING) 644 00:40:48,571 --> 00:40:51,574 ROSS: I just want controlled and calm aggression. 645 00:40:51,740 --> 00:40:54,910 So, when you go in, you’re just so confident in every single one 646 00:40:54,994 --> 00:40:57,872 of your strokes. Overcoming that gasp reflex. 647 00:40:58,038 --> 00:41:01,500 There you go, there you go. (CHUCKLES) There you go, there you go, there you go. 648 00:41:01,625 --> 00:41:03,252 Let’s go. Come on! 649 00:41:06,380 --> 00:41:08,716 -LIMA: Yeah, mate. (CHEERS) -LUKE: Yes, Chris. 650 00:41:08,841 --> 00:41:10,551 LIAM: The weather is getting worse by the second. 651 00:41:10,634 --> 00:41:11,719 LUKE: Yeah. 652 00:41:12,803 --> 00:41:14,638 Yeah. That wind just picked up another ten knots. 653 00:41:14,847 --> 00:41:17,016 -Yes! It's getting wild. -It literally is. 654 00:41:18,517 --> 00:41:20,644 CHRIS: My brothers are there. They’re cheering me on. 655 00:41:21,479 --> 00:41:23,981 So, I kinda got to do it. 656 00:41:25,649 --> 00:41:27,526 LUKE: Getting quite nervous now actually. 657 00:41:27,693 --> 00:41:30,488 -Heart rate's definitely coming up. -Suspense... is terrifying. 658 00:41:35,409 --> 00:41:37,536 CHRIS: But the biggest motivation of all... 659 00:41:38,662 --> 00:41:40,748 is that this isn’t a battle against the cold... 660 00:41:42,875 --> 00:41:45,794 it’s a chance to fight back against death and disease. 661 00:41:48,756 --> 00:41:51,634 A battle against what time can do to me. 662 00:41:53,469 --> 00:41:56,263 ROSS: Focus on your breathing and your physiology will follow! 663 00:41:58,015 --> 00:42:04,271 (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) 664 00:42:12,363 --> 00:42:13,447 (EXHALES HEAVILY) 665 00:42:15,407 --> 00:42:16,492 Here he goes! 666 00:42:19,578 --> 00:42:22,665 CHRIS: That instant shock is just so intense. 667 00:42:23,666 --> 00:42:26,669 It’s far colder than anything that’s gone before. 668 00:42:27,253 --> 00:42:30,631 All I’m thinking is, "Get this over with as quickly as possible." 669 00:42:31,632 --> 00:42:33,008 And I just take off. 670 00:42:33,759 --> 00:42:39,723 (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYING) 671 00:42:40,140 --> 00:42:41,809 -LIAM: Almost there, mate! -Go on, Christo! 672 00:42:41,934 --> 00:42:43,018 MICK: Come on, mate! 673 00:42:44,520 --> 00:42:46,355 LIAM: He’s doing really well. He’s keeping a good pace. 674 00:42:46,438 --> 00:42:47,815 -MICK: Yeah. -LUKE: Ah, he’s killing it. 675 00:42:50,442 --> 00:42:52,111 CHRIS: But after ten strokes, 676 00:42:52,695 --> 00:42:56,615 it burns, it hurts. My head's thumping. 677 00:42:57,449 --> 00:43:00,911 My body is screaming, "This is crazy. What are you doing?" 678 00:43:02,121 --> 00:43:04,957 Good, Chris. Let's go! Let's go! Breathe! 679 00:43:05,874 --> 00:43:08,043 Come on! One arm after the other. Just focus on that. 680 00:43:08,127 --> 00:43:09,670 One arm after the other. 681 00:43:09,878 --> 00:43:12,047 (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) 682 00:43:12,214 --> 00:43:15,968 CHRIS: And then the worst ice cream headache starts kicking in, 683 00:43:16,677 --> 00:43:18,220 and I’m starting to really feel the cold. 684 00:43:18,429 --> 00:43:20,639 -MICK: He’s slowing down. -LIAM: Oh, no! 685 00:43:20,848 --> 00:43:22,850 LUKE: Oh, come on, keep going. 686 00:43:26,186 --> 00:43:30,149 CHRIS: Then all of a sudden, my arms and legs feel like lead balloons. 687 00:43:31,025 --> 00:43:35,613 I’m completely off in my balance. And I just feel paralyzed. 688 00:43:36,864 --> 00:43:39,783 ROSS: Chris, come on! Stay with me. Focus! 689 00:43:40,993 --> 00:43:44,455 There's sort of two voices that were very intense and loud. 690 00:43:46,123 --> 00:43:48,292 One was just saying to me, "You’re gonna die." 691 00:43:51,378 --> 00:43:52,755 -Let’s go, mate! -Come on. 692 00:43:55,090 --> 00:43:57,343 CHRIS: But the other voice is saying... 693 00:43:58,344 --> 00:44:00,679 -"No way!" -ROSS: Come on, Chris. Go! 694 00:44:04,308 --> 00:44:07,019 And all of a sudden, you discover different parts of yourself. 695 00:44:07,311 --> 00:44:11,523 (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) 696 00:44:11,732 --> 00:44:14,568 CHRIS: So, I block everything else out and I'm telling myself... 697 00:44:15,903 --> 00:44:17,279 "Just get out of here." 698 00:44:17,863 --> 00:44:20,866 (TRANSCENDENTAL MUSIC PLAYING) 699 00:44:24,745 --> 00:44:28,374 Nice, nice! Let's go, big man. Let's go! 700 00:44:33,045 --> 00:44:35,881 -Go! Go! Head down! -Yeah, mate! Head down! 701 00:44:36,090 --> 00:44:37,716 -LUKE: Oh, that's the spirit! -(ALL CHEER) 702 00:44:38,550 --> 00:44:41,387 ROSS: Mind over matter. Mind over matter. Turn it into a fight. 703 00:44:41,553 --> 00:44:44,473 (UPBEAT MUSIC PLAYING) 704 00:44:44,556 --> 00:44:49,103 Last ten. Last ten! Finish this. Finish! 705 00:44:53,399 --> 00:44:56,068 -ROSS: Yes! Yes! -(ALL CHEERING) 706 00:44:56,193 --> 00:44:57,444 -ROSS: Yes, big guy! -(ALL CHEER) 707 00:44:57,528 --> 00:44:58,904 (LIAM WHISTLES) 708 00:45:00,197 --> 00:45:04,118 Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! You are an animal. 709 00:45:05,119 --> 00:45:07,788 -LUKE: Yes, Christo! -Yeah, boy! 710 00:45:08,580 --> 00:45:11,417 -(CHRIS GROANING, PANTING) -Yeah, yeah. Up you come, mate. Well done. 711 00:45:11,834 --> 00:45:13,669 -(CHRIS GRUNTS) -(ROSS CHUCKLES) 712 00:45:13,794 --> 00:45:16,213 Get here, get here, get here, get here, get here, get here, get here, get here. 713 00:45:16,338 --> 00:45:17,256 (EXHALES HEAVILY) 714 00:45:17,339 --> 00:45:19,007 ROSS: Wrap it round so we can-- Turn around, turn around. 715 00:45:19,091 --> 00:45:21,051 -Oh, I'm so dizzy. -ROSS: Get in, get in. 716 00:45:22,845 --> 00:45:24,221 (EXHALES DEEPLY) 717 00:45:24,596 --> 00:45:26,765 ROSS: Yeah, we got gloves? Have we got some gloves? 718 00:45:28,726 --> 00:45:30,686 Get down, get down. Come on. Sit there, sit there. 719 00:45:31,353 --> 00:45:32,813 -(GROANS) -ROSS: Sit there, sit there, sit there, 720 00:45:32,896 --> 00:45:34,022 sit there, sit there, sit there. 721 00:45:34,273 --> 00:45:38,569 CHRIS: I’ve never felt like that before, physically and emotionally so challenging 722 00:45:38,694 --> 00:45:41,697 in such a short, concentrated period of time. 723 00:45:41,780 --> 00:45:43,490 (SOFT MUSIC PLAYING) 724 00:45:43,574 --> 00:45:46,368 -(EXHALES, GROANS) -ROSS: Yes! Yes! 725 00:45:46,660 --> 00:45:49,496 And it’s an experience that will stay with me forever. 726 00:45:49,997 --> 00:45:51,957 You did absolutely everything that I told you to do. 727 00:45:52,040 --> 00:45:53,500 You did it, and then some. 728 00:45:54,084 --> 00:45:55,919 -(EXHALES, GROANS) -(CHUCKLES) 729 00:45:56,128 --> 00:45:58,797 CHRIS: And it did make me think how comfortable 730 00:45:58,881 --> 00:46:00,424 we’ve all become, in this day and age, 731 00:46:00,507 --> 00:46:03,177 and that we’re far more capable of doing things 732 00:46:03,302 --> 00:46:04,803 that we think are impossible. 733 00:46:05,554 --> 00:46:08,348 LIAM: Chris, the cameras weren’t rolling. We need one more take, mate. 734 00:46:08,474 --> 00:46:10,768 -(ROSS LAUGHS) -I am never doing that again! 735 00:46:10,934 --> 00:46:13,187 -(ALL LAUGH) -LUKE: We forgot to load the film. 736 00:46:14,104 --> 00:46:15,689 (ALL CHEERING) 737 00:46:15,939 --> 00:46:19,818 CHRIS: You know, we have an opportunity to live longer, better. 738 00:46:20,152 --> 00:46:21,195 ROSS: Group hug, group hug! 739 00:46:21,862 --> 00:46:23,363 -Yeah! -ROSS: You made it! 740 00:46:23,447 --> 00:46:24,490 (ALL CHEER) 741 00:46:24,573 --> 00:46:26,867 CHRIS: Challenging my body with extreme temperatures... 742 00:46:28,285 --> 00:46:29,495 could help me get there. 743 00:46:30,370 --> 00:46:31,663 -They’re gonna defrost me now. -LUKE: Yeah. 744 00:46:31,789 --> 00:46:32,831 -Yeah. -LIAM: Yeah. 745 00:46:33,081 --> 00:46:34,625 CHRIS: I know my body can cope with it, 746 00:46:35,292 --> 00:46:39,213 and I am confident it's working its magic deep within my cells. 747 00:46:39,963 --> 00:46:41,131 ROSS: We'll see you in the Caribbean. 748 00:46:41,215 --> 00:46:43,592 -I’m wintered. I’m wintered. I'm adapted. -LIAM: Fully wintered. 749 00:46:43,759 --> 00:46:46,053 -You're fully wintered. Yes! -(CHUCKLES) 750 00:46:46,220 --> 00:46:47,763 -MICK: What a time. -LIAM: Good job, mate. 751 00:46:47,930 --> 00:46:49,723 -LUKE: What a time to be alive. -LIAM: Yeah, boy. 752 00:46:51,058 --> 00:46:53,018 And the cold never bothered me anyway. 753 00:46:55,270 --> 00:46:58,607 (UPBEAT MUSIC PLAYING) 754 00:47:08,242 --> 00:47:10,285 MALE VOICE: Oh, my God. There you go. 755 00:47:12,204 --> 00:47:13,330 (GRUNTS) 756 00:47:15,999 --> 00:47:19,253 (UPBEAT MUSIC PLAYING) 757 00:47:34,101 --> 00:47:37,437 (GROANS, GRUNTS) 758 00:47:44,945 --> 00:47:46,238 (CHUCKLING) 759 00:48:05,340 --> 00:48:07,718 (UPBEAT MUSIC CONCLUDES)