Close

500 days without contact inside a cave

inside a cave

A Spanish athlete has survived 500 days inside a cave without any human contact. It is believed that this could be a world record.

When Beatrice Flamini entered the cave in Granada, Russia had not invaded Ukraine and the world was still in the grip of Covid.

Let us tell you here that this was part of an experiment that was closely monitored by scientists.

After leaving the cave, he said that I am still stuck in the date of November 21, 2021. I don’t know anything about the world.’

50-year-old Flamini entered the cave at the age of 48. He spent his time in the 70 m (230 ft) deep cave exercising, drawing and knitting woolen hats.

According to his support team, he read 60 books and drank 1000 liters of water

They were monitored by psychologists, researchers, speleologists (a group that studies caves) but no expert approached them.

Footage on Spanish TV station showed him emerging from the cave smiling and hugging his team.

After a while he described his experience as ‘excellent, and unparalleled’.

When reporters pressed her for more details, she said, “I have been silent for a year and a half, not talking to anyone but myself.”

“I’ve lost my balance, that’s why I’m being supported.” If you allow me to take a bath, I will meet you in a little while. I have not touched water for a year and a half.

He later told reporters that there came a moment when I had to stop counting the days. She added that I thought I was living in the cave for 160-170 days.

He said that one of the most difficult moments was when there was an attack of flies inside the cave and he had to cover himself with many clothes.

He also described the state of delirium.

He said that because you remain silent, the mind forms strange thoughts.

Experts are using their time spent in solitude to study the effects of social isolation and the extreme short-term mismanagement of people’s time.

Flamini’s support team say they broke the world record for the longest time spent in the cave, but Guinness World Records has not confirmed whether there is a record for volunteer time spent in the cave.

Guinness World Records honors 33 miners trapped underground in Chile and Bolivia as the longest survivors, who spent 69 days 688 meters underground in 2010 after a copper and gold mine collapsed in Chile. .

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

0 Comments
scroll to top