William Trubridge's hands reveal the toll of 24 hours of freediving. Photo / Supplied
William Trubridge's hands reveal the toll of 24 hours of freediving. Photo / Supplied
William Trubridge was trying to enjoy a very well-earned rest.
The Hawke's Bay-raised holder of multiple freediving records had just done something remarkable - even by his phenomenal standards.
Trubridge set out to break the world 24-hour endurance freediving record, in a 25-metre swimming pool in Nassau, Bahamas from Sundayto Monday morning (NZ time).
The original record for a breath hold with no propulsive assistance stood at 23.35km, but Trubridge absolutely smashed that.
The goal had been to freedive the full marathon distance of 42.2km, only that took "just'' 20 hours to complete. Trubridge gritted his teeth and willed himself to break the 50km barrier, finally completing 2023 laps on the pool to cover an astounding 51.575km.
The Havelock North High School old boy had dedicated the world record attempt to mental health and the imminent release of his video series called The Mental Immune System.
If accumulating what's now 19 world freediving records has taught Trubridge anything, it's that things such as anxiety, stress and depression can be overcome.
That's where he hopes The Mental Immune System will come in, providing people with the tools he's accumulated in his storied career to push past their fears.
It's all about being able to operate in your conscious mind, while relegating stress and anxiety to your subconscious.
Trubridge has built his 2023 plans around helping people with their mental health and couldn't believe the irony that he had freedived 2023 laps in his bid to promote that.