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Human beings are social creatures.
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We love to surround ourselves with other people and share our personal stories and experiences.
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We crave connection and interaction.
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Today we only have to turn on our laptops or smartphones to instantly spark up a conversation.
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So being on your own for long periods of time, isolated from family, friends and loved ones,
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can sound a little scary.
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But what can isolation really do to a person?
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What effect does disconnecting from the world and society have?
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And if the time alone is indefinite, how long would it take to drive a person insane?
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Today we will attempt to answer these questions by exploring stories of people who have spent
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hours, months, and even years on their own, in this episode of The Infographics Show 'Effects
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of isolation and how long would it take to go crazy?'
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Let's begin by looking at the case of Michel Siffre, a French underground explorer, adventurer
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and scientist.
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On Valentine's Day in 1972, Siffre kissed his wife goodbye and descended a hundred feet
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into the Midnight Cave in Texas.
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He did not emerge for six months.
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He didn't go crazy, but things did get pretty strange.
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Siffre lived in a nylon tent surrounded by scientific equipment.
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He took a few creature comforts including a freezer, furniture, books, and a music player.
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NASA supplied all of his food, so they could monitor the experiment as part of their research
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for long haul space missions.
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So how did Siffre fair?
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Well the lack of sensory and social stimulation led to a gradual deterioration in his mental
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wellbeing and at one point he even thought about suicide.
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By day seventy-seven, his memory was so bad, that he forgot things unless he wrote them
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down immediately.
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Siffre survived the ordeal, he did not lose his mind, but even three years after leaving
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the cave, he continued to have issues with his memory and eyesight.
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Years later in 2008, the BBC conducted a similar experiment but with a shorter time frame and
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more extreme conditions.
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They wanted to try and answer a simple question: Can any human endure total sensory deprivation
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without losing their sanity?
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A group of six volunteers were put into a total isolation chamber, hidden in a former
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nuclear bunker.
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No light, no sound, no sensory interaction for 48 hours.
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One of the volunteers was comedian, Adam Bloom.
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Bloom explained his experience as the hours went by.
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He started out by talking, singing and making jokes out loud until he was bored.
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Next he stared off into space for sometime and his mind filled with thoughts of his life
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outside.
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This led him to worry about his fiancée and family.
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He fell asleep after a few hours but when he woke up, he had totally lost track of time.
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In pitch black and with nothing to reference for the time of day, he found it impossible
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to regain his body clock.
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After 18 hours, things took a turn for the worse and comedian Bloom started experiencing
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paranoia.
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He was singing and then crying, his emotions running out of control.
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At the halfway mark, 24 hours, Bloom's brainpower was really flagging.
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He felt it was impossible to stimulate his mind.
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At 30 hours, he started pacing his room endlessly, to keep himself occupied.
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Finally, after 40 hours, with only 8 hours to go, Bloom began to hallucinate, seeing
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a pile of 500 oyster shells.
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He described seeing the pearly sheen on the shells as clear as day, and he felt like the
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room was taking off from beneath him.
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He realized that the lack of stimulation was driving him close to insanity.
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Bloom survived the final 8 hours and lived to tell the tale.
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But we can see from this experiment, that taking away all of a person's sensory input
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and locking them away on their own for even a short period of time, can begin to drive
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them crazy.
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When you think of isolation, something that also springs to mind is life inside a prison.
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So we decided to take a look at some of the cases that involved prisoners being kept in
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solitary confinement.
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Kenny “Zulu” Whitmore spent 36 consecutive years in solitary confinement in Louisiana
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State Penitentiary at Angola.
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During his time there, Whitmore was deprived of virtually all human contact, and spent
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23 hours a day living in a 6-foot by 9-foot cell.
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After he was eventually released back into the general prison population, Whitmore was
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suffering from what he described as a constellation of muscle atrophy, cardiovascular hypertension
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and deteriorating vision caused by a lack of light and visual stimulation in his stifling
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cell.
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36 years in solitary, now that's a long time but it's actually NOT the record!
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With a little more digging, we discovered the story of Albert Woodfox.
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Woodfox was released from jail after a staggering 43 years in isolation.
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Like Whitmore, Woodfox spent 23 hours of his day living alone in his small cell.
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In 2014, he relayed his experiences to a blogger.
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Woodfox described what it was like to be locked in the cell for so many years.
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He said he feared he might start screaming and not be able to stop.
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He also felt he might turn into a baby, curl up in a fetal position and lay there day after
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day for the rest of his life.
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Or that he might cut off his balls, throw them through the bars the way he had seen
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others do when they couldn't take any more.
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Albert Woodfox's comments certainly sound like those of a man who was flirting with
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insanity, but he survived.
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His attorney said Woodfox made it through the ordeal because of his extraordinary strength
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and character.
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So we've looked at isolation experiments and the effects on the mind, and we've seen
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how years in a jail cell can push a person to the edge.
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What other extreme examples of isolation are there?
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Well not everyone is forced into isolation.
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In fact, in some spiritual traditions, practitioners chose to retreat to the forest or in to caves
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for years at a time.
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One such person is Tenzin Palmo who at the age of 21 swapped her job as a London librarian
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for life as a nun in a monastery in India.
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But even that was not isolated enough for Palmo and after a few years there, she moved
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from the monastery and started living in a cave in the Himalayas.
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The cave measured 10 feet wide and six feet deep and Palmo stayed there for 12 years.
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Three of those years she spent meditating, never laying down, sleeping seated, in a traditional
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wooden meditation box for only three hours a night.
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The idea of spending more than a decade in a cave is certainly a crazy one, but this
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nun reemerged years later to teach others in the monastery.
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Did she hold on to her sanity?
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Was she enlightened?
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We may never know.
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So today we've seen there are many examples of people being in isolation for long periods.
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How long it takes to drive you crazy depends on the individual and the conditions of their
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isolation.
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But even in the extreme cases we looked at, when people do lose their grip on reality,
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they also tend to recover.
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So, how do you think you'd react to being in isolation?
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Let us know in the comments.
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Also, be sure to check out our other video called What Would Happen to Your Body if You
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Lived in the Bathtub?
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Thanks for watching, and, as always, don't forget to like, share, and subscribe.
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See you next time!