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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:06,448 --> 00:00:09,413 WILLIAM SHATNER: Horrific plane crashes, 2 00:00:09,517 --> 00:00:12,896 far from civilization... 3 00:00:13,000 --> 00:00:14,827 failing parachutes, 4 00:00:14,931 --> 00:00:18,275 sending skydivers plummeting to the ground... 5 00:00:20,241 --> 00:00:24,206 ...and freezing temperatures that no one... 6 00:00:24,310 --> 00:00:26,034 should be able to survive. 7 00:00:29,482 --> 00:00:33,482 How do some people live through the impossible? 8 00:00:33,586 --> 00:00:36,206 Is it divine intervention? 9 00:00:36,310 --> 00:00:37,620 Luck? 10 00:00:37,724 --> 00:00:41,793 Or could it be something else? 11 00:00:41,896 --> 00:00:44,344 Something incredible. 12 00:00:44,448 --> 00:00:50,206 Well, that is what we'll try and find out. 13 00:00:50,310 --> 00:00:52,413 ♪ 14 00:01:06,448 --> 00:01:09,068 Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. 15 00:01:09,172 --> 00:01:12,068 November 1992. 16 00:01:12,172 --> 00:01:16,000 Banker Annette Herfkens, her fiancé, 17 00:01:16,103 --> 00:01:20,172 and 29 other passengers board a small plane 18 00:01:20,275 --> 00:01:24,620 and head to the coastal town of Nha Trang for a vacation. 19 00:01:26,172 --> 00:01:29,206 But what is supposed to be a short, routine flight 20 00:01:29,310 --> 00:01:34,000 is about to turn into a nightmare. 21 00:01:36,000 --> 00:01:38,275 When I saw the plane, I didn't want to enter it 22 00:01:38,379 --> 00:01:40,275 because it was awfully small 23 00:01:40,379 --> 00:01:42,448 and I am very claustrophobic. 24 00:01:42,551 --> 00:01:45,172 And... I said there's no way I'm entering that plane. 25 00:01:45,275 --> 00:01:47,862 I'm not gonna go in there. It looks old but mostly small. 26 00:01:47,965 --> 00:01:51,586 And my fiancé said, "Well, don't worry, don't... 27 00:01:51,689 --> 00:01:53,655 "You have to. It's only 55 minutes. 28 00:01:53,758 --> 00:01:56,793 "And do it for us because I have this beautiful vacation planned, 29 00:01:56,896 --> 00:01:59,413 "and I knew you were gonna speak up about it. 30 00:01:59,517 --> 00:02:00,965 But please, please do it." 31 00:02:02,620 --> 00:02:06,000 And then we entered from the back of the plane. 32 00:02:06,103 --> 00:02:11,275 So we sat down and were told to buckle our seat belts. 33 00:02:11,379 --> 00:02:13,310 And they were going across, and then 34 00:02:13,413 --> 00:02:14,758 I was restrained enough as it is, 35 00:02:14,862 --> 00:02:16,896 and I did not buckle my seat belt. 36 00:02:18,241 --> 00:02:21,206 And the flight took off. 37 00:02:21,310 --> 00:02:22,517 For the next 30 minutes, 38 00:02:22,620 --> 00:02:24,482 I just kept counting the minutes. 39 00:02:24,586 --> 00:02:28,896 And at 50 minutes there was a gigantic drop. 40 00:02:29,000 --> 00:02:31,344 - [screaming] - And people were screaming, 41 00:02:31,448 --> 00:02:34,206 and my fiancé looked at me, and he said, 42 00:02:34,310 --> 00:02:36,413 "Well, this I don't like." 43 00:02:39,310 --> 00:02:41,620 And then another drop. 44 00:02:45,586 --> 00:02:47,068 More people screaming. 45 00:02:47,172 --> 00:02:51,103 He reached for my hand, and I reached for his. 46 00:02:51,206 --> 00:02:52,931 And then everything went black. 47 00:02:54,931 --> 00:02:58,275 I woke up to this eerie sound of the jungle. 48 00:02:58,379 --> 00:03:01,793 [birds chirping] 49 00:03:01,896 --> 00:03:04,551 The plane broke in three pieces: 50 00:03:04,655 --> 00:03:08,068 the wings, the fuselage and the cockpit. 51 00:03:08,172 --> 00:03:11,137 Then I looked at my left, and there I saw my fiancé, 52 00:03:11,241 --> 00:03:13,586 still strapped in his seat. 53 00:03:15,586 --> 00:03:17,068 He was dead. 54 00:03:21,448 --> 00:03:24,241 SHATNER: In shock, grief-stricken, 55 00:03:24,344 --> 00:03:26,172 and with her legs and hips broken, 56 00:03:26,275 --> 00:03:30,172 Annette painfully pulls herself out of the wreckage... 57 00:03:30,275 --> 00:03:36,103 only to find that every passenger on board has perished, 58 00:03:36,206 --> 00:03:38,551 except her. 59 00:03:38,655 --> 00:03:42,482 It all seems... impossible. 60 00:03:44,137 --> 00:03:47,206 In this plane crash, Annette was the only survivor. 61 00:03:49,275 --> 00:03:51,931 Of 31 people, she's the only one that survived. 62 00:03:52,034 --> 00:03:54,413 Did it have to do with just the randomness 63 00:03:54,517 --> 00:03:56,344 of her being in the right seat 64 00:03:56,448 --> 00:03:59,482 that hit the ground in just the right place, 65 00:03:59,586 --> 00:04:02,344 that had just the right structural integrity 66 00:04:02,448 --> 00:04:04,241 based on how they crashed? 67 00:04:04,344 --> 00:04:06,172 Or could it be something else? 68 00:04:06,275 --> 00:04:07,827 [indistinct chatter] 69 00:04:07,931 --> 00:04:09,689 JEFF WISE: When we hear stories of survival, 70 00:04:09,793 --> 00:04:12,310 we sort of imagine, "Could I learn from that? 71 00:04:12,413 --> 00:04:14,000 Could I do that?" 72 00:04:14,103 --> 00:04:15,965 And many times we can't. 73 00:04:16,068 --> 00:04:19,689 Maybe they're lucky or-or maybe they're just some X factor 74 00:04:19,793 --> 00:04:21,310 that we'll never really get our heads around. 75 00:04:21,413 --> 00:04:23,034 [screaming] 76 00:04:23,137 --> 00:04:26,517 THOMAS COYNE: We know the safest places to sit on a plane, 77 00:04:26,620 --> 00:04:28,517 and we know generally our seat belts 78 00:04:28,620 --> 00:04:30,379 will save us in the event of a crash, 79 00:04:30,482 --> 00:04:32,689 but this was the one instance 80 00:04:32,793 --> 00:04:34,896 where the seat belt not being attached saved her. 81 00:04:35,000 --> 00:04:36,896 Who could have predicted that? 82 00:04:37,000 --> 00:04:39,965 There's too many variables at play. 83 00:04:42,344 --> 00:04:43,689 [grunts] 84 00:04:43,793 --> 00:04:45,689 SHATNER: Miles from civilization, 85 00:04:45,793 --> 00:04:47,310 injured and alone, 86 00:04:47,413 --> 00:04:50,206 Annette finds herself in an unbearable predicament. 87 00:04:50,310 --> 00:04:54,241 But somehow, from somewhere deep inside her, 88 00:04:54,344 --> 00:04:58,827 she finds a way to survive. 89 00:04:58,931 --> 00:05:02,206 I felt this enormous energy lifting me up. 90 00:05:02,310 --> 00:05:05,379 I would just be quiet... 91 00:05:08,448 --> 00:05:12,344 ...and listen to my instincts, just make it complete quiet. 92 00:05:20,413 --> 00:05:22,137 You breathe out all the way... 93 00:05:25,551 --> 00:05:27,689 [indistinct whispering] 94 00:05:27,793 --> 00:05:29,413 ...and then you listen to this other voice 95 00:05:29,517 --> 00:05:30,827 we all carry inside of us. 96 00:05:32,758 --> 00:05:34,344 I completely felt that 97 00:05:34,448 --> 00:05:36,517 things would work out. 98 00:05:36,620 --> 00:05:39,000 [whispering continues] 99 00:05:39,103 --> 00:05:40,862 What's interesting to me about this case 100 00:05:40,965 --> 00:05:43,586 is that Annette attributes her survival 101 00:05:43,689 --> 00:05:45,620 to hearing this mysterious voice. 102 00:05:45,724 --> 00:05:48,103 [indistinct whispering] 103 00:05:48,206 --> 00:05:51,275 WHITEHEAD: I can only imagine what that must have been like. 104 00:05:51,379 --> 00:05:54,172 The plane has crashed in the Vietnam jungle, 105 00:05:54,275 --> 00:05:57,448 you have a broken hip, you're surrounded by wreckage, 106 00:05:57,551 --> 00:06:01,448 dead bodies, and here you have this voice telling you, 107 00:06:01,551 --> 00:06:04,724 "Don't lose hope." 108 00:06:04,827 --> 00:06:07,586 I just listened to that voice and I acted on it. 109 00:06:07,689 --> 00:06:10,379 And it said, "Make a plan, 110 00:06:10,482 --> 00:06:12,206 "divide it in achievable steps. 111 00:06:12,310 --> 00:06:14,620 "And when you achieve one of those steps, 112 00:06:14,724 --> 00:06:16,206 congratulate yourself." 113 00:06:16,310 --> 00:06:18,068 That's exactly what I did. 114 00:06:18,172 --> 00:06:20,655 I realized that I was gonna need some water. 115 00:06:20,758 --> 00:06:23,551 So I looked at the wing of the plane, 116 00:06:23,655 --> 00:06:25,896 insulation material was some kind of foam, 117 00:06:26,000 --> 00:06:27,689 so I figured that could work as a sponge. 118 00:06:27,793 --> 00:06:30,689 And then I made 119 00:06:30,793 --> 00:06:33,689 seven little bowls, 120 00:06:33,793 --> 00:06:38,517 and I lined them up for it to rain, 121 00:06:38,620 --> 00:06:40,413 and then it rained and it poured. 122 00:06:43,965 --> 00:06:45,965 And then I was very happy to see 123 00:06:46,068 --> 00:06:49,310 these little bowls filling up with water. 124 00:06:49,413 --> 00:06:51,689 Tasted like the best champagne as you can imagine. 125 00:06:54,931 --> 00:06:57,137 She was able to survive the plane crash, 126 00:06:57,241 --> 00:06:59,103 but maybe what was even more remarkable 127 00:06:59,206 --> 00:07:02,310 is that she was able to survive eight days in the jungle 128 00:07:02,413 --> 00:07:05,068 with no prior 129 00:07:05,172 --> 00:07:08,310 jungle training or experience 130 00:07:08,413 --> 00:07:13,448 and no conditioning to be in the jungle. 131 00:07:13,551 --> 00:07:15,413 Of course, being the only survivor, 132 00:07:15,517 --> 00:07:17,275 it's an incredible story, but then 133 00:07:17,379 --> 00:07:20,896 the survival happens because you hear a voice 134 00:07:21,000 --> 00:07:23,310 directing you through it. 135 00:07:23,413 --> 00:07:27,413 It just shows how we know very little about what happens 136 00:07:27,517 --> 00:07:30,931 in these kind of encounters and situations. 137 00:07:31,034 --> 00:07:34,103 On the afternoon on the eighth days, out of nowhere... 138 00:07:36,034 --> 00:07:38,068 ...men came up the mountain... 139 00:07:40,724 --> 00:07:43,965 ...and they showed me a passenger list, 140 00:07:44,068 --> 00:07:47,310 and I had to point out my name. 141 00:07:47,413 --> 00:07:50,827 I just realized how amazing it was that they actually found me. 142 00:07:50,931 --> 00:07:54,586 SHATNER: It may have been random chance 143 00:07:54,689 --> 00:07:57,689 that allowed Annette to live through the horrific crash, 144 00:07:57,793 --> 00:08:01,862 but what was the so-called voice 145 00:08:01,965 --> 00:08:06,137 that gave her the guidance she needed to survive? 146 00:08:06,241 --> 00:08:08,758 TAYLOR: A lot of people, when they get into dangerous situations, 147 00:08:08,862 --> 00:08:10,862 they'll say that they had a voice tell them 148 00:08:10,965 --> 00:08:13,034 that they needed to do this, they needed to do that. 149 00:08:13,137 --> 00:08:17,931 We don't really know scientifically 150 00:08:18,034 --> 00:08:20,862 where these inner voices that tell you to get out 151 00:08:20,965 --> 00:08:24,448 of the dangerous situation are coming from. 152 00:08:24,551 --> 00:08:26,862 Is it some kind of deep-seated, 153 00:08:26,965 --> 00:08:30,758 electro-biochemical, uh, force 154 00:08:30,862 --> 00:08:32,620 that's-that's innate in the brain 155 00:08:32,724 --> 00:08:34,034 that suddenly gets activated? 156 00:08:34,137 --> 00:08:37,827 Or is it something that comes from outside? 157 00:08:37,931 --> 00:08:39,344 Is it faith 158 00:08:39,448 --> 00:08:42,034 from an outside power that brings that energy 159 00:08:42,137 --> 00:08:44,862 to the person who's in desperate need? 160 00:08:44,965 --> 00:08:48,931 Whether or not you view yourself as strong and capable, 161 00:08:49,034 --> 00:08:52,172 you have the potential to tap into these things 162 00:08:52,275 --> 00:08:53,241 and get in tune 163 00:08:53,344 --> 00:08:55,586 with these strengths, with these capabilities, 164 00:08:55,689 --> 00:08:58,344 whether you know it or not. 165 00:08:58,448 --> 00:09:01,206 Maybe there is something to this inner voice 166 00:09:01,310 --> 00:09:02,689 telling them the right way, 167 00:09:02,793 --> 00:09:06,000 and maybe some people have a better inner voice than others, 168 00:09:06,103 --> 00:09:08,965 and maybe there's just some dumb luck involved. 169 00:09:09,068 --> 00:09:10,620 It's possible 170 00:09:10,724 --> 00:09:13,172 that it's just one of those unexplained mysteries 171 00:09:13,275 --> 00:09:16,103 that we're never gonna figure out. 172 00:09:16,206 --> 00:09:18,517 We all have that voice inside of us 173 00:09:18,620 --> 00:09:21,068 that we can listen to, 174 00:09:21,172 --> 00:09:25,241 and in extreme situations it's always there to help you. 175 00:09:25,344 --> 00:09:27,896 Just listen to that voice. Be silent. 176 00:09:28,000 --> 00:09:29,655 It's there, it's there. 177 00:09:29,758 --> 00:09:33,586 SHATNER: Did Annette Herfkens 178 00:09:33,689 --> 00:09:37,034 manage to survive a deadly plane crash because of luck? 179 00:09:37,137 --> 00:09:39,827 A simple twist of fate? 180 00:09:39,931 --> 00:09:42,724 Or was there something inside her, 181 00:09:42,827 --> 00:09:45,379 a hidden reserve of willpower perhaps, 182 00:09:45,482 --> 00:09:49,655 that gave her the means of staying alive? 183 00:09:49,758 --> 00:09:51,586 It's an interesting question. 184 00:09:51,689 --> 00:09:54,241 And there are some who believe the answer can be found 185 00:09:54,344 --> 00:09:56,379 by examining accounts of people 186 00:09:56,482 --> 00:09:59,793 who have also found a way of cheating death 187 00:09:59,896 --> 00:10:03,241 by using superhuman strength. 188 00:10:08,758 --> 00:10:10,241 SHATNER: Melbourne, Australia. 189 00:10:10,344 --> 00:10:12,620 August 1, 2013. 190 00:10:12,724 --> 00:10:14,034 High above the city, 191 00:10:14,137 --> 00:10:15,793 22-year-old Brad Guy 192 00:10:15,896 --> 00:10:19,724 is excited to make his first skydiving jump. 193 00:10:19,827 --> 00:10:24,758 The self-professed adrenaline junkie wants to push the limits, 194 00:10:24,862 --> 00:10:27,482 but he'll soon find that this is going to be 195 00:10:27,586 --> 00:10:31,241 the fall of his life. 196 00:10:31,344 --> 00:10:33,379 I was given the opportunity to choose 197 00:10:33,482 --> 00:10:35,206 which height I wanted to jump from. 198 00:10:35,310 --> 00:10:39,137 And I decided to go as high as possible, which was 15,000 feet, 199 00:10:39,241 --> 00:10:40,551 very high. 200 00:10:40,655 --> 00:10:43,068 So my tandem instructor ran me through 201 00:10:43,172 --> 00:10:44,827 how it would feel to jump 202 00:10:44,931 --> 00:10:48,034 and what I need to do to ensure maximum safety. 203 00:10:48,137 --> 00:10:50,310 Then he asked me if I had any final questions. 204 00:10:50,413 --> 00:10:52,241 I think because I was so nervous, 205 00:10:52,344 --> 00:10:56,482 I made the joke saying, "I hope my parachute opens." 206 00:10:59,103 --> 00:11:02,931 I remember when that rickety door of the aircraft opened 207 00:11:03,034 --> 00:11:05,034 and my instructor just edging me closer and closer, 208 00:11:05,137 --> 00:11:07,344 I was so terrified. 209 00:11:07,448 --> 00:11:12,413 And eventually my instructor said, "Three, two, one, jump," 210 00:11:12,517 --> 00:11:14,275 and he pushed us out. 211 00:11:14,379 --> 00:11:16,310 [wind whistling] 212 00:11:18,655 --> 00:11:20,655 I was moving so fast that I couldn't even comprehend. 213 00:11:20,758 --> 00:11:25,655 Just that four, five, seven seconds of free fall, 214 00:11:25,758 --> 00:11:27,413 it's totally euphoric. 215 00:11:27,517 --> 00:11:30,620 It's indescribable. It's kind of like magic. 216 00:11:30,724 --> 00:11:32,586 TAYLOR: When a skydiver jumps out of a plane, 217 00:11:32,689 --> 00:11:33,965 they're accelerated by gravity, 218 00:11:34,068 --> 00:11:36,758 at a rate of 32 feet per second, per second. 219 00:11:36,862 --> 00:11:37,655 His speed would have been upwards 220 00:11:37,758 --> 00:11:39,793 over a hundred miles per hour. 221 00:11:39,896 --> 00:11:43,586 SHATNER: Brad's skydive is an even greater thrill than he expected. 222 00:11:43,689 --> 00:11:47,206 But as he and his instructor plunge toward the ground, 223 00:11:47,310 --> 00:11:50,310 something goes horribly awry. 224 00:11:50,413 --> 00:11:54,172 There just was this point when, as we were falling, 225 00:11:54,275 --> 00:11:57,137 I was expecting a thrust of a parachute to come 226 00:11:57,241 --> 00:12:00,827 as per the safety instructions, and it never came. 227 00:12:02,931 --> 00:12:05,482 I felt a bit of a thrust from a parachute, 228 00:12:05,586 --> 00:12:07,206 but it wasn't enough to slow us down. 229 00:12:09,103 --> 00:12:11,482 And that's when I noticed that the first parachute, 230 00:12:11,586 --> 00:12:14,275 it's been deployed, but it hasn't opened. 231 00:12:16,344 --> 00:12:20,448 And the emergency parachute got stuck in the original parachute. 232 00:12:20,551 --> 00:12:21,724 And because they are tangled together, 233 00:12:21,827 --> 00:12:23,068 we're not slowing down. 234 00:12:24,862 --> 00:12:28,793 We were tumbling towards the ground from 15,000 feet. 235 00:12:28,896 --> 00:12:30,517 I start freaking out. I'm really panicking. 236 00:12:30,620 --> 00:12:34,068 All I could really see was the earth getting closer and closer. 237 00:12:34,172 --> 00:12:37,724 And I knew I was going to hit the ground and die... 238 00:12:40,620 --> 00:12:42,103 [groaning] 239 00:12:42,206 --> 00:12:47,620 The impact just smashed through my body. 240 00:12:47,724 --> 00:12:50,310 It really didn't feel like a fall, 241 00:12:50,413 --> 00:12:53,172 it almost felt like the earth just came and hit me. 242 00:12:53,275 --> 00:12:57,241 And when I hit the ground, I'm still strapped to my instructor. 243 00:12:57,344 --> 00:12:58,551 He's unconscious. 244 00:12:58,655 --> 00:13:01,344 Eventually he did come to. 245 00:13:01,448 --> 00:13:03,827 We were just strapped to each other, screaming. 246 00:13:03,931 --> 00:13:05,620 I remember I was just hysterically crying, 247 00:13:05,724 --> 00:13:09,137 so confused, having no idea what had happened. 248 00:13:09,241 --> 00:13:11,724 Partially still thinking that I was actually dead. 249 00:13:11,827 --> 00:13:14,344 SHATNER: Against all odds, 250 00:13:14,448 --> 00:13:18,103 the two men survive a fall of nearly three miles. 251 00:13:18,206 --> 00:13:21,965 Brad and his instructor are rushed to the hospital, 252 00:13:22,068 --> 00:13:25,931 where they both begin a long and miraculous recovery. 253 00:13:26,034 --> 00:13:27,931 GUY: My physical injuries, 254 00:13:28,034 --> 00:13:30,793 I broke my upper spine, fractured my lower spine, 255 00:13:30,896 --> 00:13:32,620 tore the ligaments in my neck, 256 00:13:32,724 --> 00:13:36,206 cracked and bruised ribs, mild head concussion. 257 00:13:36,310 --> 00:13:40,724 I had suspected that I was a quadriplegic. 258 00:13:40,827 --> 00:13:42,241 I was numb from the neck down. 259 00:13:42,344 --> 00:13:45,379 It took me a long time to feel my body again. 260 00:13:45,482 --> 00:13:50,034 You would think that, after all these years and all the time 261 00:13:50,137 --> 00:13:52,862 I've had to reflect on it, that I would be able to look 262 00:13:52,965 --> 00:13:55,517 at the situation and seriously ask myself, 263 00:13:55,620 --> 00:13:58,448 was this luck or is it just all the odds 264 00:13:58,551 --> 00:14:01,310 being in my favor on a particular day? 265 00:14:01,413 --> 00:14:04,344 I don't know. I don't know. 266 00:14:04,448 --> 00:14:06,206 I would love to know. 267 00:14:06,310 --> 00:14:07,896 [groaning] 268 00:14:08,000 --> 00:14:10,655 COYNE: Sometimes, when humans face extreme danger, 269 00:14:10,758 --> 00:14:12,586 the normal parts of our operating brain 270 00:14:12,689 --> 00:14:14,034 kind of get pushed aside 271 00:14:14,137 --> 00:14:16,517 and the sympathetic nervous system kicks in 272 00:14:16,620 --> 00:14:20,517 and can institute an adrenaline rush into the body, 273 00:14:20,620 --> 00:14:23,931 which can do some amazing things. 274 00:14:24,034 --> 00:14:26,206 It forces blood into the muscles 275 00:14:26,310 --> 00:14:28,862 and pumps them up and becomes hard to strengthen 276 00:14:28,965 --> 00:14:33,000 and protect your skeletal system and connective tissue. 277 00:14:33,103 --> 00:14:36,000 NARRATOR: Was a surge of adrenaline responsible 278 00:14:36,103 --> 00:14:39,517 for protecting Brad's body from the extreme impact? 279 00:14:39,620 --> 00:14:44,137 Or was there something even more incredible going on? 280 00:14:44,241 --> 00:14:46,827 Perhaps an explanation can be found 281 00:14:46,931 --> 00:14:50,689 by examining another case of survival. 282 00:14:50,793 --> 00:14:53,068 One that involves an extraordinary feat 283 00:14:53,172 --> 00:14:55,862 performed by an ordinary man. 284 00:14:58,758 --> 00:15:02,551 Tucson, Arizona, July 26, 2006. 285 00:15:02,655 --> 00:15:06,793 Tom Boyle, a supervisor at a local aerospace company, 286 00:15:06,896 --> 00:15:09,068 is driving home with his wife. 287 00:15:09,172 --> 00:15:12,724 The couple are about to exit a parking lot 288 00:15:12,827 --> 00:15:14,965 when another car pulls alongside them. 289 00:15:15,068 --> 00:15:18,000 What happens next actually changes Tom 290 00:15:18,103 --> 00:15:22,793 in ways that seem to defy the very laws of nature. 291 00:15:22,896 --> 00:15:26,275 [tires screeching, metal clattering] 292 00:15:26,379 --> 00:15:29,103 The driver-- he had taken upon himself to peel out 293 00:15:29,206 --> 00:15:31,517 out of the parking lot, and as he did that, 294 00:15:31,620 --> 00:15:35,517 he sucked in a, a bicyclist underneath the vehicle. 295 00:15:35,620 --> 00:15:38,482 I jump out of the car. I go running after the Camaro. 296 00:15:38,586 --> 00:15:41,551 And as I approached the Camaro, there was a boy underneath 297 00:15:41,655 --> 00:15:43,931 on a bicycle, yelling for help 298 00:15:44,034 --> 00:15:47,310 and asking people to please get the car off him. 299 00:15:47,413 --> 00:15:49,551 I just reacted. 300 00:15:49,655 --> 00:15:53,103 SHATNER: As the boy's cries ring out, Tom has no time to think. 301 00:15:53,206 --> 00:15:56,551 A powerful force comes alive inside him. 302 00:15:56,655 --> 00:15:59,931 A force that allows Tom 303 00:16:00,034 --> 00:16:02,965 to do the impossible. 304 00:16:03,068 --> 00:16:05,241 BOYLE: It just got me so, 305 00:16:05,344 --> 00:16:10,068 I guess, nervous and, uh, compelled to help 306 00:16:10,172 --> 00:16:12,448 that I just lifted the side of the car. 307 00:16:12,551 --> 00:16:15,206 As I started lifting the car, I could hear the bicyclist 308 00:16:15,310 --> 00:16:18,241 telling me, "Higher, higher, mister, please go higher." 309 00:16:18,344 --> 00:16:20,482 So I did. 310 00:16:20,586 --> 00:16:22,793 I just held it as long as I possibly could, 311 00:16:22,896 --> 00:16:24,655 and I just thought, "Don't let go." 312 00:16:24,758 --> 00:16:26,931 And fortunately we got him out. 313 00:16:27,034 --> 00:16:30,310 I'm six-three, at that time I was 275 pounds, 314 00:16:30,413 --> 00:16:35,827 and, uh, the most I've ever lifted, I think, was... 315 00:16:35,931 --> 00:16:37,827 800 pounds? 316 00:16:37,931 --> 00:16:40,206 As I lifted the car, 317 00:16:40,310 --> 00:16:42,034 I never thought about how much it weighed. 318 00:16:42,137 --> 00:16:43,896 I just thought about saving this kid. 319 00:16:44,000 --> 00:16:45,344 WISE: Now, Tom's a big guy. 320 00:16:45,448 --> 00:16:48,793 Solid guy, but we're talking about a car, okay? 321 00:16:48,896 --> 00:16:51,103 This is a car that weighs about 3,000 pounds, 322 00:16:51,206 --> 00:16:53,862 and yet he just jacks it up. 323 00:16:53,965 --> 00:16:55,793 Bare hands, lifts this thing up. 324 00:16:55,896 --> 00:16:59,344 Human beings can't normally just lift cars. 325 00:16:59,448 --> 00:17:00,896 MICHAEL DENNIN: These situations where people 326 00:17:01,000 --> 00:17:03,172 manage to do superhuman feats of strength, 327 00:17:03,275 --> 00:17:05,034 like lift a car off someone, 328 00:17:05,137 --> 00:17:07,827 as often happens in science, these are rare events. 329 00:17:07,931 --> 00:17:09,620 We don't have detailed measurements. 330 00:17:09,724 --> 00:17:12,689 And so really understanding the true biophysics and physiology 331 00:17:12,793 --> 00:17:15,551 of all the details that go in remain a bit of a mystery 332 00:17:15,655 --> 00:17:18,517 and an interesting area for us to explore going forward. 333 00:17:18,620 --> 00:17:20,482 COYNE: We don't use most of our muscles' capability 334 00:17:20,586 --> 00:17:21,655 throughout the day. 335 00:17:21,758 --> 00:17:23,448 It's capable of much more, 336 00:17:23,551 --> 00:17:26,724 but for some reason, only under these extreme circumstances. 337 00:17:26,827 --> 00:17:32,034 TAYLOR: If we can learn how to control our minds and use it at will, 338 00:17:32,137 --> 00:17:35,206 that would be like being a superhuman, a superhero. 339 00:17:35,310 --> 00:17:39,068 SHANE HOBEL: That will, that power, 340 00:17:39,172 --> 00:17:42,000 is being driven both not only by the adrenaline 341 00:17:42,103 --> 00:17:44,068 but, more importantly, it's that energy. 342 00:17:44,172 --> 00:17:45,655 It's that type of thing in China 343 00:17:45,758 --> 00:17:46,793 that's called fa jin: 344 00:17:46,896 --> 00:17:48,689 "animal explosive energy." 345 00:17:48,793 --> 00:17:54,103 It's a burst of absolute decision. 346 00:17:54,206 --> 00:17:59,379 It's that unknown, that unexplained energetic place 347 00:17:59,482 --> 00:18:02,034 that we all know about, we talk about it, 348 00:18:02,137 --> 00:18:05,172 we have feelings and vibes about these things. 349 00:18:05,275 --> 00:18:08,034 BOYLE: So, this was a once in a lifetime moment for me. 350 00:18:08,137 --> 00:18:10,896 I've never done anything else like this again. 351 00:18:11,000 --> 00:18:13,896 I think you can tap into some amazing power. 352 00:18:14,000 --> 00:18:16,068 I truly do. It's there. 353 00:18:16,172 --> 00:18:18,413 We just have to have a reason to use it. 354 00:18:28,172 --> 00:18:32,413 Sometimes the difference between certain death and survival 355 00:18:32,517 --> 00:18:34,793 isn't only due to adrenaline, 356 00:18:34,896 --> 00:18:37,448 something that's already inside our bodies, 357 00:18:37,551 --> 00:18:40,896 but because of something else. 358 00:18:41,000 --> 00:18:45,827 Something you'd never expect could keep you alive. 359 00:18:48,172 --> 00:18:51,344 Southampton, England. April 10, 1912. 360 00:18:51,448 --> 00:18:53,275 [horn blows] 361 00:18:53,379 --> 00:18:57,103 RMS Titanic sets out on her maiden voyage 362 00:18:57,206 --> 00:18:59,206 bound for New York. 363 00:19:01,413 --> 00:19:02,931 Billed as "unsinkable," 364 00:19:03,034 --> 00:19:05,793 the more-than-46,000-ton vessel offers 365 00:19:05,896 --> 00:19:10,241 passengers the very latest in transatlantic comfort. 366 00:19:10,344 --> 00:19:13,275 But what the men, women and children on board don't know 367 00:19:13,379 --> 00:19:16,931 and could never suspect is that Titanic 368 00:19:17,034 --> 00:19:21,620 will not reach its intended destination. 369 00:19:21,724 --> 00:19:27,275 The Titanic had 2,208 on board-- uh, 891 of whom were crew. 370 00:19:27,379 --> 00:19:31,827 The Titanic was not just the largest and most luxurious 371 00:19:31,931 --> 00:19:34,482 ocean liner of the time, but it was also seen 372 00:19:34,586 --> 00:19:36,103 as a kind of industrial miracle. 373 00:19:36,206 --> 00:19:40,206 It was the largest moving object in human history. 374 00:19:44,068 --> 00:19:47,241 It was four days into its voyage. 375 00:19:47,344 --> 00:19:50,034 Very late in the evening, about 20 minutes before midnight, 376 00:19:50,137 --> 00:19:54,482 the lookout spotted a growler iceberg in its path. 377 00:19:54,586 --> 00:19:56,000 Iceberg dead ahead, sir. 378 00:19:56,103 --> 00:19:58,103 Iceberg dead ahead, sir. 379 00:19:58,206 --> 00:20:01,310 And unfortunately the ship was going too fast. 380 00:20:01,413 --> 00:20:04,206 - Hard to starboard. - HUGH BREWSTER: They tried to turn the ship, 381 00:20:04,310 --> 00:20:09,931 but the iceberg struck along the starboard bow, 382 00:20:10,034 --> 00:20:13,482 bashing in the riveted steel plates 383 00:20:13,586 --> 00:20:16,068 that comprised the Titanic's hull. 384 00:20:16,172 --> 00:20:20,275 The Titanic was proclaimed unsinkable 385 00:20:20,379 --> 00:20:24,034 because it had 16 so-called watertight compartments, 386 00:20:24,137 --> 00:20:30,172 except only the first forward four compartments at the bow 387 00:20:30,275 --> 00:20:34,241 and four compartments at the stern were truly watertight. 388 00:20:34,344 --> 00:20:39,827 And this was the fatal flaw because the iceberg breached 389 00:20:39,931 --> 00:20:42,965 more than the first four compartments. 390 00:20:43,068 --> 00:20:45,620 And the order was given to man the lifeboats. 391 00:20:45,724 --> 00:20:48,034 [alarm blaring] 392 00:20:48,137 --> 00:20:50,827 It's endlessly repeated that there weren't enough lifeboats 393 00:20:50,931 --> 00:20:54,482 on the Titanic, and strictly speaking, it's true. 394 00:20:54,586 --> 00:20:57,068 Every passenger and every crew member 395 00:20:57,172 --> 00:20:59,724 had a different moment when they began to move 396 00:20:59,827 --> 00:21:01,931 from complacency to concern 397 00:21:02,034 --> 00:21:04,068 and finally to panic. 398 00:21:04,172 --> 00:21:06,206 SHATNER: As panic spreads across the decks 399 00:21:06,310 --> 00:21:08,896 of the Titanic, male passengers scramble 400 00:21:09,000 --> 00:21:11,482 to place their wives and children on lifeboats. 401 00:21:11,586 --> 00:21:13,310 Many unfortunate souls 402 00:21:13,413 --> 00:21:16,000 choose to take their chances by jumping overboard 403 00:21:16,103 --> 00:21:18,586 into the frigid waters of the North Atlantic. 404 00:21:18,689 --> 00:21:20,758 They didn't live long. 405 00:21:20,862 --> 00:21:24,000 That is, with the remarkable exception of one man, 406 00:21:24,103 --> 00:21:27,827 Charles Joughin, the ship's chief baker. 407 00:21:29,965 --> 00:21:32,103 Charles Joughin was asleep in his bunk 408 00:21:32,206 --> 00:21:34,068 when the Titanic hit the iceberg, 409 00:21:34,172 --> 00:21:38,172 and where his quarters were, were a part of the ship 410 00:21:38,275 --> 00:21:40,517 that felt the collision quite significantly, 411 00:21:40,620 --> 00:21:42,586 so he sat up with a jolt 412 00:21:42,689 --> 00:21:46,896 and realized that there had been a fairly serious collision 413 00:21:47,000 --> 00:21:49,827 for the ship and he went up on deck to see. 414 00:21:49,931 --> 00:21:52,068 BREWSTER: When he heard that the order 415 00:21:52,172 --> 00:21:55,034 for lifeboats had been given, 416 00:21:55,137 --> 00:21:58,689 he returned to his cabin and poured himself 417 00:21:58,793 --> 00:22:01,655 a tumbler full of liquor, 418 00:22:01,758 --> 00:22:04,137 and he drank a half tumbler full. 419 00:22:04,241 --> 00:22:06,310 Then he went back up on deck 420 00:22:06,413 --> 00:22:09,862 and helped to supervise the loading of lifeboats. 421 00:22:09,965 --> 00:22:12,000 He helped load lifeboat ten. 422 00:22:12,103 --> 00:22:15,000 After that lifeboat was loaded, he went back to his cabin 423 00:22:15,103 --> 00:22:17,862 and had another nip or two so that he was 424 00:22:17,965 --> 00:22:20,793 really quite well-lit as it got later in the night. 425 00:22:20,896 --> 00:22:23,724 RUSSELL: At about 2:10, passengers 426 00:22:23,827 --> 00:22:26,103 reported hearing a sickening roar. 427 00:22:26,206 --> 00:22:28,034 - [loud metallic creaking] - RUSSELL: That was the bulkheads 428 00:22:28,137 --> 00:22:31,965 giving way after this incredible stress from the incoming ocean. 429 00:22:33,344 --> 00:22:35,103 BREWSTER: After the Titanic broke in two, 430 00:22:35,206 --> 00:22:37,655 Joughin himself climbed onto the stern railing, 431 00:22:37,758 --> 00:22:40,275 not far from the flagpole. 432 00:22:40,379 --> 00:22:42,517 And as the ship sank, 433 00:22:42,620 --> 00:22:44,793 he rode it down like an elevator. 434 00:22:44,896 --> 00:22:48,103 [passengers screaming] 435 00:22:48,206 --> 00:22:52,103 The water temperature was between -1 and -2 Celsius, 436 00:22:52,206 --> 00:22:55,862 or about 28 Fahrenheit, which is below freezing. 437 00:22:55,965 --> 00:22:59,206 RUSSELL: Then, at about 2:30 a.m., 438 00:22:59,310 --> 00:23:03,137 so ten minutes after the ship disappeared, 439 00:23:03,241 --> 00:23:07,413 the cries for help had finally stopped. 440 00:23:10,241 --> 00:23:13,068 So we would say survival time in that water 441 00:23:13,172 --> 00:23:16,172 was about ten minutes for most passengers and crew. 442 00:23:16,275 --> 00:23:19,517 BREWSTER: Joughin paddled around for a while 443 00:23:19,620 --> 00:23:21,827 and eventually, uh, came across 444 00:23:21,931 --> 00:23:24,620 the overturned collapsible lifeboat, 445 00:23:24,724 --> 00:23:30,068 and at least 28 men found refuge there and survived on the back. 446 00:23:30,172 --> 00:23:33,103 Joughin says he paddled up to the lifeboat and was rebuffed. 447 00:23:33,206 --> 00:23:37,068 They said, "No more men, you'll sink us." 448 00:23:37,172 --> 00:23:40,448 Of the 2,208 passengers and crew 449 00:23:40,551 --> 00:23:43,379 who sailed upon the Titanic on its maiden voyage, 450 00:23:43,482 --> 00:23:47,379 only 712 survived. 451 00:23:47,482 --> 00:23:51,551 1,496 perished. 452 00:23:51,655 --> 00:23:53,275 SHATNER: Among the survivors 453 00:23:53,379 --> 00:23:57,000 was Charles Joughin, who, after floating in 28-degree water 454 00:23:57,103 --> 00:24:01,793 for nearly two hours, managed to stay alive. 455 00:24:01,896 --> 00:24:04,448 But how? 456 00:24:04,551 --> 00:24:07,103 He should have been a candidate to have his legs amputated. 457 00:24:07,206 --> 00:24:10,344 There should have been severe damage, and there wasn't. 458 00:24:10,448 --> 00:24:13,793 Joughin reached New York in relative good health. 459 00:24:13,896 --> 00:24:17,620 He went back to his career at sea not long afterwards. 460 00:24:17,724 --> 00:24:19,103 And when they asked him later, 461 00:24:19,206 --> 00:24:21,172 "What do you think it was that allowed you to survive," 462 00:24:21,275 --> 00:24:25,482 he said that the alcohol warmed his blood and kept him alive. 463 00:24:25,586 --> 00:24:28,758 But no medical science shows that this is the case. 464 00:24:28,862 --> 00:24:32,137 In fact, it's believed that alcohol actually makes it worse 465 00:24:32,241 --> 00:24:35,965 if you're encountering a situation of hypothermia. 466 00:24:36,068 --> 00:24:38,896 BREWSTER: Experts say that when you drink alcohol, 467 00:24:39,000 --> 00:24:42,000 something called vasodilation occurs, 468 00:24:42,103 --> 00:24:44,068 and the blood goes to your skin, 469 00:24:44,172 --> 00:24:47,068 which is why your face turns red if you drink a lot. 470 00:24:47,172 --> 00:24:50,517 So that when you actually are plunged into cold water, 471 00:24:50,620 --> 00:24:53,310 you're more susceptible to hypothermia. 472 00:24:53,413 --> 00:24:57,241 You actually, uh, would die more quickly if you were drunk. 473 00:24:57,344 --> 00:24:59,862 TAYLOR: Alcohol is a toxin. 474 00:24:59,965 --> 00:25:02,310 Perhaps it drives your body temperature up 475 00:25:02,413 --> 00:25:04,379 because your immune system has to kick in 476 00:25:04,482 --> 00:25:07,655 and start fighting off a toxin. Uh, that's one possibility. 477 00:25:07,758 --> 00:25:09,551 Uh, the other possibility is 478 00:25:09,655 --> 00:25:13,758 that the alcohol in his system just kept him calm, 479 00:25:13,862 --> 00:25:17,344 uh, so that he didn't panic and was able to survive longer 480 00:25:17,448 --> 00:25:20,620 because he kept a cool head about it. 481 00:25:20,724 --> 00:25:24,827 So stories like Charles Joughin cause us to question. 482 00:25:24,931 --> 00:25:28,103 Was he different from normal people? 483 00:25:28,206 --> 00:25:30,586 How could he have survived temperatures like that 484 00:25:30,689 --> 00:25:33,517 for that long? 485 00:25:33,620 --> 00:25:35,827 We don't really know the answers to this, 486 00:25:35,931 --> 00:25:37,275 and maybe we'll never know. 487 00:25:38,241 --> 00:25:41,689 SHATNER: Saved by alcohol? 488 00:25:41,793 --> 00:25:43,517 Or was it that, 489 00:25:43,620 --> 00:25:45,137 by being intoxicated, 490 00:25:45,241 --> 00:25:48,655 Charles Joughin simply had no fear? 491 00:25:48,758 --> 00:25:51,172 But whatever the reason, 492 00:25:51,275 --> 00:25:53,551 there are many who believe that the ability 493 00:25:53,655 --> 00:25:57,068 to fearlessly survive almost certain death 494 00:25:57,172 --> 00:25:59,827 isn't limited to adults. 495 00:25:59,931 --> 00:26:02,965 They insist that children also possess 496 00:26:03,068 --> 00:26:06,655 a unique ability to survive danger, 497 00:26:06,758 --> 00:26:09,206 as we will soon find out. 498 00:26:14,827 --> 00:26:16,655 SHATNER: Wallowa, Oregon. 499 00:26:16,758 --> 00:26:19,482 April 1986. 500 00:26:19,586 --> 00:26:22,620 Six-year-old Cody Sheehy is with his family on a picnic 501 00:26:22,724 --> 00:26:25,068 in Wallowa-Whitman National Forest. 502 00:26:25,172 --> 00:26:27,034 The young boy is playing with his older sister 503 00:26:27,137 --> 00:26:29,896 amongst the trees when he gets separated from her. 504 00:26:30,000 --> 00:26:32,620 When he tries to find his way back to the picnic, 505 00:26:32,724 --> 00:26:35,620 he realizes he can't. 506 00:26:35,724 --> 00:26:37,793 RYAN SHEEHY: At some point, my sister had said 507 00:26:37,896 --> 00:26:40,862 that she hadn't seen my brother in a while. 508 00:26:40,965 --> 00:26:44,482 After a few minutes, when my brother still didn't show up, 509 00:26:44,586 --> 00:26:46,689 - we started to call out for him. - Cody! 510 00:26:46,793 --> 00:26:48,103 RYAN: And we thought that would bring him 511 00:26:48,206 --> 00:26:51,517 out of the woods immediately, but there was no response. 512 00:26:51,620 --> 00:26:53,034 And there were several adults out there, 513 00:26:53,137 --> 00:26:55,310 and also my sister and I started to look for him, 514 00:26:55,413 --> 00:26:58,068 yelling out his name, trying to get his attention. 515 00:26:58,172 --> 00:27:01,344 So I'd guess it was maybe 3:00 in the afternoon. 516 00:27:01,448 --> 00:27:05,586 Cody had probably been gone for an hour and a half. 517 00:27:05,689 --> 00:27:09,379 I think at this point my mom was starting to get really worried. 518 00:27:11,172 --> 00:27:12,793 SHATNER: With no sign of the boy, 519 00:27:12,896 --> 00:27:15,517 an official search party is formed. 520 00:27:15,620 --> 00:27:18,275 But as day turns into night, 521 00:27:18,379 --> 00:27:21,206 their desperate attempts to find Cody fail. 522 00:27:21,310 --> 00:27:26,517 The six-year-old is now utterly and completely lost and alone, 523 00:27:26,620 --> 00:27:29,724 wandering the rugged wilderness. 524 00:27:31,655 --> 00:27:35,000 A professional search and rescue team from the county came out. 525 00:27:40,413 --> 00:27:43,965 And one of the first things that they did was they started 526 00:27:44,068 --> 00:27:47,137 by driving the roads and calling out his name. 527 00:27:47,241 --> 00:27:50,931 And they alerted local pilots to start flying over there. 528 00:27:51,034 --> 00:27:52,896 This was a scary situation for us. 529 00:27:53,000 --> 00:27:56,206 - [phone rings] - The next morning 530 00:27:56,310 --> 00:27:58,379 my grandmother received a phone call 531 00:27:58,482 --> 00:28:02,862 that he had been found, and that was great news. 532 00:28:04,206 --> 00:28:06,172 It was a huge sense of relief. 533 00:28:08,448 --> 00:28:11,931 My six-year-old logic was that if I could just get home 534 00:28:12,034 --> 00:28:14,689 and get into bed, then I wouldn't be in trouble 535 00:28:14,793 --> 00:28:16,068 and everything would be okay. 536 00:28:16,172 --> 00:28:19,034 So when the sun came up, I was... 537 00:28:19,137 --> 00:28:21,758 leaving that forested area and that plateau, 538 00:28:21,862 --> 00:28:24,379 and looking down below me was a valley 539 00:28:24,482 --> 00:28:26,379 with some houses in it. 540 00:28:26,482 --> 00:28:28,482 I got down the-the hill, 541 00:28:28,586 --> 00:28:29,931 and there was a girl, 542 00:28:30,034 --> 00:28:32,620 and so she talked me into going into this house. 543 00:28:32,724 --> 00:28:35,827 And that's when I just totally fell asleep on the couch. 544 00:28:35,931 --> 00:28:39,034 When I woke up, there was a county sheriff there. 545 00:28:39,137 --> 00:28:42,827 So that officer drove me to my grandpa's house, 546 00:28:42,931 --> 00:28:44,586 and then eventually they brought my mom, 547 00:28:44,689 --> 00:28:48,344 and my sister and brother were there all of a sudden, and so... 548 00:28:48,448 --> 00:28:51,724 at that point, I kind of knew that... that I was home. 549 00:28:51,827 --> 00:28:54,586 SHATNER: In the days after his survival, 550 00:28:54,689 --> 00:28:58,034 Cody's journey through the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest 551 00:28:58,137 --> 00:29:01,758 back to civilization becomes headline news 552 00:29:01,862 --> 00:29:03,482 across the country. 553 00:29:03,586 --> 00:29:06,551 But the story raises more questions than answers. 554 00:29:06,655 --> 00:29:09,689 How did a young child endure frigid temperatures, 555 00:29:09,793 --> 00:29:14,965 hostile terrain, and a walk of nearly marathon distance? 556 00:29:16,413 --> 00:29:18,275 Cody was missing from... 557 00:29:18,379 --> 00:29:21,310 early afternoon till 8:00 the next morning, 558 00:29:21,413 --> 00:29:23,896 about 15 or 16 hours, 559 00:29:24,000 --> 00:29:27,206 and somehow in that time period he covered 18 miles 560 00:29:27,310 --> 00:29:31,551 over rugged terrain in an area he'd never been in, at night. 561 00:29:31,655 --> 00:29:34,206 It just really amazes me that he had the conviction 562 00:29:34,310 --> 00:29:36,068 to keep heading in the correct direction, 563 00:29:36,172 --> 00:29:38,482 and somehow he knew that. 564 00:29:40,068 --> 00:29:42,206 By the time it got dark, I'd probably walked, 565 00:29:42,310 --> 00:29:44,551 I think, around three or four miles. 566 00:29:44,655 --> 00:29:48,241 And as a six-year-old, that probably was the furthest 567 00:29:48,344 --> 00:29:51,275 I'd ever walked in my life up to that point. 568 00:29:51,379 --> 00:29:55,068 And I had found a larger road, but then it got to a fork, 569 00:29:55,172 --> 00:29:56,862 and I had to make a decision. 570 00:29:56,965 --> 00:29:59,379 [crickets chirping] 571 00:30:04,344 --> 00:30:07,827 And I decided to go right, and I went down... 572 00:30:07,931 --> 00:30:10,586 this other way for probably half a mile. 573 00:30:10,689 --> 00:30:12,206 And then something inside me said, 574 00:30:12,310 --> 00:30:14,896 "This is not the right direction." 575 00:30:15,000 --> 00:30:17,758 More scary that way, but I don't know why. 576 00:30:17,862 --> 00:30:20,000 So I turned around. 577 00:30:22,827 --> 00:30:25,172 And once I made a decision to start walking, 578 00:30:25,275 --> 00:30:28,482 I don't really remember questioning it. 579 00:30:28,586 --> 00:30:31,586 An adult can sit there and think of all the fears, 580 00:30:31,689 --> 00:30:34,413 all the mistakes, all the bad things that can happen, 581 00:30:34,517 --> 00:30:36,793 where the child just knew he was in trouble 582 00:30:36,896 --> 00:30:38,724 and had to get out of it. 583 00:30:38,827 --> 00:30:40,965 SHATNER: But what if it's more 584 00:30:41,068 --> 00:30:43,896 than just a child's lack of self-consciousness 585 00:30:44,000 --> 00:30:47,241 that allowed Cody to make it home alive? 586 00:30:47,344 --> 00:30:51,241 What if there's a more supernatural explanation? 587 00:30:53,137 --> 00:30:55,620 For some reason, he knew that he was on the right trail. 588 00:30:55,724 --> 00:30:57,724 Is it because there is so many people and activity 589 00:30:57,827 --> 00:31:00,793 on that trail in the past that he's picking up on that energy? 590 00:31:00,896 --> 00:31:03,862 Whatever he's picking up, he trusted it, 591 00:31:03,965 --> 00:31:06,034 he knew it, and he went with it. 592 00:31:07,413 --> 00:31:09,758 We are all connected to our higher guidance 593 00:31:09,862 --> 00:31:12,793 and, in fact, we receive messages 594 00:31:12,896 --> 00:31:16,034 from our guides on a daily basis. 595 00:31:16,137 --> 00:31:19,448 This is our internal guidance system 596 00:31:19,551 --> 00:31:25,137 keeping us on the right path, telling us what to do next. 597 00:31:25,241 --> 00:31:28,758 The reason why Cody stayed calm and did not panic-- 598 00:31:28,862 --> 00:31:34,137 it is because he sensed the presence of his spirit guide 599 00:31:34,241 --> 00:31:38,758 or perhaps his guardian angel protecting him, guiding him, 600 00:31:38,862 --> 00:31:41,931 telling him to walk back to safety. 601 00:31:42,034 --> 00:31:45,068 Children are very comfortable with these feelings. 602 00:31:45,172 --> 00:31:47,655 They get a sensation and they act on it. 603 00:31:49,103 --> 00:31:50,379 CODY: Looking back over my life, 604 00:31:50,482 --> 00:31:53,379 there's no doubt that I defied the odds. 605 00:31:53,482 --> 00:31:55,827 And science would probably say that a six-year-old 606 00:31:55,931 --> 00:31:58,620 is capable of that because I did do it. 607 00:31:58,724 --> 00:32:02,206 But the reality is that most people are not put 608 00:32:02,310 --> 00:32:05,172 in that situation as a six-year-old. 609 00:32:06,344 --> 00:32:08,793 SHATNER: Cody Sheehy withstood something 610 00:32:08,896 --> 00:32:11,137 that would have challenged any adult. 611 00:32:11,241 --> 00:32:14,793 But does his battle against nature suggest that children 612 00:32:14,896 --> 00:32:17,344 have an innate knack for survival, 613 00:32:17,448 --> 00:32:21,137 as counterintuitive as that may seem? 614 00:32:21,241 --> 00:32:23,206 Survival experts say yes. 615 00:32:23,310 --> 00:32:25,103 They also claim that some people 616 00:32:25,206 --> 00:32:28,517 have even more extraordinary survival skills, 617 00:32:28,620 --> 00:32:32,068 including the ability to avoid danger entirely 618 00:32:32,172 --> 00:32:35,068 by sensing it before it occurs. 619 00:32:42,448 --> 00:32:45,344 SHATNER: England, February 1998. 620 00:32:46,862 --> 00:32:50,068 Interior designer Clare Henry is driving to her home 621 00:32:50,172 --> 00:32:54,241 in the county of Hampshire, nearly 100 miles from London. 622 00:32:54,344 --> 00:32:59,344 It's a trip that she's made more times than she can remember. 623 00:32:59,448 --> 00:33:02,034 HENRY: So I'm sitting in the car. 624 00:33:02,137 --> 00:33:05,448 I was driving back from London to Hampshire. 625 00:33:05,551 --> 00:33:11,310 It was about the 8th of February, 1998. 626 00:33:11,413 --> 00:33:15,275 It was six months after Princess Diana had died. 627 00:33:17,448 --> 00:33:22,551 I met Diana when I was a member of the Harbour Club. 628 00:33:22,655 --> 00:33:24,620 And I would meet her many times 629 00:33:24,724 --> 00:33:26,793 when I was working out in the gym. 630 00:33:26,896 --> 00:33:29,896 And I wasn't a close friend-- I wish I had been-- 631 00:33:30,000 --> 00:33:32,620 but we used to have a giggle together, 632 00:33:32,724 --> 00:33:34,689 and we had a lovely time. 633 00:33:34,793 --> 00:33:36,448 And she was a very dear soul. 634 00:33:36,551 --> 00:33:39,482 Full of light, full of love. There was something about her. 635 00:33:39,586 --> 00:33:41,241 I couldn't quite put my finger on it. 636 00:33:42,758 --> 00:33:44,379 SHATNER: As Clare pulls 637 00:33:44,482 --> 00:33:46,344 onto the M27 motorway, 638 00:33:46,448 --> 00:33:49,310 she notices that the highway is shrouded in fog. 639 00:33:51,517 --> 00:33:53,827 HENRY: I came across a fog wall. 640 00:33:53,931 --> 00:33:56,034 It had been raining in the morning, and when it rains, 641 00:33:56,137 --> 00:33:59,275 you know, you often get damp weather in England, 642 00:33:59,379 --> 00:34:02,965 and you get foggy evenings, especially in the West Country. 643 00:34:03,068 --> 00:34:05,896 SHATNER: Instead of pulling into the fast lane, 644 00:34:06,000 --> 00:34:08,275 as she's done countless times before, 645 00:34:08,379 --> 00:34:12,793 Clare slows down and proceeds with caution. 646 00:34:12,896 --> 00:34:15,827 And then Clare suddenly has a strange 647 00:34:15,931 --> 00:34:19,793 and disturbing vision. 648 00:34:19,896 --> 00:34:21,793 She sees a woman's face 649 00:34:21,896 --> 00:34:23,827 but not just that of any woman. 650 00:34:23,931 --> 00:34:28,000 She sees the face of Princess Diana. 651 00:34:29,896 --> 00:34:33,931 And suddenly I see this vision. 652 00:34:34,034 --> 00:34:37,000 And I was very surprised, very shocked 653 00:34:37,103 --> 00:34:40,275 to see the face of Princess Diana 654 00:34:40,379 --> 00:34:41,931 just here. 655 00:34:42,034 --> 00:34:45,034 Literally here in front of my face. 656 00:34:45,137 --> 00:34:49,517 Because I see her face, and I put two and two together-- 657 00:34:49,620 --> 00:34:53,620 Diana killed in a car crash 658 00:34:53,724 --> 00:34:56,586 in the tunnel in the Mercedes-- 659 00:34:56,689 --> 00:34:57,965 I suddenly realize 660 00:34:58,068 --> 00:34:59,965 Diana is trying to tell me something, 661 00:35:00,068 --> 00:35:03,103 and something is about to happen in front of me, 662 00:35:03,206 --> 00:35:04,689 and I need to pay attention, 663 00:35:04,793 --> 00:35:07,517 and I need to change what I normally do. 664 00:35:08,724 --> 00:35:11,965 So I had a very, very, very short time 665 00:35:12,068 --> 00:35:15,931 to think about what I was gonna do next. 666 00:35:16,034 --> 00:35:19,793 I shot across, left, towards the hard shoulder, 667 00:35:19,896 --> 00:35:21,517 and I kept on going. 668 00:35:21,620 --> 00:35:23,068 And all of a sudden, 669 00:35:23,172 --> 00:35:27,827 - I hear this awful sound. - [tires screeching] 670 00:35:27,931 --> 00:35:30,620 [glass breaking, metal clanging] 671 00:35:30,724 --> 00:35:33,379 And the sound was metal on metal... 672 00:35:35,344 --> 00:35:36,758 ...and breaking glass. 673 00:35:36,862 --> 00:35:39,931 And I realized there's an accident. 674 00:35:40,034 --> 00:35:44,310 I just remember passing this barrage of cars. 675 00:35:44,413 --> 00:35:48,448 And I couldn't believe how glass didn't hit me. 676 00:35:48,551 --> 00:35:51,206 It was a pretty big pileup. 677 00:35:51,310 --> 00:35:54,931 And then I stop 'cause I realize there's nobody next to me, 678 00:35:55,034 --> 00:35:57,000 there's nobody behind me, 679 00:35:57,103 --> 00:35:59,482 and nobody got out of that accident. 680 00:35:59,586 --> 00:36:04,275 I was the only one who got out of that accident. 681 00:36:04,379 --> 00:36:08,206 And if I had done what I normally do that day 682 00:36:08,310 --> 00:36:10,275 and gone straight into the fast lane, 683 00:36:10,379 --> 00:36:13,862 I don't think I'd be sitting here today, to be honest. 684 00:36:14,862 --> 00:36:17,206 SHATNER: This strange ability 685 00:36:17,310 --> 00:36:19,103 to anticipate danger before it happens 686 00:36:19,206 --> 00:36:22,275 may seem like a far-fetched notion. 687 00:36:22,379 --> 00:36:25,517 But if not for seeing the face of Princess Diana, 688 00:36:25,620 --> 00:36:27,896 Clare Henry believes that she would have met 689 00:36:28,000 --> 00:36:32,379 a rather sudden and tragic end on the highway that day. 690 00:36:32,482 --> 00:36:36,689 Was the vision that she claims to have seen 691 00:36:36,793 --> 00:36:40,793 simply a coincidental figment of Clare's imagination? 692 00:36:40,896 --> 00:36:45,620 Or was it something more? 693 00:36:47,689 --> 00:36:49,517 Clare had a glimpse of the future 694 00:36:49,620 --> 00:36:53,379 in that one instant, which is exactly the time 695 00:36:53,482 --> 00:36:57,000 she had a vision of Princess Diana warning her. 696 00:36:57,103 --> 00:36:59,517 "This is not your time to die." 697 00:37:00,689 --> 00:37:02,379 "Be careful. 698 00:37:02,482 --> 00:37:04,482 Get off the road now." 699 00:37:04,586 --> 00:37:06,827 Clare and Princess Diana 700 00:37:06,931 --> 00:37:08,620 may have been just friends at the gym, 701 00:37:08,724 --> 00:37:12,448 but perhaps there was a deeper, stronger connection 702 00:37:12,551 --> 00:37:13,931 on a spiritual level, 703 00:37:14,034 --> 00:37:16,689 on a much higher level. 704 00:37:16,793 --> 00:37:18,931 A bigger story, so to speak. 705 00:37:19,931 --> 00:37:21,103 DENNIN: I think many of us 706 00:37:21,206 --> 00:37:22,689 have had that experience 707 00:37:22,793 --> 00:37:24,448 of, you know, your hair tingling 708 00:37:24,551 --> 00:37:27,068 or ducking just before something was coming. 709 00:37:27,172 --> 00:37:29,241 And if our brain is good at interpreting it 710 00:37:29,344 --> 00:37:31,689 without us knowing, we can get a premonition 711 00:37:31,793 --> 00:37:33,586 and get out of harm's way. 712 00:37:34,724 --> 00:37:36,448 But at the end of the day, 713 00:37:36,551 --> 00:37:38,896 science doesn't really have a good explanation of this yet 714 00:37:39,000 --> 00:37:40,551 because we haven't studied it in the ways, 715 00:37:40,655 --> 00:37:41,931 I think, that needs to be done. 716 00:37:42,034 --> 00:37:44,000 [monitor beeping] 717 00:37:44,103 --> 00:37:45,965 CORY: Sometimes premonition 718 00:37:46,068 --> 00:37:49,034 comes from what we call our spirit family. 719 00:37:49,137 --> 00:37:53,965 They are communicating with us from the other side, 720 00:37:54,068 --> 00:37:57,000 giving us messages 721 00:37:57,103 --> 00:37:59,482 that something's about to go wrong. 722 00:37:59,586 --> 00:38:03,655 Because premonition is coming from our higher consciousness, 723 00:38:03,758 --> 00:38:07,068 it is not part of our normal awakened state. 724 00:38:07,172 --> 00:38:10,034 It is coming from another dimension 725 00:38:10,137 --> 00:38:13,310 beyond this human reality. 726 00:38:15,310 --> 00:38:17,103 SHATNER: If it's true that some humans 727 00:38:17,206 --> 00:38:19,862 can avoid danger by seeing through time, 728 00:38:19,965 --> 00:38:21,655 could it also be possible 729 00:38:21,758 --> 00:38:24,172 for some of us to protect ourselves from harm 730 00:38:24,275 --> 00:38:27,827 by making time stand still? 731 00:38:27,931 --> 00:38:29,965 There's at least one man 732 00:38:30,068 --> 00:38:33,000 who would insist that the answer to that question 733 00:38:33,103 --> 00:38:35,206 is a profound yes. 734 00:38:40,896 --> 00:38:43,137 SHATNER: Ragged Falls, Ontario. 735 00:38:43,241 --> 00:38:45,379 Summer 1995. 736 00:38:45,482 --> 00:38:47,413 13-year-old David Whitehead 737 00:38:47,517 --> 00:38:50,206 is hanging out with friends by a river, 738 00:38:50,310 --> 00:38:54,103 enjoying the simple joys of sunshine and the outdoors. 739 00:38:54,206 --> 00:38:58,172 But what happens next is anything but fun. 740 00:38:58,275 --> 00:39:00,862 WHITEHEAD: We start playing truth or dare, 741 00:39:00,965 --> 00:39:03,000 and I started getting the sense 742 00:39:03,103 --> 00:39:05,896 that my friend was thinking, "Well, the next dare 743 00:39:06,000 --> 00:39:08,000 will be that I'm gonna jump into the river." 744 00:39:08,965 --> 00:39:10,448 I didn't think it was a good idea, 745 00:39:10,551 --> 00:39:11,689 but he did it anyways. 746 00:39:11,793 --> 00:39:13,827 He jumped in. 747 00:39:13,931 --> 00:39:18,034 Immediately, he gets swept towards the edge of these falls, 748 00:39:18,137 --> 00:39:20,689 and they were very rocky, sharp, jagged edges. 749 00:39:20,793 --> 00:39:23,344 They would actually smash you all the way down. 750 00:39:23,448 --> 00:39:24,655 I don't know what it was, 751 00:39:24,758 --> 00:39:26,137 but something activated inside of me, 752 00:39:26,241 --> 00:39:29,586 and I knew that my friend was gonna die. 753 00:39:29,689 --> 00:39:30,620 SHATNER: In an instant, 754 00:39:30,724 --> 00:39:32,344 David was able to react 755 00:39:32,448 --> 00:39:34,000 because, in that moment, he found 756 00:39:34,103 --> 00:39:36,655 he possessed the extraordinary ability 757 00:39:36,758 --> 00:39:39,310 to slow down time. 758 00:39:42,413 --> 00:39:44,758 The whole thing I remember 759 00:39:44,862 --> 00:39:47,000 in crystal clear detail to this day. 760 00:39:49,103 --> 00:39:50,620 Time stood still. 761 00:39:50,724 --> 00:39:52,793 Everything seemed to slow down. 762 00:39:53,724 --> 00:39:55,137 I remember everything feeling 763 00:39:55,241 --> 00:39:58,172 like I was operating in slow motion. 764 00:39:59,241 --> 00:40:01,551 And luckily, 765 00:40:01,655 --> 00:40:03,586 I was able to finally get ahold 766 00:40:03,689 --> 00:40:04,965 - of one of the rocks. - Help! Help me! 767 00:40:05,068 --> 00:40:07,310 WHITEHEAD: I grab the rock. 768 00:40:07,413 --> 00:40:08,827 I grab onto my friend's hand. 769 00:40:08,931 --> 00:40:11,172 - Help me! - His feet are literally dangling over the edge 770 00:40:11,275 --> 00:40:13,000 of this waterfall. 771 00:40:13,103 --> 00:40:15,758 - Help! Help me! - WHITEHEAD: All that went through my mind 772 00:40:15,862 --> 00:40:17,551 was, "Don't let go. Don't let go. 773 00:40:17,655 --> 00:40:18,965 - Don't let go." - Help! 774 00:40:19,068 --> 00:40:22,758 I'm just a small, scrawny 13-year-old kid, 775 00:40:22,862 --> 00:40:24,448 and here I am, bicep-curling this kid 776 00:40:24,551 --> 00:40:26,000 off the edge of a waterfall. 777 00:40:26,103 --> 00:40:28,172 I often think back to that feeling 778 00:40:28,275 --> 00:40:30,931 of time slowing down, and I wonder, 779 00:40:31,034 --> 00:40:33,068 how could I be in one state of consciousness, 780 00:40:33,172 --> 00:40:35,206 and then, during a traumatic event, 781 00:40:35,310 --> 00:40:38,172 I'm in a completely different state of consciousness? 782 00:40:40,034 --> 00:40:42,827 Time dilation isn't just something we perceive. 783 00:40:42,931 --> 00:40:46,793 It's something that really happens to us in our brains. 784 00:40:46,896 --> 00:40:50,896 It may seem like time is moving slower, 785 00:40:51,000 --> 00:40:52,862 but we're just processing information 786 00:40:52,965 --> 00:40:55,034 - so much more quickly. - [screams] 787 00:40:55,137 --> 00:40:59,482 Our synapses are literally firing off faster. 788 00:40:59,586 --> 00:41:01,068 The way you make a slow-motion movie 789 00:41:01,172 --> 00:41:03,310 is by taking a lot of frames of film. 790 00:41:03,413 --> 00:41:05,758 And that's essentially how the human brain works, too. 791 00:41:05,862 --> 00:41:08,793 Intense experience 792 00:41:08,896 --> 00:41:11,896 means lots of dense, rich memories, 793 00:41:12,000 --> 00:41:14,068 which creates a perception 794 00:41:14,172 --> 00:41:16,551 that things have taken a long time 795 00:41:16,655 --> 00:41:20,137 even if they've taken a short time. 796 00:41:20,241 --> 00:41:23,586 So that means that there's a gear that we have in our minds 797 00:41:23,689 --> 00:41:26,379 that we don't play with on a daily basis 798 00:41:26,482 --> 00:41:29,206 but, during traumatic events, gets activated. 799 00:41:29,310 --> 00:41:32,724 And this is yet another testament 800 00:41:32,827 --> 00:41:34,965 to the true potential that we all have. 801 00:41:38,172 --> 00:41:40,931 If, after hearing these stories, 802 00:41:41,034 --> 00:41:42,655 you still think surviving disaster 803 00:41:42,758 --> 00:41:44,517 is nothing more than a matter of fate, 804 00:41:44,620 --> 00:41:45,793 then maybe you're the type 805 00:41:45,896 --> 00:41:47,310 to ignore the safety instructions 806 00:41:47,413 --> 00:41:48,896 before an airline flight 807 00:41:49,000 --> 00:41:52,448 or trust someone else to pack your parachute. 808 00:41:52,551 --> 00:41:54,275 No? 809 00:41:54,379 --> 00:41:59,551 Then maybe you'd better take destiny into your own hands 810 00:41:59,655 --> 00:42:02,620 and rely on your wits to survive, 811 00:42:02,724 --> 00:42:05,689 especially since your future is still... 812 00:42:05,793 --> 00:42:07,862 [whispering]: unexplained. 64467

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