Combining
yoga and his knowledge of
physiology in freediving, Severinsen became a record holder of four
AIDA freediving world records. He achieved two Guinness World Records in 2010: in March that year he swam under ice wearing only swimming trunks and goggles, exceeding
Wim Hof's record of March 2000 by ; and in April, after inhaling pure oxygen, he held his breath for 20 minutes and 10 seconds in a tank full of
sharks at the Kattegat Centre in
Grenaa. In May 2012 he was awarded the record of "Longest time breath held voluntarily (male)" by Guinness World Records for holding his breath for 22 minutes; this record was achieved in a tank at the London School of Diving with the water cooled to . He held this record until 28 February 2016, when it was broken by
Aleix Segura. In April 2013 in
Qorlortoq Lake in east
Greenland, he set two new world records for "longest swim under ice - breath held": while wearing a wetsuit and
monofin, taking 2 minutes, 11 seconds, and the following day, wearing only swimming trunks. He announced that these would be his last record attempts and he would now concentrate on teaching. In 2020, Severinsen came back from retirement to break another record. He swam 202 meters on a single breath at La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico on 26 November 2020. Severinsen was chosen "The Ultimate Superhuman" on the
Discovery Channel programme
Superhuman Showdown, and a documentary about him, ''Stig Severinsen: The Man Who Doesn't Breathe'', was produced for broadcast on Discovery and on
Quest in the UK in October 2013. In
Breatheology Severinsen proposes that through working with the breath, a link can be created between body and mind that enables a person to control
stress, increase energy, perform better physically and mentally, alleviate pain and improve health. ==AIDA Freediving World Records==