![]() “I have dragged my ears very hard in different directions, but with no success,” he added. Olle has actually managed to crack his jaw “once or twice,” however, it proved “very painful.” “I have tried cracking my jaw, ears and nose, even though I am not sure if this is even possible,” he said. The human body contains 360 joints in total, which means there are many that Olle has been unable to crack, despite trying. Olle cracked 46 different joints consecutively to achieve his world record – including ones in his neck, back, and ankles - however, he believes he could do 60 “if all goes perfectly.” “I do notice that I crack them more when I feel restless,” he said. Nowadays, joint cracking serves as a stress reliever for Olle. Olle believes that the reason he started cracking his joints as a young child was because it felt “exciting” and “dangerous” without causing himself any real harm, despite his grandmother’s warnings. Now a hardened joint cracker, Olle no longer feels any pain at all. “The most painful joints were probably the smaller joints, such as the ‘middle’ joints on the fingers and the toes in general,” he revealed. Olle admitted that some joints were “definitely painful” to crack at first, however, he has always been “relatively insensitive” to pain. “I remember when I watched some video on YouTube where two old men explained how one could crack one´s back in a sitting-up position.” Naturally, he also began trying to crack other joints elsewhere in his body. “Astonished” by the sensation, thereafter Olle began cracking his toes himself. “At the end they dragged my toes individually until they cracked,” Olle recalled. ![]() He has fond memories of his first toe cracking, performed by a Thai masseuse when he was seven. It didn’t take long before Olle moved on to cracking his toes too. He remembers his grandmother telling him to stop or else his fingers would become “crooked like hers.” Advertisements Olle began cracking his fingers as a young child, around age six. The record attempt was almost ruined by the recording studio’s squeaky floor, which Olle feared would drown out the sound of some of his joint cracks, but luckily the microphone picked them all up. Olle didn’t let the pressure get to him though, as he broke the previous record by six cracks. Olle had put in hours of practise to figure out the “perfect order of cracks,” however, he said that executing it while under stress was harder than expected. In order to successfully achieve the record, there must be no more than a three-second gap between each crack. If a joint doesn't crack the first time, the challenger must move onto the next one. On the day of the official attempt, Olle avoided making any sudden movements, “much like a sloth,” to prevent any of his joints from cracking prior to the attempt. Every day for a month, he practised cracking his joints in different sequences to determine the most efficient order. Olle prepared “quite a bit” to break this world record. Most continuous cracking of different joints - 46 by Olle Lundin □□ #guinnessworldrecords #worldrecord #bodytok ♬ original sound - Guinness World Records ![]() Olle consecutively cracked 46 different joints in his body, breaking the previous record of 40, set by Kamal Pokhrel (Nepal) in December 2022. 23-year-old Olle Lundin (Sweden) has done a cracking job to break the record for the most continuous cracking of different joints.
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