Suspended beneath the towering redwoods of California, circus artist Leila Noone rewrote the limits of human endurance—using nothing more than her ponytail. On an afternoon that fused grit, grace, and sheer willpower, the 39-year-old performer achieved what few would dare attempt: she shattered the Guinness World Record for the longest time suspended by the hair, hanging in mid-air for an astonishing 25 minutes and 11.3 seconds. With this feat, Noone surpassed the previous benchmark of 23 minutes and 19 seconds set in 2011, etching her name into the annals of Guinness World Records—and into the history of circus artistry itself.
A Ritual of Pain and Power Beneath the Redwoods
Noone’s record-breaking moment wasn’t just a stunt—it was a ritual of resilience. Surrounded by the natural grandeur of Redwood National and State Parks, she created a scene both surreal and serene. As acoustic guitar melodies played nearby and supportive friends offered words of affirmation, Noone floated in silence—suspended by a carefully coiled ponytail, tethered not only to a rig but to a lineage of performers who have long honored the extraordinary discipline of hair suspension.

The moment was as meditative as it was physical. The pain was real, but so was the power. “Thanks for all the love ❤️❤️❤️,” Noone wrote in an Instagram Stories repost of Guinness World Records’ video, radiating quiet pride in the aftermath of her extraordinary achievement.
Two Years of Training for 25 Minutes of Defiance
Though the spectacle may have lasted just over 25 minutes, the journey to get there took years. As Guinness World Records reports, Noone trained intensely for two years in preparation for this attempt—building not only the physical endurance required to endure immense scalp tension, but the mental discipline to stay calm while suspended in pain.

No stranger to extremes, Noone is a four-time American Ninja Warrior competitor and a core performer with Cirque Vida, an Austin-based circus company known for its daring, multidisciplinary approach. Her skillset reads like a fantasy novel: handstand archery with her feet, aerial contortion, acrobatics, and mastery of the Cyr wheel. But even in that dazzling list, hair suspension remains one of the most visually arresting—and emotionally demanding—disciplines in the circus world.
What Is Hair Suspension? An Ancient Artform Meets Modern Determination
Hair suspension, also known as hair hanging, is a centuries-old circus act believed to have originated in China and later adopted by traveling troupes across the globe. It requires performers to be hoisted into the air using only their hair, which is tightly braided and coiled to distribute weight evenly across the scalp. The technique, while deceptively simple in appearance, demands extreme precision and inner strength.

For Noone, the tradition is more than performance—it’s a metaphor for feminine strength, discipline, and control. In her own words, the act becomes a kind of spiritual discipline, where pain and power coexist in delicate balance.
Redefining Human Limits—One Strand at a Time
Leila Noone’s world record doesn’t just mark the longest time suspended by hair—it marks a moment where circus artistry, mental fortitude, and physical mastery collided in perfect form. In an age where endurance often plays out digitally, her real-world achievement is a bold reminder of the strength we still possess in body and spirit.

Hanging by a thread—literally—Noone proved what’s possible when passion outweighs pain, and when gravity is simply another element to dance with.