You can’t hold your breath for more than a few minutes, because when you stop breathing, you begin to store up a gas called carbon dioxide, which your body cells produce as a waste product.
Since your breathing is controlled by the respiratory center in your brain, an increase of carbon dioxide in your blood stimulates this respiratory center.
It then sends messages to your breathing muscles to breathe faster to take in more oxygen.
So, no matter how hard you might try to hold your breath, your brain works even harder to see that you don’t injure your body.