Blind juggling is juggling without being able to see the pattern. Like isolation, balancing, head bouncing, and spinning, this makes juggling more difficult by increasing the accuracy required.
Normally to demonstrate blind juggling, you need to wear a blindfold to show that you can't see the objects, but for some tricks, you don't even have to close your eyes to juggle blind. You can do blind overhead or behind the back patterns while looking straight ahead with your eyes open.
- Video: Joëlle Huguenin juggling 3 balls blind behind the back and overhead
World Records
Blind juggling world records validated by Guinness or with publicly available video evidence:
- 3 balls: 22 minutes and 7 seconds by David Rush in 2016 (video at 64x speed)[1]
- 4 balls: 144 catches by Michael Hendriksen in 2017 (video)
- 5 balls: 15 catches by Haavard Hvidsten in 2016 (video)
- 6 balls: 7 catches by Michael Hendriksen in 2017 (video)
- 7 balls: 7 catches by Johnathan Mundell in 2020 (video)
- 4 rings: 11 catches by Johnathan Mundell in 2020 (video)
- 5 rings: 5 catches by Johnathan Mundell in 2020 (video)
- 3 clubs: 19 minutes and 29 seconds by Niels Duinker in 2015 (video)
- 4 clubs: 14 catches by Felix Sürbe in 2017 (video)
Unverified claims:
- 3 balls: 40 minutes by TheLally in 2007 (claim)
- 4 clubs: 25 catches by Felix Sürbe (claim)
Blind jugglers
Damian Pickering, who has been blind since age three, was taught by Barry Friedman to juggle 3 balls by bouncing them off his chest.
Nino Frediani was mostly blind his whole life, but kept it a secret because he preferred to be thought of as a speed juggler, not a blind juggler.