This man just won a very special award for turning himself into a goat

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Goat Life Mountain

Tim Bowditch

When life gets unbearably stressful, most of us opt for a vacation that relieves us of the worries of day-to-day life.

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Thomas Thwaites, a UK-based designer, decided to take that a step further and take a break from being a human entirely. He became a goat - or at least he tried to, through some pretty extreme measures.

And now he has an Ig Nobel Award to show for it. The Ig Nobels, not to be confused with the actual Nobel Prizes, are designed to recognize achievements and studies that "first make people laugh then make them think." Thwaites won the biology award alongside Charles Foster, who also lived as a number of different animals.

With the help of a team of researchers and the financial support of London-based biomedical research group Wellcome Trust, Thwaites built himself a suit to achieve goat status and cross the Alps, all of which he chronicled in his book, "GoatMan: How I Took a Holiday from Being a Human."

For Thwaites, the project wasn't just a physical adventure. It was a psychological one, too.

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"I started thinking of the project as kind of this investigation into what present-day science and technology could do to help me achieve what I think is this ancient human desire of becoming more like an animal," Thwaites told Business Insider.

Here's what the experiment was like: