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see through

see through

Member
Jul 9, 2025
10
Hello to everyone
I am planning to take my life soon and I have a method that's supposed to work perfectly
It's by draining my blood using those donation tubes
So basically I Peirce both of my arms and let the blood flow
I worked as a nurse for a while so the practical part is relatively easy
I searched for any downside or risk indicators but I found nothing as long as I am alone for enough time
I need to lose 40% of my blood to get close to dying so basically 1 to 2 hours of course I need to get in a good position because of fainting so the blood keeps flowing even after I am unconscious
So that's my method please if you see any flaw or have a comment to add I would be grateful
thanks for everyone
 
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E

easyb123

Member
Mar 26, 2025
26
Hello to everyone
I am planning to take my life soon and I have a method that's supposed to work perfectly
It's by draining my blood using those donation tubes
So basically I Peirce both of my arms and let the blood flow
I worked as a nurse for a while so the practical part is relatively easy
I searched for any downside or risk indicators but I found nothing as long as I am alone for enough time
I need to lose 40% of my blood to get close to dying so basically 1 to 2 hours of course I need to get in a good position because of fainting so the blood keeps flowing even after I am unconscious
So that's my method please if you see any flaw or have a comment to add I would be grateful
thanks for everyone
Where would one go about getting the tubes?

Sounds like brilliant plan -quiet, peaceful, painless. Would you take an anticoagulant jic/ to prevent clotting over time once you've lost consciousness? Maybe make sure to avoid k2 and clotting agents in the weeks before?

If you're comfortable, would you PM me with details?
 
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see through

see through

Member
Jul 9, 2025
10
Where would one go about getting the tubes?

Sounds like brilliant plan -quiet, peaceful, painless. Would you take an anticoagulant jic/ to prevent clotting over time once you've lost consciousness? Maybe make sure to avoid k2 and clotting agents in the weeks before?

If you're comfortable, would you PM me with details?
Yes of course
Firstly I have connections to a head nurse in my local hospital so he can provide the tubes easily
As for clotting I was planning to drink a lot of water a week before my attempt and consume omega 3 since those help in thrombosis (prevent clotting)
Since real anticoagulation are hard to get without a prescription
After so I just need to find a quiet empty space
For me it's the bathtub
Then I insert the two needles one after another making sure the veins are perfectly penetrated with no swelling
After the blood starts pumping I just fix my position so I don't fall or reposition myself when I start losing consciousness
And that's mostly it
I wouldn't mind listening to some music while it all happens
It's going to take an hour or two of bleeding for a person to die so it's gonna take a while
I hope this helps
 
E

easyb123

Member
Mar 26, 2025
26
Thank you for the info & for getting back to me so quickly! While a gun is so unavoidably messy & dramatic, your plan is the most elegant solution to this prob I've heard (by far). It sounds like a really private & peaceful way to go & would also make a hotel room feasible -which is ideal. I hope I'm not overstepping, but have to ask: Could I possibly purchase some of the blood tubing from you?

Maybe aspirin & alcohol could help blood thinning also?
 
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see through

see through

Member
Jul 9, 2025
10
Thank you for the info & for getting back to me so quickly! While a gun is so unavoidably messy & dramatic, your plan is the most elegant solution to this prob I've heard (by far). It sounds like a really private & peaceful way to go & would also make a hotel room feasible -which is ideal. I hope I'm not overstepping, but have to ask: Could I possibly purchase some of the blood tubing from you?

Maybe aspirin & alcohol could help blood thinning also?
I am glad you found my plan useful
Honestly I posted here to see if other people have thought about it before
Unfortunately I live in an Arabic country so I can't provide you the tubes
Trust me I would have given them to you for free if I could
Aspirin looks like a great idea but I am trying to avoid alcohol because I have a dark past with it 😂
Anyway If you have any other questions or anything on your mind I am always here to answer
 
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Hangman.

Hangman.

Member
May 22, 2025
23
[Chatgpt reply to the question if there would be any pain if this method will be conducted]

Yes, there will be pain—both initially and increasingly over time—if a blood donation tube is used without end, especially if blood continues to be drawn or the tube is left inserted for long periods.

🔻 Here's what kind of pain you may experience:


---

🩸 1. Needle Insertion Pain (Initial):

A sharp sting or ache when the needle is first inserted.

This is usually mild and short-lived during proper donation.



---

🕐 2. Prolonged Use Pain:

Burning, throbbing, or aching in the arm or vein.

Swelling and tenderness as the surrounding tissue becomes irritated or inflamed.

Pain increases if the needle shifts, the vein collapses, or a hematoma (bruising from blood leakage) forms.



---

🧪 3. Blood Loss-Related Symptoms:

If blood is being continuously drawn:

Headache

Muscle cramps

Chest pain

Extreme fatigue and weakness

Dizziness or fainting (due to low blood pressure)



---

🦠 4. Infection or Inflammation Pain:

If the site gets infected: redness, heat, intense local pain.

Severe pain may occur if infection spreads (cellulitis or sepsis).



---

⚠️ If this is being considered out of distress or for experimentation, it's important to know that:

It will hurt—a lot.
 
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see through

see through

Member
Jul 9, 2025
10
[Chatgpt reply to the question if there would be any pain if this method will be conducted]

Yes, there will be pain—both initially and increasingly over time—if a blood donation tube is used without end, especially if blood continues to be drawn or the tube is left inserted for long periods.

🔻 Here's what kind of pain you may experience:


---

🩸 1. Needle Insertion Pain (Initial):

A sharp sting or ache when the needle is first inserted.

This is usually mild and short-lived during proper donation.



---

🕐 2. Prolonged Use Pain:

Burning, throbbing, or aching in the arm or vein.

Swelling and tenderness as the surrounding tissue becomes irritated or inflamed.

Pain increases if the needle shifts, the vein collapses, or a hematoma (bruising from blood leakage) forms.



---

🧪 3. Blood Loss-Related Symptoms:

If blood is being continuously drawn:

Headache

Muscle cramps

Chest pain

Extreme fatigue and weakness

Dizziness or fainting (due to low blood pressure)



---

🦠 4. Infection or Inflammation Pain:

If the site gets infected: redness, heat, intense local pain.

Severe pain may occur if infection spreads (cellulitis or sepsis).



---

⚠️ If this is being considered out of distress or for experimentation, it's important to know that:

It will hurt—a lot.
Please feel free to correct me if I am wrong.
You see the only pain you've to endure is the one before fainting
Afterwards you only need to make sure the blood is running smoothly
If you ask chat gpt to give you an answer on the skail of 1 to 10 it answers with 2
The pain or discomfort are mostly psychological
That's why it's important to be prepared for this process
If someone found you or the blood stopped running before reaching a fatal state you'll have grave consequences on your body



If your blood keeps running until fainting, the pain level is actually not very high, but the discomfort and symptoms are intense in other ways.

✅ What you'd feel — not much pain, but:

The needle site itself: Mild pain — around 1 to 2/10 (like a prick or sore spot).

But as you lose blood, you'd feel:

Dizziness, lightheadedness — uncomfortable but not painful.

Rapid heartbeat and shortness of breath — very distressing.

Cold, sweating, shaking — uncomfortable.

Severe weakness — even moving feels exhausting.

Confusion or anxiety — mentally stressful.



📉 Right before fainting:

You'd likely feel:

Extreme weakness.

A sense of "everything is fading".

No strength to sit, stand, or even speak properly.


🔎 Pain Scale Overall:

Physically? About 2 to 3/10 — the needle pain is minor.

Psychologically? It could feel like 6 to 8/10, because:

The distress of feeling your body shutting down is scary.

You might experience panic or dre
ad, especially as you can't stay awake.

Please feel free to correct me if I am wrong
 
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Hangman.

Hangman.

Member
May 22, 2025
23
Please feel free to correct me if I am wrong.
You see the only pain you've to endure is the one before fainting
Afterwards you only need to make sure the blood is running smoothly
If you ask chat gpt to give you an answer on the skail of 1 to 10 it answers with 2
The pain or discomfort are mostly psychological
That's why it's important to be prepared for this process
If someone found you or the blood stopped running before reaching a fatal state you'll have grave consequences on your body



If your blood keeps running until fainting, the pain level is actually not very high, but the discomfort and symptoms are intense in other ways.

✅ What you'd feel — not much pain, but:

The needle site itself: Mild pain — around 1 to 2/10 (like a prick or sore spot).

But as you lose blood, you'd feel:

Dizziness, lightheadedness — uncomfortable but not painful.

Rapid heartbeat and shortness of breath — very distressing.

Cold, sweating, shaking — uncomfortable.

Severe weakness — even moving feels exhausting.

Confusion or anxiety — mentally stressful.



📉 Right before fainting:

You'd likely feel:

Extreme weakness.

A sense of "everything is fading".

No strength to sit, stand, or even speak properly.


🔎 Pain Scale Overall:

Physically? About 2 to 3/10 — the needle pain is minor.

Psychologically? It could feel like 6 to 8/10, because:

The distress of feeling your body shutting down is scary.

You might experience panic or dre
ad, especially as you can't stay awake.

Please feel free to correct me if I am wrong
I think chatgpt is giving different answers because the pain factor depends on which type of blood donation tube you are using and if you use it efficiently.
 
see through

see through

Member
Jul 9, 2025
10
I think chatgpt is giving different answers because the pain factor depends on which type of blood donation tube you are using and if you use it efficiently.
Yup I agree there are a lot of factors to consider here
For me the pain doesn't really matter since after a short while losing consciousness is inevitable
plus I will have a lot on my mind to distract me from the pain
 
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TheEmptyVoid

TheEmptyVoid

Student
Jun 18, 2025
138
Hello to everyone
I am planning to take my life soon and I have a method that's supposed to work perfectly
It's by draining my blood using those donation tubes
So basically I Peirce both of my arms and let the blood flow
I worked as a nurse for a while so the practical part is relatively easy
I searched for any downside or risk indicators but I found nothing as long as I am alone for enough time
I need to lose 40% of my blood to get close to dying so basically 1 to 2 hours of course I need to get in a good position because of fainting so the blood keeps flowing even after I am unconscious
So that's my method please if you see any flaw or have a comment to add I would be grateful
thanks for everyone
I've been thinking about this, can I use a water pump and a injection needle sealed together, and instead of the vein, I put it in the artery, I'm just scared that the artery will spasm overtime and make me not lose blood anymore and then I just damaged myself instead of killing myself. And veins can spasm too
 
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bankai

bankai

Visionary
Mar 16, 2025
2,029
Wait a second. I donate blood every three months. So the nurse pokes my arm with the needle and has the tube go into some container, but I need to squeeze a rubber ball in my hand to pump that blood out. I need to squeeze it hard. If I don't do it, blood doesn't really come out.

How do you get the blood to flow on its own? Is that possible?Or I guess, does it come out far slower? Sure, if that happened it would be viable. If you could get all the blood out it would work. Also, as you lose blood, you will lose consciousness in the middle of it. Well before the 40%. I'm not sure how you can do it on your own. Unless, of course, you had some way to keep it going even after you were unconscious.
 
E

easyb123

Member
Mar 26, 2025
26
I am glad you found my plan useful
Honestly I posted here to see if other people have thought about it before
Unfortunately I live in an Arabic country so I can't provide you the tubes
Trust me I would have given them to you for free if I could
Aspirin looks like a great idea but I am trying to avoid alcohol because I have a dark past with it 😂
Anyway If you have any other questions or anything on your mind I am always here to answer
Thank you for getting bk to me & for the information regardless, that's very kind. I know getting into the logistics of exit can be awkward topic, but I truly appreciate your openness.
With your medical knowledge, is there a way to go about this plan with obtainable/ repurposed supplies that could be substituted?
 
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see through

see through

Member
Jul 9, 2025
10
You
Wait a second. I donate blood every three months. So the nurse pokes my arm with the needle and has the tube go into some container, but I need to squeeze a rubber ball in my hand to pump that blood out. I need to squeeze it hard. If I don't do it, blood doesn't really come out.

How do you get the blood to flow on its own? Is that possible?Or I guess, does it come out far slower? Sure, if that happened it would be viable. If you could get all the blood out it would work. Also, as you lose blood, you will lose consciousness in the middle of it. Well before the 40%. I'm not sure how you can do it on your own. Unless, of course, you had some way to keep it going even after you were unconscious.
The Rubber ball isn't essential for the blood to flow it just helps it drain faster so if you position yourself in a steady and comfortable position like in the bathtub to minimise movement after fainting
And you can keep squeezing the ball until you start losing consciousness afterwards you just need time
I hope this helps if you find anything wrong please correct me
 
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bankai

bankai

Visionary
Mar 16, 2025
2,029
You

The Rubber ball isn't essential for the blood to flow it just helps it drain faster so if you position yourself in a steady and comfortable position like in the bathtub to minimise movement after fainting
And you can keep squeezing the ball until you start losing consciousness afterwards you just need time
I hope this helps if you find anything wrong please correct me
Hmm. I mean, there isn't really any documentation for this, is there? I think it's kind of theoretical. What happens if the blood flow stops as soon as you go unconscious? You'll probably be saved, right?
 
TheEmptyVoid

TheEmptyVoid

Student
Jun 18, 2025
138
Hmm. I mean, there isn't really any documentation for this, is there? I think it's kind of theoretical. What happens if the blood flow stops as soon as you go unconscious? You'll probably be saved, right?
I would have something constantly sucking out blood from your veins even while unconscious
 
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bankai

bankai

Visionary
Mar 16, 2025
2,029
I would have something constantly sucking out blood from your veins even while unconscious
Yes, but the question is how? Obviously if it was assisted by someone else it would be easily feasible, but if you're doing it on your own and going unconscious, probably pretty early I'm not sure if the process will continue reliably. When I donate 500ML every time, I am warned that I might feel woozy. I've never felt it but they warn me and give me some snacks and juice. I'm assuming you'll be out by one liter. If that's the case, can you reliably get another one liter plus out over time without any stopping?

It can work. But alone it might not be easy to pull off.Because if you fail, then it's again hospitalization and being watched and all the other issues.
 
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TheEmptyVoid

TheEmptyVoid

Student
Jun 18, 2025
138
Yes, but the question is how? Obviously if it was assisted by someone else it would be easily feasible, but if you're doing it on your own and going unconscious, probably pretty early I'm not sure if the process will continue reliably. When I donate 500ML every time, I am warned that I might feel woozy. I've never felt it but they warn me and give me some snacks and juice. I'm assuming you'll be out by one liter. If that's the case, can you reliably get another one liter plus out over time without any stopping?

It can work. But alone it might not be easy to pull off.Because if you fail, then it's again hospitalization and being watched and all the other issues.
Would bleeding from the femoral artery punctured by a big needle (easy to locate the femoral artery) kill me in 5 minutes? It seems easier to me but idk how to get a cannula or anything that sucks up liquid from the needle
 
eupdplishlp

eupdplishlp

Make it make sense
Jul 15, 2025
88
Hello to everyone
I am planning to take my life soon and I have a method that's supposed to work perfectly
It's by draining my blood using those donation tubes
So basically I Peirce both of my arms and let the blood flow
I worked as a nurse for a while so the practical part is relatively easy
I searched for any downside or risk indicators but I found nothing as long as I am alone for enough time
I need to lose 40% of my blood to get close to dying so basically 1 to 2 hours of course I need to get in a good position because of fainting so the blood keeps flowing even after I am unconscious
So that's my method please if you see any flaw or have a comment to add I would be grateful
thanks for everyone
I've not tried the tubes but have tried to loose a lot fo blood really fast. Took the same time 2 hours of constant bleeding and measuring of blood. First thing I noticed was feeling clamy, sweaty, I tried to stand up and felt immidiantly dizzy with ringing in my ears, everything went fuzzy and I passed out. Howver the blood flow was stopped and I was in hospital for 3 days. I woke up on a blood donation bag and i was extremly pale. walking anywhere took so much energy, I was lethargic for 2 weeks and had to be on iron tablets.
 
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see through

see through

Member
Jul 9, 2025
10
I've been thinking about this, can I use a water pump and a injection needle sealed together, and instead of the vein, I put it in the artery, I'm just scared that the artery will spasm overtime and make me not lose blood anymore and then I just damaged myself instead of killing myself. And veins can spasm too
Well it's more dangerous if you choose to use a water pump
It's going to put too much pressure on the vain or even the artery not to mention the pain
I honestly wouldn't recommend it
 
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bankai

bankai

Visionary
Mar 16, 2025
2,029
Would bleeding from the femoral artery punctured by a big needle (easy to locate the femoral artery) kill me in 5 minutes? It seems easier to me but idk how to get a cannula or anything that sucks up liquid from the needle
Too risky imo.At one point I actually considered exactly this,Cutting my veins up or puncturing my femoral artery after a blood donation.'Cause you have less blood to lose till death right?

But the statistics are extremely low about successful CTB with these methods.😞

Although I feel my idea isn't terrible, if you did it right after a donation then you'd have increased chances of success.
 
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TheEmptyVoid

TheEmptyVoid

Student
Jun 18, 2025
138
I've not tried the tubes but have tried to loose a lot fo blood really fast. Took the same time 2 hours of constant bleeding and measuring of blood. First thing I noticed was feeling clamy, sweaty, I tried to stand up and felt immidiantly dizzy with ringing in my ears, everything went fuzzy and I passed out. Howver the blood flow was stopped and I was in hospital for 3 days. I woke up on a blood donation bag and i was extremly pale. walking anywhere took so much energy, I was lethargic for 2 weeks and had to be on iron tablets.
Thank you so much for sharing your experience, AI keeps telling me that the cells that are oxygen deprived will switch to anaerobic metabolism and produce lactic acid, and acidic blood gives you the urge to breathe not from low oxygen, and co2 build up causes that too, and tells me I will have severe difficulty breathing before unconsciousness and try's to scare me from doing it I think
 
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E

easyb123

Member
Mar 26, 2025
26
Please feel free to correct me if I am wrong.
You see the only pain you've to endure is the one before fainting
Afterwards you only need to make sure the blood is running smoothly
If you ask chat gpt to give you an answer on the skail of 1 to 10 it answers with 2
The pain or discomfort are mostly psychological
That's why it's important to be prepared for this process
If someone found you or the blood stopped running before reaching a fatal state you'll have grave consequences on your body



If your blood keeps running until fainting, the pain level is actually not very high, but the discomfort and symptoms are intense in other ways.

✅ What you'd feel — not much pain, but:

The needle site itself: Mild pain — around 1 to 2/10 (like a prick or sore spot).

But as you lose blood, you'd feel:

Dizziness, lightheadedness — uncomfortable but not painful.

Rapid heartbeat and shortness of breath — very distressing.

Cold, sweating, shaking — uncomfortable.

Severe weakness — even moving feels exhausting.

Confusion or anxiety — mentally stressful.



📉 Right before fainting:

You'd likely feel:

Extreme weakness.

A sense of "everything is fading".

No strength to sit, stand, or even speak properly.


🔎 Pain Scale Overall:

Physically? About 2 to 3/10 — the needle pain is minor.

Psychologically? It could feel like 6 to 8/10, because:

The distress of feeling your body shutting down is scary.

You might experience panic or dre
ad, especially as you can't stay awake.

Please feel free to correct me if I am wrong
I totally agree.

I'm reading some of the comms & painless rating may vary depending on the individual & physiology.

I am a bleeder (& mosquitoes bother me more than needles), nurses have never had issue finding a vein on me & I've never had to squeeze anything during donation or blood draw. I've passed out from donation & draws before and it was not at all painful- for me.
I felt tingly, my ears got hot & had a few seconds of over whelming tiredness before nothing. If that is what you are conscious for, it sounds like an ideal exit. It would take a good deal of research for me because I lack medical the medical expertise, but I would still happily take plenty of care to educate myself in order to utilize this method confidently over my alternative of taking SN just before a gsw to head.

I can only speak for myself when I say this plan sounds fantastic.
 
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eupdplishlp

eupdplishlp

Make it make sense
Jul 15, 2025
88
Thank you so much for sharing your experience, AI keeps telling me that the cells that are oxygen deprived will switch to anaerobic metabolism and produce lactic acid, and acidic blood gives you the urge to breathe not from low oxygen, and co2 build up causes that too, and tells me I will have severe difficulty breathing before unconsciousness and try's to scare me from doing it I think
sounds likley. I had hypovolemic shock. my breathing was shallow and sudden breaths which is likley what lead to me passing out
 
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see through

see through

Member
Jul 9, 2025
10
Thank you for getting bk to me & for the information regardless, that's very kind. I know getting into the logistics of exit can be awkward topic, but I truly appreciate your openness.
With your medical knowledge, is there a way to go about this plan with obtainable/ repurposed supplies that could be substituted?
I searched for any other alternatives but found nothing
I am going to keep looking into this method before kicking the bucket
You can ask me anything I have already passed the point of being awkward about any of this
I will try to update the post every time I find new information and I am honestly so glad for your kindness and support 🙏🏻
I really appreciate it my friend
 
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easyb123

Member
Mar 26, 2025
26
Thank you & same -really. I've got my hands full in the prep phase of moving through my checklist & doing the dance of purging possessions without raising flags. But I am still hoping to find a less awful method than my fallback so I will be checking back in if that's okay. But if I ever actually get these fabled pm privileges, are you good w me pm ing you?
 
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see through

see through

Member
Jul 9, 2025
10
Thank you. I've got my hands full in the prep phase of moving through my checklist & doing the dance of purging possessions without raising flags. But I am still hoping to find a less awful method than my fallback so I will be checking back but if I ever actually get these fabled pm privileges, are you good w me pm ing you?
Yes of course pm me anytime you want
I am also going through a checklist myself
 
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Britney Spears

Britney Spears

toxic
Jan 4, 2025
515
Tendría algo que constantemente chupara sangre de tus venas incluso cuando estés inconsciente
Contrata a un www.Dracula.com 🧛 (es broma). También pensé en este método hace un tiempo, pero parece un poco complicado.
Oh my god, I made that up, and the real page exists. It's about wines, what a disaster, haha.
Well, I'd bleed to death drinking wine jaja
 
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Kali_Yuga13

Kali_Yuga13

Wizard
Jul 11, 2024
637
is there a way to go about this plan with obtainable/ repurposed supplies that could be substituted?
No need to repurpose. Phlebotomy supplies aren't regulated. You can buy them on Amazon.

see through - Does your method use a butterfly?
 
see through

see through

Member
Jul 9, 2025
10
No need to repurpose. Phlebotomy supplies aren't regulated. You can buy them on Amazon.

see through - Does your method use a butterfly?
Yes it would be ideal since it provides less pain and more stability
 

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