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Awake47

Awake47

Member
Jul 9, 2023
43
Came across this years ago.
Posting it here because I've been curious about different methods & always wondered how they would feel.



Drowning: When victims eventually submerge, they hold their breath for as long as possible, typically 30 to 90 seconds. After that, they inhale some water, splutter, cough and inhale more. Survivors say there is a feeling of tearing and a burning sensation in the chest as water goes down into the airway. Then that sort of slips into a feeling of calmness and tranquility. That calmness represents the beginnings of the loss of consciousness from oxygen deprivation, which eventually results in the heart stopping and brain death.


Heart Attack: The most common symptom is chest pain: a tightness, pressure or squeezing, often described as an "elephant on my chest", which may be lasting or come and go. This is the heart muscle struggling and dying from oxygen deprivation. Pain can radiate to the jaw, throat, back, belly and arms. Other signs and symptoms include shortness of breath, nausea and cold sweats.


Bleeding to Death: Anyone losing 1.5 litres – either through an external wound or internal bleeding – feels weak, thirsty and anxious, and would be breathing fast. By 2 litres, people experience dizziness, confusion and then eventual unconsciousness.


Fire: Burns inflict immediate and intense pain through stimulation of the pain nerves in the skin. To make matters worse, burns also trigger a rapid inflammatory response, which boosts sensitivity to pain in the injured tissues and surrounding areas.As burn intensities progress, some feeling is lost but not much. 3rd degree burns don't hurt as much as 2nd degree burns.


Decapitation: Very quick. Consciousness is said to continue for a few seconds after decapitation. It's thought to be painless. But the separation of the spinal cord and brain may cause severe pain.


Electrocution: Higher currents can produce nearly immediate unconsciousness. The electric chair was designed to produce instant loss of consciousness and painless death, but that's debatable. It's been proposed that prisoners could instead be dying from heating of the brain, or perhaps from suffocation due to paralysis of the breathing muscles instead of electrocution itself because the skulls of the wall are a thick and powerful insulator.


Falling from a height: Another instantaneous death. Survivors of great falls often report the sensation of time slowing down. The natural reaction is to struggle to maintain a feet-first landing, resulting in fractures to the leg bones, lower spinal column and life-threatening broken pelvises. The impact traveling up through the body can also burst the aorta and heart chambers.


Hanging: The rope puts pressure on the windpipe and the arteries to the brain. This can cause unconsciousness in 10 seconds, but it takes longer if the noose is incorrectly sited. Witnesses of public hangings often reported victims "dancing" in pain at the end of the rope, struggling violently as they asphyxiated.


Lethal injection: . First comes the anaesthetic thiopental to speed away any feelings of pain, followed by a paralytic agent called pancuronium to stop breathing. Finally potassium chloride is injected, which stops the heart almost instantly. Eyewitnesses have reported inmates convulsing, heaving and attempting to sit up during the procedure, suggesting it's not always completely effective.


Vacuum (In Outer Space): When the external air pressure suddenly drops, the air in the lungs expands, tearing the fragile gas exchange tissues. This is especially damaging if the victim neglects to exhale prior to decompression or tries to hold their breath. Oxygen begins to escape from the blood and lungs. Human survivors from NASA often report an initial pain, like being hit in the chest, and may remember feeling air escape from their lungs and the inability to inhale. Time to the loss of consciousness was generally less than 15 seconds.
 
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Ambivalent1

Ambivalent1

🎵 Be all, end all 🎵
Apr 17, 2023
3,279
Should one fall back when jumping?
 
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saddestbunny

saddestbunny

pastebin.com/xJuaSE0j
Feb 16, 2023
203
can we post experiences as well, here's a drowning one

One myth about drowning that survives to this day is that it is a painless, almost pleasant way to die. Survivors testify otherwise:

"...When the cramp hit me, I sank to the bottom of the lake 12 feet down, in a doubled-up position. Compounding the wracking pain in my trunk was a mounting choking sensation. (Try holding your mouth and nose after taking a deep breath. Hold your breath until it becomes unbearable; then try holding it a few seconds past the unbearable point. It's a horrible sensation and would give you a dim idea of just one aspect of how it feels to drown.) The pressure of the water caused a stabbing pain in my eyes and ears... try to keep your head when water begins to seep into your already tortured lungs and your body is a mass of pain and you know you are dying... I remember that I screamed down there against a solid wall of water. I remember that I threshed and bobbed, but only succeeded in burrowing my head into the slime of the lake floor...."
 
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Awake47

Awake47

Member
Jul 9, 2023
43
Should one fall back when jumping?
I feel like landing head first would be a much better way to go. Might be quicker & you wouldn't be struggling to land on your feet since it'd be a natural response. That or jumping off a bridge head first into a very very VERY cold lake so that your body won't feel anything other than the sensation of being frozen but I've heard that once your body hits the water from a crazy height, all your bones break anyways.
can we post experiences as well, here's a drowning one

One myth about drowning that survives to this day is that it is a painless, almost pleasant way to die. Survivors testify otherwise:

"...When the cramp hit me, I sank to the bottom of the lake 12 feet down, in a doubled-up position. Compounding the wracking pain in my trunk was a mounting choking sensation. (Try holding your mouth and nose after taking a deep breath. Hold your breath until it becomes unbearable; then try holding it a few seconds past the unbearable point. It's a horrible sensation and would give you a dim idea of just one aspect of how it feels to drown.) The pressure of the water caused a stabbing pain in my eyes and ears... try to keep your head when water begins to seep into your already tortured lungs and your body is a mass of pain and you know you are dying... I remember that I screamed down there against a solid wall of water. I remember that I threshed and bobbed, but only succeeded in burrowing my head into the slime of the lake floor...."
That's gonna keep me awake, no pun intended. It did mention a burning and tearing sensation - idk what is peaceful and tranquil about that. I'd naturally thrash about & try to bring myself to the surface as a survival instinct. As for what you wrote, I'd absolutely hate the stabbing pain in the ears & eyes, it's bad enough I'm prone to ear infections already so fuck that. And as for the screaming part? Jesus H. Christ. I can hear it while just thinking about it. But thank you for sharing this! Very informative stuff. Keep up the good work 👍
 
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FuneralCry

FuneralCry

Just wanting some peace
Sep 24, 2020
39,147
Thank you for sharing, it's very informative, most of these ways of dying just sound awful to me, I would like a death that is as painless as possible, I just want to pass away peacefully without any suffering in the dying process.
 
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TheDyingSolarSystem

TheDyingSolarSystem

Member
Jul 11, 2023
14
As someone who nearly drowned, you got it on point.
 
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