B
brownie
Member
- Nov 25, 2021
- 11
I first thought jumping off the GGB would be the best way to go. Every time I biked over the bridge, there was no one around and I had complete opportunities to do it. Then I learned that most people suffer blunt force trauma from the fall and eventually drown due to not being able to swim. That sounds terrifying. I learned recently that if the coast guard doesn't find you, your body will likely be eaten by marine life. The most horrifying seems to be crabs, because they like to go for the face - and namely go for the eyeballs first. WTF crabs.
www.theguardian.com
![www.theguardian.com](/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fi.guim.co.uk%2Fimg%2Fstatic%2Fsys-images%2FFilm%2FPix%2Fpictures%2F2006%2F06%2F22%2FgoldengateericRisbergap372.jpg%3Fwidth%3D1200%26height%3D630%26quality%3D85%26auto%3Dformat%26fit%3Dcrop%26overlay-align%3Dbottom%252Cleft%26overlay-width%3D100p%26overlay-base64%3DL2ltZy9zdGF0aWMvb3ZlcmxheXMvdGctYWdlLTIwMDYucG5n%26enable%3Dupscale%26s%3D09989870dba4dbe514d8f6166938a60f&hash=4801a818893a03dac80c548c4845e5bd&return_error=1)
Get your suicides here, folks
People who jump off the Golden Gate bridge drown in their own blood and have their eyeballs eaten by crabs. Not stuff for a documentary, you'd think. Howard Feinstein on a film that is shaking San Francisco.