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D3M0LITI0N_H3ARTxo

D3M0LITI0N_H3ARTxo

bats are friends
Jun 29, 2025
10
has anyone here ever tried drowning? is there a thread for it somewhere? any survivors talk about it? it's something I've been considering and I literally don't care how painful it is I honestly want the most painful way out. I just want answers
 
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MetallicCognition

New Member
Jun 28, 2025
4
A distant family friend killed themself by walking into a lake. I don't know any more details than that as it was insensitive to press for details at the time.

However, I've heard that it's a very difficult method to pull off successfully as your survival instinct is very strong, and your subconscious will reflexively take over control of your body and pull you out if it's possible to do so. So to be successful I think you have to take physical control away, such as tying yourself to a weight that will sink and you can't detach yourself from easily.

It's also a very unpleasant way to go. Drowning is used as torture for a good reason. I would consider other methods if I were you.
 
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Ch4in3dcr0w

Ch4in3dcr0w

if u ever see me happy just kill me
Jun 21, 2025
120
there is a lot of stories from those who nearly drowned not even CTB. Generally at first its really uncomfortable like panic setting in, swallowing water, cough reflex and after water enters your lungs u should feel peace and a strange calm u can look at the poll answers from a paper about drowing and to also quote the same paper "Immediately (after inhaling water) you will feel very relaxed and peaceful for a moment or two, also with no fear, until everything goes black and you pass out.". Its hard to pull of because like the user above me said your survival instict will kick in and u will try to get out. Not knowing how to swim losing consciousness from the impact after a jump to the water or somehow making yourself unable to swim above will greatly help your chances of actually drowning. Much love 🤗 366EEB06 44D1 4177 98FC 83146C60E06D
 
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carebare@2000

Member
Jul 2, 2025
10
has anyone here ever tried drowning? is there a thread for it somewhere? any survivors talk about it? it's something I've been considering and I literally don't care how painful it is I honestly want the most painful way out. I just want answers
Drowning is a method that I considered in the past
 
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Intoxicated

Intoxicated

M
Nov 16, 2023
875
However, I've heard that it's a very difficult method to pull off successfully as your survival instinct is very strong, and your subconscious will reflexively take over control of your body and pull you out if it's possible to do so. So to be successful I think you have to take physical control away, such as tying yourself to a weight that will sink and you can't detach yourself from easily.

It's also a very unpleasant way to go. Drowning is used as torture for a good reason. I would consider other methods if I were you.
If drowning is so unpleasant and the "survival instinct" is so strong, how would you explain why these people couldn't just get out of the bathtub, the creek, and the spa?



 
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MetallicCognition

New Member
Jun 28, 2025
4
If drowning is so unpleasant and the "survival instinct" is so strong, how would you explain why these people couldn't just get out of the bathtub, the creek, and the spa?



What? All three of those people were unconscious. Survival instinct obviously only applies if you are conscious.

I previously said:
your subconscious will reflexively take over control of your body and pull you out if it's possible to do so
and
to be successful I think you have to take physical control away
..such as being unconscious.

I'm not sure why you linked these articles as an example of failure of survival instinct.
 
Intoxicated

Intoxicated

M
Nov 16, 2023
875
I'm not sure why you linked these articles as an example of failure of survival instinct.
I linked those articles in order to demonstrate that drowning doesn't necessarily have to happen in the way you described. If you visit a dental surgeon for extraction of your tooth, you'd likely expect that the doctor will apply proper analgesia/anesthesia before commencing the operation. Likewise, the common sodium nitrite poisoning protocol recommends to use benzodiazepines to alleviate discomfort before LOC occurs. What does stop us from considering the same idea for drowning?

If you're really concerned about possible discomfort from drowning and your low tolerance to it, it would be logical to consider available substances that can reduce intensity and duration of unpleasant experience to bare minimum. There are cheap cans with butane or propane-butane that cost $3 - $10. A culinary dispenser with N2O chargers and a pack of plastic bags or latex balloons may be purchased for about $30 - $50. Inhaling any of these gases can induce unconsciousness in about half a minute (I've tried to inhale nitrous and can confirm that it works very fast). So with a proper preparation, drowning may be superior to many other methods in terms of discomfort and reliability.
 
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