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lost.ghost

lost.ghost

dissolving mind
Jan 25, 2019
110
The building in question is 91 feet tall (27 meters) below the building is pavement. Not sure if weight has anything to do with fatality but i'm 5'5 and 110 pounds. Is it likely there would be no chance of survival?
 
LostMyWill

LostMyWill

Member
Nov 22, 2019
40
I honestly wouldn't recommend jumping, as there's a chance you could survive with broken limbs and live on an even more hellish nightmare.
 
Estrela do Sol

Estrela do Sol

Member
Dec 2, 2020
31
Pretendo desse jeito. Mas acho que para ser fatal a altura tem que ser maior.
estou analisando meticulosamente para nada sair errado!
 
lost.ghost

lost.ghost

dissolving mind
Jan 25, 2019
110
You could die from that height but I personally wouldn't do it. The chances of failure are still too high and the consequences would be severe.
yeah the fact that there's still a valid chance i might survive from it sucks, i don't think i'll jump as my method. thanks for the input
 
Thanatonaut

Thanatonaut

My time is coming.
May 17, 2019
264
Back in my military days I was a very proficient skydiver both on and off duty (What can I say? That adrenaline rush is addictive.) And so at some point we all hear about the freak accidents of people surviving impossibly fatal falls. Like:

1. The Army does their static line parachute training at Fort Benning, Ga. One night a suicidal trainee climbed one of the 250-foot-tall parachute training towers intent on jumping. A drill sergeant went up to talk him down, but the trainee went over and took the sergeant with him. The trainee didn't survive, but the drill sergeant, having been full trained on parachute emergency procedures (including the Parachute Landing Fall (PLF) which teaches parachutists how to distribute the force of a hard landing over the entire body to minimize trauma) survived because he PLF'd by habit. He was severely injured, but he survived.
2. There was a flight attendant whose plane was bombed while in flight. She was the only survivor, having lived through a fall around twice as high as most skydivers make.

There were more, but you get the point.

Also, having experienced groundrush (or the sense of the ground rushing up at you) countless times, it's the reason for the adrenaline rush. Your brain really can't properly process height when you're at 13,000 feet but when you get down to about 2,000, your brain becomes acutely aware of the ground rushing up at you, and it's not a sensation I would want to have without a way to stop it.

I wouldn't consider jumping. Too much chance of failure, and you don't know misery until you survive a fall. A good friend of mine survived a fall and laid in the hospital for nearly a year while they slowly amputated parts off the man until finally he went into toxic shock and died. It was horrible to watch; I can't imagine his agony.
 

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