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C

conflagration

Experienced
Jul 29, 2022
210
As I child I was drowning and I had very peaceful experience. I think this would be my method of choice. Problem is I know how to swim so how can I drown?
 
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Intoxicated

Intoxicated

M
Nov 16, 2023
931
It's possible to remove a large amount of oxygen from the bloodstream to the point of losing consciousness as described here. Your swimming skills probably won't work then.
 
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AreWeWinning

AreWeWinning

-
Nov 1, 2021
317
As I child I was drowning and I had very peaceful experience. I think this would be my method of choice. Problem is I know how to swim so how can I drown?

The only reliable way is by attaching weights to yourself. I'm lazy to look it up now, but there are formulas for calculating how much you actually need.
 
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W

WatchmeBurn

Student
Apr 26, 2023
145
Drowning is an extremely painful way to die and you unequivocally will panic and try to swim once your survival instinct kicks in. Not something you should pursue. The thing linked above seems way overly complex and unreliable, not to mention you'd still experience immense suffering if it even went 5% wrong.
 
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Worndown

Worndown

Illuminated
Mar 21, 2019
3,787
Swimming does not stop drowning.
It is based on the situation.
Cold water, fast current, exhaustion and depth are the variables that kill you.
Manipulate those and you are in danger!
 
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hippiedeath

hippiedeath

Dead on the inside
Jul 12, 2025
134
Get very drunk and weigh yourself down. I've read that it's a panicky feeling after the first intake of water. In a minute you will be unconscious though and then nature takes over.
 
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Intoxicated

Intoxicated

M
Nov 16, 2023
931
Drowning is an extremely painful way to die
Probably not more "extremely painful" than vomiting from SN.
and you unequivocally will panic and try to swim once your survival instinct kicks in. Not something you should pursue.
The lethality of drowning is one of the highest amongst the known suicide methods.


The thing linked above seems way overly complex
There is nothing "overly complex" in gas asphyxiation. I tested it several times, getting complete blackout, and other users successfully fainted too:

and unreliable
Although I see theoretical reasons why regaining some semi-consciousness could be possible, it seems unlikely to occur, and if it occurs, the semi-conscious state likely won't last longer than just a few seconds, because the bloodstream severely lacks of O2 already.
not to mention you'd still experience immense suffering if it even went 5% wrong.
You can't know that. It's worth mentioning that, even without asphyxiation, nitrous is able to make people insensitive to unpleasant stimuli. For example, this girl had her ankle injured, and shortly after inhaling nitrous with air or oxygen, she didn't care about the trauma anymore - see the video from 3:48

 
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locked*n*loaded

locked*n*loaded

Archangel
Apr 15, 2022
9,046
Non-removable weights. You'd probably have to engineer/make them yourself, at least, to some degree.
 
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Malfunction

Malfunction

Member
Jul 27, 2024
92
If you're near the ocean, rip currents, tides, or undertows can certainly take you under. You'd have to be a strong swimmer and know how to escape to have a chance of getting out.

I live by the sea, people do use this method here and we often don't find the bodies. They often can get pulled under and outwards.

This is a little explanation between the three types of currents. Ignore the news agency. https://www.foxweather.com/learn/rip-currents-rip-tides-undertows-difference-definition

I personally couldn't do this. As I can't swim very well, fear deep water and am asthmatic.
 
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E

Eriktf

Specialist
Jun 1, 2023
336
i know someone who jumped from a bridge into water

its was high enough so he probably got somewhat deep but not so high the the jump alone would do anything and he had some stones with him, he drowned and was found on the on the beach next to the bridge
 
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