
Vasy93
we are dead without dying
- Nov 22, 2021
- 104
UK users: Due to a formal investigation into this site by Ofcom under the UK Online Safety Act 2023, we strongly recommend using a trusted, no-logs VPN. This will help protect your privacy, bypass censorship, and maintain secure access to the site. Read the full VPN guide here.
Today, OFCOM launched an official investigation into Sanctioned Suicide under the UK’s Online Safety Act. This has already made headlines across the UK.
This is a clear and unprecedented overreach by a foreign regulator against a U.S.-based platform. We reject this interference and will be defending the site’s existence and mission.
In addition to our public response, we are currently seeking legal representation to ensure the best possible defense in this matter. If you are a lawyer or know of one who may be able to assist, please contact us at [email protected].
Read our statement here:
Donate via cryptocurrency:
I had a recent source for that, but it seems to have disappeared from his price list!Where would you get K in the fist place? Isn't it something that is heavily regulated?
I would at least drink the SN first, before the K hits, else you won't know which way is up or down! Aldous Huxley died on from cancer, whilst on a massive dose of LSD administered by his wife.Would Ketamine administered intravenously before drinking SN be a good idea for a peaceful end?
Not as peaceful as propofol. What ever happened to that idea?Would Ketamine administered intravenously before drinking SN be a good idea for a peaceful end?
Acutally you can drink SN first and then inject a bolus dose of Ketamine. Ketamine is sold as 500mg/10ml. You can administer a 10 ml injection in 5-6 seconds with a large vein and a large cannula. That's less than an arm-brain circulation time. The K effect onset time is not very short anyway. There is enough time. The real problem is how to manage the infusion that needs to continue.I think it would be too difficult to do. Ketamine gives a sense of time dilation which could make the process more uncomfortable or worse with too weak a dose and if you dose strongly enough to be out of your senses then it would be very difficult to get the SN before you are out from the K.
That makes a lot of sense, I am not sure why I was set on the Ketamine first. Since you seem (?) to know about this and I am not sure where to look this bit, what would a knock out dose look like? Would 500mg IV not be enough? That's definitely more than enough for a k-hole but I honestly have no idea how that would feel like coupled with the SN effects or if that would be peaceful. But I would have thought 500mg would be enough for the SN to take effect with the resources thread claiming SN can achieve unconciousness by 12 minutes.Acually you can drink SN first and then inject a bolus dose of Ketamine. Ketamine is sold as 500mg/10ml. You can administer a 10 ml injection in 5-6 seconds with a large vein and a large cannula. That's less than an arm-brain circulation time. The K effect onset time is not very short anyway. There is enough time. The real problem is how to manage the infusion that needs to continue.
Ketamine is an anesthetic. Dissociative anesthetic. The 4.5mg/kg dose will knock you down. No K-hole or any other experience. You become completely unconscious. The effect of the anesthesia induction dose lasts 10-20 minutes. For it to continue further, an infusion is needed.That makes a lot of sense, I am not sure why I was set on the Ketamine first. Since you seem (?) to know about this and I am not sure where to look this bit, what would a knock out dose look like? Would 500mg IV not be enough? That's definitely more than enough for a k-hole but I honestly have no idea how that would feel like coupled with the SN effects or if that would be peaceful. But I would have thought 500mg would be enough for the SN to take effect with the resources thread claiming SN can achieve unconciousness by 12 minutes.
I agree with that. Not realistic for someone inexperienced with IV.I think it would be too difficult to do.
I read that 4-5 g ketamine are lethal. Was thinking to inject it intramuscularly. Do you think it would do the job? Was wondering if i fall directly into a coma or have horror trip before. Any ideas?Ketamine is an anesthetic in high doses. Anesthesia induction dose is 4.5 mg/kg without premedication with midazolam. So the anesthesia induction dose for someone who weighs 80 kg is 360 mg. I am 100 kilos. For a guarantee I would make this dose 600mg. The duration of action of the bolus dose is 10-20 minutes. CTB with SN may take longer than that. That is, an infusion is required to maintain anesthesia with ketamine.
Maybe, maybe not. A patient in the pediatric ward was given IV ketamine ten times the required dose as a result of a misunderstanding. No clinical effects were observed, except for the usual sedation expected to result. Ketamine is labeled as "safe" alongside sedatives like propofol, thiopental, so it offers no guarantees to CTB.I read that 4-5 g ketamine are lethal. Was thinking to inject it intramuscularly. Do you think it would do the job? Was wondering if i fall directly into a coma or have horror trip before. Any ideas?
I think your answer is in this post.Hi I want to renew this thread so no one has to repeat themselves.
I have a medium-large amt of Ketamine (in the form of oral troches...they are dissolved under the tongue) and am well aware of its usual anesthesia qualities. I'm just wondering if it's possible to od on ketamine alone (well I've always found some old school MJ extends the period) without having to deal with other meds? Or could it like, kinda "mentally take over" from any distressing sides from what I've stashed (mostly opiates) plus all the additional meds to keep the slew *down* , a side-by-side SN od (I've had the powder for years, back when Amazon sold it with no issue)
No. In cases of methemoglobinemia, oxygen therapy will not work because methemoglobin cannot carry oxygen.Probably a weird question but ketamine also acts also as a bronchodilation meaning it extends the bronchial passages and you can breath much better. Could this be beneficial for SN in a way that you feel like suffocating less?
Makes sense thank you!Maybe, maybe not. A patient in the pediatric ward was given IV ketamine ten times the required dose as a result of a misunderstanding. No clinical effects were observed, except for the usual sedation expected to result. Ketamine is labeled as "safe" alongside sedatives like propofol, thiopental, so it offers no guarantees to CTB.
I think your answer is in this post.
No. In cases of methemoglobinemia, oxygen! therapy will not work because methemoglobin cannot carry oxygen.