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jane78flower

jane78flower

Student
Mar 2, 2025
116
Hi I am so desperate, sorry for posting so much I deleted some other threads so im not clogging up the forum.

So I want to give one more try to partial. I have a dog leash & a window that I'm using. I have tested this out, the leash can hold my weight & so can the windowsill it's closed tightly in. I have pulled & put my entire body weight on it repeatedly. I have attempted a few times but I keep getting the head exploding feeling, even at several different positions (slightly altered how much leash I have dangling) is there anything you guys can tell me? Fs is not an option where I am. Should I put up with the head exploding feeling? Is that normal? Or is this just not gonna be possible due to my anatomy? I've heard that sometimes it isn't possible. Or can I just strangle long enough anyway even with the exploding head feeling. Tysm
 
TheVanishingPoint

TheVanishingPoint

Student
May 20, 2025
109
Yes, the sensation of your head exploding is normal in cases of venous compression without sufficient carotid artery blockage. It means that blood is flowing into the brain but not draining properly, increasing intracranial pressure and causing pulsation, congestion, and panic. It's not a sign that the method is working correctly—in fact, if you don't lose consciousness within 10–20 seconds, it means the setup isn't producing effective cerebral ischemia. This is not caused by your anatomy but by poor distribution of force: the knot may be too loose, the angle incorrect, your body weight partially supported, the anchor point too low, or the overall height insufficient. There's no point in enduring that sensation—if you're not reaching a quick blackout, you're only causing congestion and pain, not a meaningful interruption of arterial blood flow. For it to work, full suspension or precise bilateral lateral compression is needed; without these, the method remains ineffective and torturous.
 
jane78flower

jane78flower

Student
Mar 2, 2025
116
Yes, the sensation of your head exploding is normal in cases of venous compression without sufficient carotid artery blockage. It means that blood is flowing into the brain but not draining properly, increasing intracranial pressure and causing pulsation, congestion, and panic. It's not a sign that the method is working correctly—in fact, if you don't lose consciousness within 10–20 seconds, it means the setup isn't producing effective cerebral ischemia. This is not caused by your anatomy but by poor distribution of force: the knot may be too loose, the angle incorrect, your body weight partially supported, the anchor point too low, or the overall height insufficient. There's no point in enduring that sensation—if you're not reaching a quick blackout, you're only causing congestion and pain, not a meaningful interruption of arterial blood flow. For it to work, full suspension or precise bilateral lateral compression is needed; without these, the method remains ineffective and torturous.
Thank you so much.
Yes, the sensation of your head exploding is normal in cases of venous compression without sufficient carotid artery blockage. It means that blood is flowing into the brain but not draining properly, increasing intracranial pressure and causing pulsation, congestion, and panic. It's not a sign that the method is working correctly—in fact, if you don't lose consciousness within 10–20 seconds, it means the setup isn't producing effective cerebral ischemia. This is not caused by your anatomy but by poor distribution of force: the knot may be too loose, the angle incorrect, your body weight partially supported, the anchor point too low, or the overall height insufficient. There's no point in enduring that sensation—if you're not reaching a quick blackout, you're only causing congestion and pain, not a meaningful interruption of arterial blood flow. For it to work, full suspension or precise bilateral lateral compression is needed; without these, the method remains ineffective and torturous.
Do u know anything about ligature strangulation with tying a front & back knot tightly & quickly? Ty in advance
 
Q

quietbird

Student
Apr 2, 2025
113
Yes, the sensation of your head exploding is normal in cases of venous compression without sufficient carotid artery blockage. It means that blood is flowing into the brain but not draining properly, increasing intracranial pressure and causing pulsation, congestion, and panic. It's not a sign that the method is working correctly—in fact, if you don't lose consciousness within 10–20 seconds, it means the setup isn't producing effective cerebral ischemia. This is not caused by your anatomy but by poor distribution of force: the knot may be too loose, the angle incorrect, your body weight partially supported, the anchor point too low, or the overall height insufficient. There's no point in enduring that sensation—if you're not reaching a quick blackout, you're only causing congestion and pain, not a meaningful interruption of arterial blood flow. For it to work, full suspension or precise bilateral lateral compression is needed; without these, the method remains ineffective and torturous.
For full suspension, is there a chance you'd still feel that head exploding feeling before you pass out? I know some are lucky and find a sweet spot to hit their carotids hard enough but I imagine I might not.

Do people always pass out within a minute with something like full?
 

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