Moonicide
ᴘʜᴀꜱᴇꜱ ᴏꜰ ᴛʜᴇ ᴍᴏᴏɴ
- Nov 19, 2019
- 802
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Ooh. I'm not good about these things either. But the 25gm was referring to Sodium Nitrite. I tried convert it and it told me it would be a tablespoon.Are you certain that one tablespoon is 25gm? I don't know much about those drugs. Are they something you rake everyday as part of your normal treatment?
I'd be interested to hear the logic behind that. Not even major surgery requires you to have a 24 hour fast before the anaestheticTo be on the safe side. I am not sure how safe 12 hours is.
Compare your notes with this https://sanctioned-suicide.net/thre...-an-aquarium-testing-kit-rough-version.18188/
Don't eat 24 hours before. Also keep a bucket or tub nearby in case of nausea. Maybe wear a nappy just to be safe.
Good luck and I hope you arrive at an outcome you are happy with. This is a hard decision and I hope your suffering comes to an end as SN does guarantee relief. Just be sure it is right for you as other forms of relief are out there and may allow you to work through this with your life still intact. If you do not want your life and you have resolved to using SN that is also fine. Think it over and do not rush it, you may as well be comfortable. You owe it to yourself in your final moments.
Thinking of your family (if there is anyone). Maybe leave a letter?
I don't claim to know precisely how much SN would a tablespoon provide (esp, US since Im in the US), but here is what I do know:
- 1 US Tablespoon is marked as 15g for dry contents (generally speaking) , 1 US teaspoon = 5g (I always thought of doing 1TB + 2x TS of SN to equal 25g)
- This site someone had found shows weight per tablespoon and teaspoon of ground SN (see pics below)
1 tablespoon = 17.76g
1 teaspoon =5.92g (not sure if those are heaping or not, but prob not)
View attachment 19871View attachment 19872
- In this instructional video from the Nov2019 Pph Dr. N measures out 25g of SN on a scale and it looks a lot more than I anticipated. His scale maxes out at 20g, so he first does that (which is the amount you see in the small cup which is on the scale) then he moves that over to the big beaker and then he measures out an additional 5g and adds it into the big beaker (which is the 2nd pic)
I don't know if this helps at all, but for me it would to visually see it.
View attachment 19873View attachment 19874
Thank you for this! Is there a video of this? Or is it included in the MEGA download?
The video is in the Nov2019 online edition of the PpH (which I have access to). The version in the resouces is from March, so I don't think so, but I haven't checked.
Are you able to share it by any chance?
(Totally okay if you can't.)
I actually have been writing letters for my virtual friends and I'm going to write one out for my mom. The thing is, I'm hesitant to send the letters to my online friends. I don't have someone reliable to give them to without them trying to intervene. So I'm kind of conflicted about that, because I do want to leave a letter behind for them too.
that really does look like such a lot! 50ml is such a small amount of water!I don't claim to know precisely how much SN would a tablespoon provide (esp, US since Im in the US), but here is what I do know:
- 1 US Tablespoon is marked as 15g for dry contents (generally speaking) , 1 US teaspoon = 5g (I always thought of doing 1TB + 2x TS of SN to equal 25g)
- This site someone had found shows weight per tablespoon and teaspoon of ground SN (see pics below)
1 tablespoon = 17.76g
1 teaspoon =5.92g (not sure if those are heaping or not, but prob not)
View attachment 19871View attachment 19872
- In this instructional video from the Nov2019 Pph Dr. N measures out 25g of SN on a scale and it looks a lot more than I anticipated. His scale maxes out at 20g, so he first does that (which is the amount you see in the small cup which is on the scale) then he moves that over to the big beaker and then he measures out an additional 5g and adds it into the big beaker (which is the 2nd pic)
I don't know if this helps at all, but for me it would to visually see it.
View attachment 19873View attachment 19874
It does doesn't it! I guess it won't look so daunting once it's all dissolved in the water though.that really does look like such a lot! 50ml is such a small amount of water!
Hope not it must be way more soluble than sea salt- no way that much sea salt would dissolve in so little water- esp. not hot.It does doesn't it! I guess it won't look so daunting once it's all dissolved in the water though.
that really does look like such a lot! 50ml is such a small amount of water!
It does doesn't it! I guess it won't look so daunting once it's all dissolved in the water though.
wish I had his set up!So In the vidéo he uses a machine to mix the Sn in the water, not a spoon. After adding water, He places the big beaker on this platform and puts a magnetic pill looking object into the solution. Then he turns on the machine which shakes the platform slightly, and the vibration causes the magnetic pill to jump around quickly mixing the solution really well and dissolving all the SN perfectly. Obv it's not expected for us to have that machine, but it does show that with enough mixing the SN can be completely dissolved.
Meh, I'll get a whisk!So In the vidéo he uses a machine to mix the Sn in the water, not a spoon. After adding water, He places the big beaker on this platform and puts a magnetic pill looking object into the solution. Then he turns on the machine which shakes the platform slightly, and the vibration causes the magnetic pill to jump around quickly mixing the solution really well and dissolving all the SN perfectly. Obv it's not expected for us to have that machine, but it does show that with enough mixing the SN can be completely dissolved.
The video is in the Nov2019 online edition of the PpH (which I have access to). The version in the resouces is from March, so I don't think so, but I haven't checked.
Yeah not to mentions all the aquarium stuff to test it too! Wish the pet shop would just sell N instead that would be SO much easier.The shopping list for SN is getting out of hand, now we need a magnetic stirrer too? :)
No worries, it will dissolve with a spoon, with a whisk, with a blender, with a shaker or with a magnetic stirrer. Clockwise and counter-clockwise stirring should both lead to satisfactory results.