
DeadButDreaming
Specialist
- Jun 16, 2020
- 362
On Mr Ballen's youtube channel is a video called 'You will never guess what was hidden in this home'. It tells the story of a man who CTB via guillotine.
Rather than face the blade while awake, he took a large number of sleeping pills and positioned himself so his neck was under the blade. The falling of the blade was triggered by a timer.
What interests me is whether the decapitation would have woken him, or his head at least. I know conciousness continues for a fair time after the decapitation, I'm guessing for 20 or so seconds afterward. I would have thought the blow of the heavy blade would be enough to render a person unconscious, but apparently this isn't always so. One of the reasons why the guillotine got abolished as a form of capital punishment is an experiment that was done with the recently severed head of a guillotine victim. Commands were given to the severed head (look right, look up, etc.) and the head (the person?!) obeyed.
I don't know how strong the pills were, but what do you think: would someone be awoken by the head being severed?
Rather than face the blade while awake, he took a large number of sleeping pills and positioned himself so his neck was under the blade. The falling of the blade was triggered by a timer.
What interests me is whether the decapitation would have woken him, or his head at least. I know conciousness continues for a fair time after the decapitation, I'm guessing for 20 or so seconds afterward. I would have thought the blow of the heavy blade would be enough to render a person unconscious, but apparently this isn't always so. One of the reasons why the guillotine got abolished as a form of capital punishment is an experiment that was done with the recently severed head of a guillotine victim. Commands were given to the severed head (look right, look up, etc.) and the head (the person?!) obeyed.
I don't know how strong the pills were, but what do you think: would someone be awoken by the head being severed?