• Hey Guest,

    If you want to donate, we have a thread with updated donation options here at this link: About Donations

RedRed

RedRed

Member
Oct 24, 2020
93
I've read that if a persons drowns, before they die they'll be able to experience extreme euphoria. I forgot the explanation for that. It's sometimes very tempting to try ahahah
 
Raminiki

Raminiki

Iustitia Mortuus
Jun 12, 2020
269
Yes. I can attest to this, as this is my method and I have done trial runs and breathed N2 all the way to unconsciousness. I did this by holding the bag vertically, looking up at the ceiling, and holding the bag to my face and nose so my hands would fall away once I was out. The euphoria was amazing. Like I can't wait for that part again. If I didn't have loose ends, I'd do it right fucking now.

I presume the same effect from He? I never thought to experiment the way you did, thanks for the idea. How soon did you regain consciousness?
 
newave3

newave3

I want out
Nov 21, 2020
2,751
Being drawn and quartered
Mel Gibson told me so
 
Last edited:
LooksAtMoonDog

LooksAtMoonDog

Too Long in the Wasteland
Nov 10, 2020
719
I've spoken to a couple divers who went too deep and experienced nitrogen narcosis, sounded pretty euphoric. Though I'm pretty sure that the pressure at depth makes the effect more pronounced than at sea level.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Nimbus
BigLucs

BigLucs

M-23 NC. Don't want to turn 24.
Apr 30, 2020
58
Honestly just about any way will. Once the DMT is released into your brain you'll be very euphoric.
 
LONE WOLF.

LONE WOLF.

PUNISHER.
Nov 4, 2020
1,978
Maybe euphoria if you're an adrenaline junkie lol.
Jumping off a really really high building is a sure fire way to go as the g-forces induced during falling will render you unconscious long before you hit the ground!
 
Gromit-CTB

Gromit-CTB

time for ctb
Nov 14, 2020
847
Jumping off a really really high building is a sure fire way to go as the g-forces induced during falling will render you unconscious long before you hit the ground!
Where did you get this info from
 
  • Like
Reactions: lostautist
LONE WOLF.

LONE WOLF.

PUNISHER.
Nov 4, 2020
1,978
From a parachute jump l did for charity 10 years ago where my main chute failed and l had to use my back up chute! Plus if you go online and read up about G-Forces you'll see for yourself that my info is correct, Have a great day
 
Gromit-CTB

Gromit-CTB

time for ctb
Nov 14, 2020
847
From a parachute jump l did for charity 10 years ago where my main chute failed and l had to use my back up chute! Plus if you go online and read up about G-Forces you'll see for yourself that my info is correct, Have a great day
Parachute jumps and building jumps are different. My friend ctb from jumping and I have pages of notes on it. Falling from building is way different to parachute. Tell you what you have a great day
 
A

Ae54rge

Member
Dec 6, 2020
40
I would just go with the easy for me, acid, weed, drink and partial suspension. I don't want my last thing on this earth to cause me yet more grief trying to achieve it.
 
Thanatonaut

Thanatonaut

My time is coming.
May 17, 2019
264
Jumping off a really really high building is a sure fire way to go as the g-forces induced during falling will render you unconscious long before you hit the ground!
This is 100% false. I'm a licensed skydiver with hundreds of jumps. The G-forces induced by falling is exactly 1, the same as you right now reading the post (unless you're reading it in a centrifuge.) Once terminal velocity (or the speed at which wind resistance prevents further acceleration) is reached, it's pretty much like laying on a cushion of air. If you had made a parachute jump, you would know this. And if you had cut away your main chute and used your "back up chute" (it's called a reserve BTW) you would have really gotten some first hand knowledge about G-forces (or lack thereof.)

So is there a way to render yourself unconscious before you hit the ground? Not really, not in a way that doesn't endanger other people. If you're flying a canopy that's overloaded enough (the standard ratio is 1:1, or 1 sq ft of canopy for every pound you weigh. So a 220 lb person should fly a 220 sq ft chute. If that same person uses a 110 sq ft canopy, the wing loading is now 2:1 and the parachute will now be much more temperamental, and a full toggle pull to one direction *MIGHT* induce a spin hard enough to put you out. For a second or 2. Then you'll likely wake up and land anyway.

Basically, if you decide to jump, count on being alert and conscious right up until impact. And the "groundrush" sensation of the ground coming up at you is not something I would want to experience without a way to stop it.

Also, as far as skydiving goes: skydivers are a really insular, tight-knit group of people. They tend to pick up if something isn't right, and if you're not a regular and just show up for a random jump, they're going to be watching you. You'll probably have at least 5 strangers insist on doing a "safety check" on your gear on the ride up, and if anyone thinks you might not be safe, they'll strap you down and tell the pilot to land. Also, when someone burns in at a drop zone, that same insular, tight-knight group will be devastated. Please don't do that to them. Skydiving is an inherently risky activity, but we do everything we can to stay safe as possible, and when someone burns in, everyone there feels like a failure for allowing it to happen. Please, don't do that.
 
Last edited:
Gromit-CTB

Gromit-CTB

time for ctb
Nov 14, 2020
847
This is 100% false. I'm a licensed skydiver with hundreds of jumps. The G-forces induced by falling is exactly 1, the same as you right now reading the post (unless you're reading it in a centrifuge.) Once terminal velocity (or the speed at which wind resistance prevents further acceleration) is reached, it's pretty much like laying on a cushion of air. If you had made a parachute jump, you would know this. And if you had cut away your main chute and used your "back up chute" (it's called a reserve BTW) you would have really gotten some first hand knowledge about G-forces (or lack thereof.)

So is there a way to render yourself unconscious before you hit the ground? Not really, not in a way that doesn't endanger other people. If you're flying a canopy that's overloaded enough (the standard ratio is 1:1, or 1 sq ft of canopy for every pound you weigh. So a 220 lb person should fly a 220 sf ft chute. If that same person uses a 110 sq ft canopy, the wing loading is now 2:1 and the parachute will now be much more temperamental, and a full toggle pull to one direction *MIGHT* induce a spin hard enough to put you out. For a second or 2. Then you'll likely wake up and land anyway.

Basically, if you decide to jump, count on being alert and conscious right up until impact. And the "groundrush" sensation of the ground coming up at you is not something I would want to experience without a way to stop it.

Also, as far as skydiving goes: skydivers are a really insular, tight-knit group of people. They tend to pick up if something isn't right, and if you're not a regular and just show up for a random jump, they're going to be watching you. You'll probably have at least 5 strangers insist on doing a "safety check" on your gear on the ride up, and if anyone thinks you might not be safe, they'll strap you down and tell the pilot to land. Also, when someone burns in at a drop zone, that same insular, tight-knight group will be devastated. Please don't do that to them. Skydiving is an inherently risky activity, but we do everything we can to stay safe as possible, and when someone burns in, everyone there feels like a failure for allowing it to happen. Please, don't do that.
Thank you false information is damaging. With most building/bridge or cliff jumps you will fall between 3-7 seconds depending on height not enough time to state what user said. Information is good wrong Information is pointless
 
Superdeterminist

Superdeterminist

Enlightened
Apr 5, 2020
1,783
I think jumping off a building or cliff produces a lot of euphoria, especially while you're falling down and probably having a heart attack before the impact of hitting the ground.
I'm not so sure. I heard that from survivor testimonies, most jumpers are overcome by a sudden extreme fear 3-4 seconds into the jump, even if they were perfectly calm when they jumped off.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Gromit-CTB
S

Symbiote

Global Mod
Oct 12, 2020
3,102
Autoerotic asphyxiation really sends your body into shivers, but your brain be on cloud 9. It's not for everyone though because the person that finds you sees you more stiff in other places.
 
Superdeterminist

Superdeterminist

Enlightened
Apr 5, 2020
1,783
Honestly just about any way will. Once the DMT is released into your brain you'll be very euphoric.
That's a big claim. Wouldn't you say that there are lots of agonising and terrifying ways to go? Like drinking bleach for example. Sure maybe you get a moment of euphoria just as you die (maybe, who knows), but before that it's guaranteed pure pain and horror.
 
Thanatonaut

Thanatonaut

My time is coming.
May 17, 2019
264
I'm not so sure. I heard that from survivor testimonies, most jumpers are overcome by a sudden extreme fear 3-4 seconds into the jump, even if they were perfectly calm when they jumped off.
This is what I was talking about by groundrush. Being able to experience that with a parachute is what gives skydiving its real adrenaline rush. But like I said above, it is NOT something I would want to experience with no way out. I've had a couple of incidents where got below 1000 feet before I got a good chute out (malfunctions, cutaways, line twists, etc.) and those incidents are the closest I came to walking away from the sport (before I got injured and had to.) Also, during those incidents, time slows down even more. During a fall anyway, time already seems to slow down. But when you start getting that low, it takes FOREVER. The closer you get, the longer it seems. I'd bet the last 250 feet would feel like 5-10 minutes.
 
S

summers

Visionary
Nov 4, 2020
2,495
This is 100% false. I'm a licensed skydiver with hundreds of jumps. The G-forces induced by falling is exactly 1, the same as you right now reading the post (unless you're reading it in a centrifuge.) Once terminal velocity (or the speed at which wind resistance prevents further acceleration) is reached, it's pretty much like laying on a cushion of air. If you had made a parachute jump, you would know this. And if you had cut away your main chute and used your "back up chute" (it's called a reserve BTW) you would have really gotten some first hand knowledge about G-forces (or lack thereof.)

So is there a way to render yourself unconscious before you hit the ground? Not really, not in a way that doesn't endanger other people. If you're flying a canopy that's overloaded enough (the standard ratio is 1:1, or 1 sq ft of canopy for every pound you weigh. So a 220 lb person should fly a 220 sq ft chute. If that same person uses a 110 sq ft canopy, the wing loading is now 2:1 and the parachute will now be much more temperamental, and a full toggle pull to one direction *MIGHT* induce a spin hard enough to put you out. For a second or 2. Then you'll likely wake up and land anyway.

Basically, if you decide to jump, count on being alert and conscious right up until impact. And the "groundrush" sensation of the ground coming up at you is not something I would want to experience without a way to stop it.

Also, as far as skydiving goes: skydivers are a really insular, tight-knit group of people. They tend to pick up if something isn't right, and if you're not a regular and just show up for a random jump, they're going to be watching you. You'll probably have at least 5 strangers insist on doing a "safety check" on your gear on the ride up, and if anyone thinks you might not be safe, they'll strap you down and tell the pilot to land. Also, when someone burns in at a drop zone, that same insular, tight-knight group will be devastated. Please don't do that to them. Skydiving is an inherently risky activity, but we do everything we can to stay safe as possible, and when someone burns in, everyone there feels like a failure for allowing it to happen. Please, don't do that.
Actually, the g forces your body experiences are less than 1 until you hit terminal velocity. Granted, that doesn't take long - only 600ft vertical.
 
  • Like
Reactions: lostautist
Thanatonaut

Thanatonaut

My time is coming.
May 17, 2019
264
Actually, the g forces your body experiences are less than 1 until you hit terminal velocity. Granted, that doesn't take long - only 600ft vertical.
Right. That's mostly only if you jump from a stationary object or something like a balloon or hovering helicopter. When you jump from a plane, the effect is less pronounced because you kind of transition from falling forward to falling down as the inertia from the plane ride dissipates. If that makes any sense.
 
S

summers

Visionary
Nov 4, 2020
2,495
Right. That's mostly only if you jump from a stationary object or something like a balloon or hovering helicopter. When you jump from a plane, the effect is less pronounced because you kind of transition from falling forward to falling down as the inertia from the plane ride dissipates. If that makes any sense.
I didn't think of that. I'm sure the plane is flying at more than 125mph air speed.
 
Thanatonaut

Thanatonaut

My time is coming.
May 17, 2019
264
I didn't think of that. I'm sure the plane is flying at more than 125mph air speed.
Actually, it's around that speed. You can always tell when it's time to jump because the engines throttle down. Average terminal velocity of a stable, belly-to earth skydiver is about 120mph.
 
LONE WOLF.

LONE WOLF.

PUNISHER.
Nov 4, 2020
1,978
This is 100% false. I'm a licensed skydiver with hundreds of jumps. The G-forces induced by falling is exactly 1, the same as you right now reading the post (unless you're reading it in a centrifuge.) Once terminal velocity (or the speed at which wind resistance prevents further acceleration) is reached, it's pretty much like laying on a cushion of air. If you had made a parachute jump, you would know this. And if you had cut away your main chute and used your "back up chute" (it's called a reserve BTW) you would have really gotten some first hand knowledge about G-forces (or lack thereof.)

So is there a way to render yourself unconscious before you hit the ground? Not really, not in a way that doesn't endanger other people. If you're flying a canopy that's overloaded enough (the standard ratio is 1:1, or 1 sq ft of canopy for every pound you weigh. So a 220 lb person should fly a 220 sq ft chute. If that same person uses a 110 sq ft canopy, the wing loading is now 2:1 and the parachute will now be much more temperamental, and a full toggle pull to one direction *MIGHT* induce a spin hard enough to put you out. For a second or 2. Then you'll likely wake up and land anyway.

Basically, if you decide to jump, count on being alert and conscious right up until impact. And the "groundrush" sensation of the ground coming up at you is not something I would want to experience without a way to stop it.

Also, as far as skydiving goes: skydivers are a really insular, tight-knit group of people. They tend to pick up if something isn't right, and if you're not a regular and just show up for a random jump, they're going to be watching you. You'll probably have at least 5 strangers insist on doing a "safety check" on your gear on the ride up, and if anyone thinks you might not be safe, they'll strap you down and tell the pilot to land. Also, when someone burns in at a drop zone, that same insular, tight-knight group will be devastated. Please don't do that to them. Skydiving is an inherently risky activity, but we do everything we can to stay safe as possible, and when someone burns in, everyone there feels like a failure for allowing it to happen. Please, don't do that.
You're entitled to your opinion which l personally am ignoring!
 
S

summers

Visionary
Nov 4, 2020
2,495
Is it hard to get your hands on it? Can you not just buy it?
Argon gas used in welding and pure helium are exactly the same. You can go to any welding supply shop and buy a cylinder of argon and you can rent a cylinder of helium from party supply rental companies.
 
  • Like
Reactions: lostautist
win32

win32

I did it for me.
Mar 26, 2020
57
Forget heroin, benzos, nitrogen, if we're talking about the most euphoric... probably taking pure MDMA and doing something like shooting or hanging yourself at the peak/just before the comedown.
 
LoneMisery

LoneMisery

Student
Jan 23, 2022
125
I wish there was a way to feel euphoric without leaving.
Every single one if us deserves to at least see what its like not to feel this empty feeling.
I only wish the best for your wishes.
But we all..every single one of us deserves to feel that feeling
 
  • Like
Reactions: lmon
lmon

lmon

Specialist
Jan 9, 2022
328
Argon gas used in welding and pure helium are exactly the same. You can go to any welding supply shop and buy a cylinder of argon and you can rent a cylinder of helium from party supply rental companies.
The helium for party supply is a different grade so that party goers don't injest the helium and pass out
 
  • Like
Reactions: thefoodispoison
S

summers

Visionary
Nov 4, 2020
2,495
Valium is effective if you take 200mg with a bottle of Vodka while sat in a car with a hose attached to the exhaust pipe poking through the window And a syringe with 5 bags of 'H' sliding into a vein and a 38 snub nose in your lap as a back up? "Yeah" Who's up for that party???
5 bags is like 500mg, probably cut so you're maybe getting 300mg pure - that is not even fatal for someone over 200lbs. Just go with a full 2g, shoot it all at once, and you won't be conscious long enough to use your 38 snub - which btw, is one of the worst firearms you could use for ctb. Weak round and 2" barrel are the last thing you want as a backup.

That's probably the most fucked up attempt fail you can have - neurological and nerve damage from the H od, and permanent disfigurement and brain damage from using an ineffective gun to ctb.
The helium for party supply is a different grade so that party goers don't injest the helium and pass out
Last time I had to get helium (about 3 years ago), it was expensive af. Argon is substantially cheaper. And you're right about the helium - you can get that from welding suppliers too. I've been looking for compressed hydrogen, but haven't found a source.
 
Last edited:
lostautist

lostautist

wandering
Jan 12, 2022
225
N20 or F or perhaps a pharm cocktail of some sort. Never used H so I've just heard OD horror stories from people I've known.

Right. That's mostly only if you jump from a stationary object or something like a balloon or hovering helicopter. When you jump from a plane, the effect is less pronounced because you kind of transition from falling forward to falling down as the inertia from the plane ride dissipates. If that makes any sense.
You will feel the force of wind resistance. You will not feel any noticeable change in g-force because you are not having another active force alter a free fall state. If you are hit by a strong gust of wind, that might change, but probably wouldn't be significant unless you had some form of substantial wind resistance like a wing suit maneurvering at speed or parachute as it's being deployed.
 

Similar threads

D
Replies
36
Views
907
Suicide Discussion
worthlessdisaster
worthlessdisaster
L
Replies
7
Views
272
Suicide Discussion
locked*n*loaded
locked*n*loaded
D
Replies
2
Views
113
Suicide Discussion
Dark-Knight
D