W
Walilamdzi
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- Mar 21, 2019
- 1,700
I go from thinking this is a terrible method to thinking it's one of the easiest.
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@lastNamePicked So there's a structure within driving distance. Only two or three people have died from jumping off it as far as I can tell. It's approximately 125 feet. If more people had done it, I guess I would consider it more seriously.
@hegesias I think I'd find it a tiny bit easier with something like the Golden Gate Bridge, because the 'idea' of jumping into water seems less painful, even if it is just as painful. I went to the place nearby and walked around a bit, and can't say I feel it would be easy to take the plunge and do it.
@JohnUK Do you know the structure/are you planning to jump into water or ground?
@aspx I guess alcohol could help a bit.
@Compodulator Yeah, it's astounding some of the heights that people have survived falling from.
@Dead beat dad I wish there was more data on whether it's a more or less instantaneous death/unconsciousness... to be conscious after the fall would be awful. Peace to you too ✌
@Chalken Yeah that is terrifying. What happens if you end up like that and have nobody to support you? Is it the law to keep you alive in a "care" home or something..?
That's what frightens me more about this method. Just to be aware that you fucked up but can't move a muscle and in excruciating pain with guts and bones stuck out. If anything it's more of a last ditch method I'd choose if I don't have many options. It takes a lot of courage and will to do this and I just don't have what it takes to push through. Plus the thought of landing on someone or something like that French man who got impaled by a 3 foot pole and survived the fall but later died just makes shit scarier.@lastNamePicked So there's a structure within driving distance. Only two or three people have died from jumping off it as far as I can tell. It's approximately 125 feet. If more people had done it, I guess I would consider it more seriously.
@hegesias I think I'd find it a tiny bit easier with something like the Golden Gate Bridge, because the 'idea' of jumping into water seems less painful, even if it is just as painful. I went to the place nearby and walked around a bit, and can't say I feel it would be easy to take the plunge and do it.
@JohnUK Do you know the structure/are you planning to jump into water or ground?
@aspx I guess alcohol could help a bit.
@Compodulator Yeah, it's astounding some of the heights that people have survived falling from.
@Dead beat dad I wish there was more data on whether it's a more or less instantaneous death/unconsciousness... to be conscious after the fall would be awful. Peace to you too ✌
@Chalken Yeah that is terrifying. What happens if you end up like that and have nobody to support you? Is it the law to keep you alive in a "care" home or something..?
Investment in Equipment: 10 (none needed)
Drink your Sodium Nitrate, shoot up a lethal dose of heroin and then jump. Less chance of missing the bus if you catch it three times.
Or unfortunately caught by people who in my opinion think suicide is a sin and should not be allowedI have seen so many videos of failed suicides. Most are jumpers who hesitate.
Very simple, and guaranteed death if you have an elementary understanding of aerodynamics and physics with an adequate elevation. However, the fear/panic I think is equatable to self-immolation, suicide-by-cop, and drowning.I go from thinking this is a terrible method to thinking it's one of the easiest.
Do you think it's an instant death upon impact? Or would it take some time?Very simple, and guaranteed death if you have an elementary understanding of aerodynamics and physics with an adequate elevation. However, the fear/panic I think is equatable to self-immolation, suicide-by-cop, and drowning.
How many did not account for their CoM and/or "landing" structure (grass vs pavement)? Or even the wind.From experience i would say please don't, if nothing else i found ending up in hospital for months unable to walk kinda scuppered any chance to try again in the short term.
Plus research tells me it is not as clear cut as some would like to suggest, there are too many variables, too many survival stories of jumps/falls from even heights associated with skydiving.
Yes a lot of people die, but the same amount end up disabled to various degrees for the rest of their lives, some to the point that taking your own life becomes impossible without help from another person.
Depends on how you land, what you've impacted, and velocity. Pretty much if you don't land on your head it's going to be agonizingly painful and you might be rescued by the ICU.Do you think it's an instant death upon impact? Or would it take some time?
Center of Mass, the main factor of how an object lands.CoM?