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Your most preferred method of dying

dfwjacker

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In its latest issue, New Scientist magazine has gone into great depth about what it's like to die and compares various ways of dying. From this list, rank them from your most preferred to least preferred way of dying.

Here's mine:
1. Heart attack
2. Drowning
3. Loss of blood
4. Electrocution
5. Decapitation
6. Hanging
7. Fall from a height
8. Fire


Drowning:
Victims first panic and try to hold their breath, typically for 30 to 90 seconds. Survivors have reported a "tearing and burning" sensation as water enters the lungs - but it is quickly followed by a feeling of calmness and tranquility. Oxygen deprivation results in loss of consciousness, the heart stopping and brain death.

Heart attack:
A "squeezing" chest pain, or feeling of pressure, is the most common symptom as the heart muscle struggles for oxygen. Disruption of the normal heart rhythm effectively stops the heart beating. Loss of consciousness can occur in about 10 seconds and death can follow minutes later.

Loss of blood:
Marked by several stages of "haemorrhagic shock". Anyone losing 1.5 litres of blood feels weak, thirsty and anxious. By the time two litres are lost, people experience dizziness, confusion and eventual unconsciousness.

Electrocution:
A household electric shock might stop the heart, leading to unconsciousness after around 10 seconds. Higher currents through the heart or brain can produce almost immediate unconsciousness. However, it has been claimed that prisoners executed with the electric chair may actually have died from heating of the brain or suffocation.

Fall from a height:
Survivors of great falls often report the sensation of time slowing down. A study of 100 suicide jumps from San Francisco's 246-ft-high Golden Gate Bridge found numerous cases of instantaneous death involving collapsed lungs, exploded hearts or damage to organs from broken ribs.

Hanging:
Hanging suicides and old-fashioned executions cause death by strangulation. This can lead to unconsciousness in 10 seconds but a poorly placed noose may result in many minutes of suffering. "Long drop" hangings are designed to break the neck. But a study of the remains of 34 prisoners executed in this way found that four-fifths died partly from asphyxiation.

Fire:
Burns inflict intense pain, and boost the skin's pain sensitivity. As superficial nerves are destroyed, some feeling is lost - but not much, according to experts. But most people who die in fires are actually killed by inhaling toxic gases and asphyxiation.

Decapitation:
Beheading can be swift and painless but consciousness is believed to continue for a short time after the spinal cord is severed. Experts have calculated that the brain might remain functioning for seven seconds. Reports from guillotine executions in France cited cases where movements of the eyes and mouth were seen for up to 30 seconds.
 
In my sleep

because of old age

without pain

only preferred
 
BTW

What the hell kind of morbid post is this?

I don't mean morbid as in talking about death

I mean morbid as in thinking about something one will never have control over. You don't even have control over suicide. Except of course putting a gun to your head, and I know all about that. My uncle killed himself that way. :(

I guess the curiosity is invigorating.
 
BTW

What the hell kind of morbid post is this?

I don't mean morbid as in talking about death

I mean morbid as in thinking about something one will never have control over. You don't even have control over suicide.

I think this is an interesting subject from a scientific standpoint.

Also, I wasn't asking people to choose their actual death method or insinuating that they would have a choice in the matter, just asking which method of these they would prefer and in what order.
 
don't worry, i'm not trying to make fun of you

but still

i don't know how anyone can even have a preference. talking about dying is one thing. talking about how one WANTS to die is another.

Different strokes for different folks, I believe.
 
...but didn't you say in your first post, that you'd like to die in your sleep? Thats still a preferance, right?

Yeah, that was my first thought.

But then I started thinking about it, and preferring to die by anything other than painlessness just gives me the shivers...

idk.
 
i died once
no biggie

but then they brought me back

*kisses everyone at st. mikes hospital the good old Urban Angel*
 
I'm just coming to terms with my preferred way of living to start thinking about death in all it's macabre glory.
 
or killed by a toilet
yea that's it
and become a grim reaper
then i'll come and take you all

 
^PeTe, stay the hell away from me!

When I read this I was thinking preferred method of killing. I was ready for a list then read the post again, sorry.

I've spent so much time on the ocean, drowning will probably do it for me.
 
If I die....I want it to be quick and easy. If I have to suffer once I get to Heaven I swear I'm going to kick Jesus' ass.
 
I would not choose any from the list because there are exceptions to each one that are not discussed. For example, a heart attack is not necessarily preceeded by chest pains and that is now a medical fact. I would use my own mother as an example. She suffered and survived a heart attack 3 years ago. No chest pains, no tightness, no pain in the shoulder or arm. Just a general feeling of nausea and cold sweats and dizziness...but no pain at all. Her cardiologist explained that there are MANY different kinds of heart attacks and varying degrees of pain or discomfort or none at all. It depends on what is wrong with the heart or the arteries going to it. Yes, a massive heart attack is similar to a massive stroke in the sense that one second you are alive and the next second you are not. It's that fast.

By the way, I did not see stroke on the list. That is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. and knows no age. I have a female friend who was only 31 years old and had a debilitating stroke, survived it and spent 3 years in therapy.

If I actually had a choice, I would want to die in my sleep. That has to be the most beautiful death. You simply fall asleep and that's the end of it. You'll never know what happened.
 
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