beforeistoolate
Member
- May 13, 2023
- 54
I felt the need to share my story because I just discovered a thread of someone considering hypothermia as a method to cbt and pretty much every answer to his post was incorrect.
First comment was "you don't need freezing temperatures to die from hypothermia", while technically correct, this might only work in a water environment or with incredible high speed winds. My experience lasted for 5 days with temperatures just above freezing, wearing only shorts and shoes(to prevent frostbite), laying on the dirt surrounded by snow and I'm still here.
Second comment was "the key to a successful attempt is alcohol", this might be true under really harsh and way below freezing conditions able to kill faster than your hangover lasts. My experience was a full bottle of whiskey had no effect at all.
Again, the problem with my hypothermia attempt might have only been the temperature range, which needs to be lower than freezing. Because I'm a thin individual, and that's the main factor determining how fast you succumb to the cold, I believed just above freezing was enough to make it happen. Age might be even more determining, but I won't speculate on that, suffice to say there's anecdotes and reports of older people dying from temperatures comfortably above freezing.
I tried hypothermia because I'm used to the cold and with extremes of survival such as extreme fasting, dehydration.
I cannot say it's too painful, but definitely very uncomfortable.
I tried it above freezing because i didn't wanna fail and end up with frostbite.
After five days of suffering thru it, I realized it wasn't going to work, I jumped in the cold water and went to sleep back on the ground completely wet. Woke up dry and feeling fine, just weak and dizzy mainly from not being able to sleep in more than 96 hours. I went back to town and recovered, only side effect was sweating profusely in my sleep for an entire month.
What I get from this experience is. Our bodies are much stronger than we think, some might be more than others.
Currently I'm thinking of a phenobarbital overdose combined with cold weather, or maybe carbon-monoxide.
For the entirety of those five days my body was pulsating/vibrating(not shivering) keeping me warm against my will. I've been in many situation where I got to the first stages of hypothermia where you shiver violently, but this time it was just that, muscle vibration I don't know how to call it and I still fail to understand, but those are the facts. Again, laying almost completely naked on the dirt, for more than 96 hours, temperature range between 2 and 7 degrees celsius, moderate wind. Unsuccessful.
First comment was "you don't need freezing temperatures to die from hypothermia", while technically correct, this might only work in a water environment or with incredible high speed winds. My experience lasted for 5 days with temperatures just above freezing, wearing only shorts and shoes(to prevent frostbite), laying on the dirt surrounded by snow and I'm still here.
Second comment was "the key to a successful attempt is alcohol", this might be true under really harsh and way below freezing conditions able to kill faster than your hangover lasts. My experience was a full bottle of whiskey had no effect at all.
Again, the problem with my hypothermia attempt might have only been the temperature range, which needs to be lower than freezing. Because I'm a thin individual, and that's the main factor determining how fast you succumb to the cold, I believed just above freezing was enough to make it happen. Age might be even more determining, but I won't speculate on that, suffice to say there's anecdotes and reports of older people dying from temperatures comfortably above freezing.
I tried hypothermia because I'm used to the cold and with extremes of survival such as extreme fasting, dehydration.
I cannot say it's too painful, but definitely very uncomfortable.
I tried it above freezing because i didn't wanna fail and end up with frostbite.
After five days of suffering thru it, I realized it wasn't going to work, I jumped in the cold water and went to sleep back on the ground completely wet. Woke up dry and feeling fine, just weak and dizzy mainly from not being able to sleep in more than 96 hours. I went back to town and recovered, only side effect was sweating profusely in my sleep for an entire month.
What I get from this experience is. Our bodies are much stronger than we think, some might be more than others.
Currently I'm thinking of a phenobarbital overdose combined with cold weather, or maybe carbon-monoxide.
For the entirety of those five days my body was pulsating/vibrating(not shivering) keeping me warm against my will. I've been in many situation where I got to the first stages of hypothermia where you shiver violently, but this time it was just that, muscle vibration I don't know how to call it and I still fail to understand, but those are the facts. Again, laying almost completely naked on the dirt, for more than 96 hours, temperature range between 2 and 7 degrees celsius, moderate wind. Unsuccessful.
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