• UK users: Due to a formal investigation into this site by Ofcom under the UK Online Safety Act 2023, we strongly recommend using a trusted, no-logs VPN. This will help protect your privacy, bypass censorship, and maintain secure access to the site. Read the full VPN guide here.

  • Hey Guest,

    Today, OFCOM launched an official investigation into Sanctioned Suicide under the UK’s Online Safety Act. This has already made headlines across the UK.

    This is a clear and unprecedented overreach by a foreign regulator against a U.S.-based platform. We reject this interference and will be defending the site’s existence and mission.

    In addition to our public response, we are currently seeking legal representation to ensure the best possible defense in this matter. If you are a lawyer or know of one who may be able to assist, please contact us at [email protected].

    Read our statement here:

    Donate via cryptocurrency:

    Bitcoin (BTC): 34HyDHTvEhXfPfb716EeEkEHXzqhwtow1L
    Ethereum (ETH): 0xd799aF8E2e5cEd14cdb344e6D6A9f18011B79BE9
    Monero (XMR): 49tuJbzxwVPUhhDjzz6H222Kh8baKe6rDEsXgE617DVSDD8UKNaXvKNU8dEVRTAFH9Av8gKkn4jDzVGF25snJgNfUfKKNC8
EconomcDisparity

EconomcDisparity

l'appel du vide
Nov 9, 2020
16
LOL I can't even kill myself properly...I accidently bought NaSO3 instead of SN...I'm beyond stupid. Anyone know if this can kill?
 
  • Yay!
  • Hugs
Reactions: NeverSatisfied, ansiedad and rs929
Tackingintothewind

Tackingintothewind

Mage
Mar 2, 2021
530
Lol I thought you were introducing a new method.
 
  • Like
Reactions: NeverSatisfied
R

rs929

Mage
Dec 18, 2020
522
Don't worry you're not the only one failing to kill yourself. Take it with humor lol
 
Tackingintothewind

Tackingintothewind

Mage
Mar 2, 2021
530
HUMAN STUDIES: Clinical oral and ocular-exposure studies reported no adverse effects. Sodium sulfite was not irritating or sensitizing in clinical tests. It may however, produce positive reactions in dermatologic patients under patch test. The majority of patients with positive reactions to sodium metabisulfite are also positive to sodium sulfite. Most studies report a prevalence of sulfite sensitivity of 3 to 10% among asthmatic subjects who ingest these additives. However, the severity of these reactions varies, and steroid-dependent asthmatics, those with marked airway hyperresponsiveness, and children with chronic asthma, appear to be at greater risk. Chronic irritation and inflammation of the respiratory tract and alteration of the sense of smell and taste is not uncommon a result of frequent exposure to 30 to 100 ppm. ANIMAL STUDIES: A single exposure to low concentrations of a sodium sulfite fine aerosol produced dose-related changes in the lung capacity parameters of guinea pigs. A 3-day exposure of rats to a sodium sulfite fine aerosol produced mild pulmonary edema and irritation of the tracheal epithelium. In rats, sodium sulfite heptahydrate at large doses (up to 3.3 g/kg) produced fetal toxicity but not teratogenicity. Sodium sulfite was negative in mutagenicity studies.
I'm guessing not
Though this abstract suggests it could cause hypoxia
 
Last edited:
EconomcDisparity

EconomcDisparity

l'appel du vide
Nov 9, 2020
16
HUMAN STUDIES: Clinical oral and ocular-exposure studies reported no adverse effects. Sodium sulfite was not irritating or sensitizing in clinical tests. It may however, produce positive reactions in dermatologic patients under patch test. The majority of patients with positive reactions to sodium metabisulfite are also positive to sodium sulfite. Most studies report a prevalence of sulfite sensitivity of 3 to 10% among asthmatic subjects who ingest these additives. However, the severity of these reactions varies, and steroid-dependent asthmatics, those with marked airway hyperresponsiveness, and children with chronic asthma, appear to be at greater risk. Chronic irritation and inflammation of the respiratory tract and alteration of the sense of smell and taste is not uncommon a result of frequent exposure to 30 to 100 ppm. ANIMAL STUDIES: A single exposure to low concentrations of a sodium sulfite fine aerosol produced dose-related changes in the lung capacity parameters of guinea pigs. A 3-day exposure of rats to a sodium sulfite fine aerosol produced mild pulmonary edema and irritation of the tracheal epithelium. In rats, sodium sulfite heptahydrate at large doses (up to 3.3 g/kg) produced fetal toxicity but not teratogenicity. Sodium sulfite was negative in mutagenicity studies.
I'm guessing not
Though this abstract suggests it could cause hypoxia
So there's hope? Fuckit, might be a scuffed ride but I don't care anymore
 
R

rs929

Mage
Dec 18, 2020
522
Hypoxia means death but also potentially surviving brain damaged. I'm not into scaring people to stop them, but we have no research on your substance
 
  • Like
Reactions: LittleBabyNothing
Tackingintothewind

Tackingintothewind

Mage
Mar 2, 2021
530
Yeah I wouldn't recommend. That abstract wasn't on humans but on a bacteria. The first study I mentioned is also the later study which suggests that sodium sulphite might be more useful in abortions than suicide re rats
 
  • Like
Reactions: LittleBabyNothing

Similar threads

g0ne1nthew1nd
Replies
5
Views
211
Suicide Discussion
Eudaimonic
Eudaimonic
Placo
Replies
2
Views
261
Suicide Discussion
encore
encore
GetReadyy
Replies
11
Views
394
Suicide Discussion
GetReadyy
GetReadyy
W
Replies
2
Views
159
Recovery
Alias Pluto
Alias Pluto
star_shine
Replies
7
Views
181
Suicide Discussion
belowaveragefish
belowaveragefish