lesbian-venting:appropriately-inappropriate:afro-latino:7mangoes:boootyfriedrice:what about poc? I w
lesbian-venting:appropriately-inappropriate:afro-latino:7mangoes:boootyfriedrice:what about poc? I was about to sayMy girl darkskinned so how Ima tellNEVER DO BREATHPLAY. EVER. Even fifteen seconds of pressure can cause cardiac arrest, and brain damage begins almost instantly after hypoxia–and is both cumulative and irreversible. Furthermore, the xyphoid bone can be shattered, the trachea and esophagus can be crushed and the voice box can be bruised beyond repair. It can also cause kidney, lung, liver and spinal damage, all of which present asymptomatically and can strike hours or days after the choking. It is a BAD idea, medically speaking, to choke anyone. It is negligent and dangerous to do it at all, and can easily be lethal. There is no such thing as a safe choke–any pressure that is strong enough to restrict breathing is strong enough to kill your partner. And that’s not hyperbole, either, that’s:-Bronze Star and Cross lifeguarding experience-CPR, St Johns Ambulance First Aid, and Black Rose BDSM first aid certifications-four years of forensic anthropology-almost a decade of kink experience-three years of full-contact martial arts speaking. I’m not just blowing smoke, but I am telling you this is the least safe, MOST dangerous thing you can do to your partner, and people do in fact die as a result.stupidity is the same as evil if you judge by the results. people who don’t know better are gonna look and this shit and go “oh, there’s a chart so it must be somewhat scientifically accurate and safe to do!”. get help and stop fucking choking each other.It is a frightening and potentially deadly scenario that many abused women face — the hands of a loved one wrapped around their necks, squeezing.And statistically, the more often a woman is strangled, the more likely she is to be killed.“If the victim survives a particular assault, they are at risk of a future assault where they will be murdered,” said registered nurse Morag McLean.Damage done not always clearAccording to the Training Institute for Strangulation Prevention in San Diego, California, 30 per cent to almost 70 per cent of women who experience domestic violence have been strangled. “I had a client once who was strangled 200 times,” said McLean, who works with victims of domestic violence in Edmonton and counsels them about the risks of strangulation.“Often victims will experience a strangulation assault, and they will appear fine; they will appear normal at the scene.”Damage can show up even weeks laterOn its website, the Training Institute on Strangulation Prevention says, “Victims may have no visible injuries whatsoever, yet because of underlying brain damage due to the lack of oxygen during the strangulation assault, they may have serious internal injuries, or die days, even weeks later.”The institute said it works to “enhance the knowledge and understanding of professionals working with victims of domestic violence and sexual assault who are strangled.”McLean said a normal man’s handshake creates about 80 pounds of pressure per square inch, and that it takes far less pressure to stop the flow of blood to and from the brain.“Eleven pounds of pressure per square inch will completely block the carotid artery, which is the main artery taking blood and oxygen to the brain,” she said.“And 4.4 pounds of pressure will occlude or block the jugular vein, and that’s the vessel that takes the blood from the brain back down to the lungs to be oxygenated."Thirty-three pounds of pressure will occlude the trachea; so with very little effort you can occlude the major vessels and the airway and block air going to the brain.”Going to dieThe psychological impacts of being strangled include depression, suicidal thoughts, nightmares, post-traumatic stress disorder and more. According to the training prevention institute, 70 per cent of women who have been strangled believed they were going to die.That echoes her experience with strangulation, McGrath said.https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/strangulation-domestic-violence-prevention-murder-st-john-s-boalag-1.4706377 -- source link
#bdsm#kink#choking#breathplay#murderplay#feminism