VIBE CHECK: Everyone ready for the ending to begin? "You met Q at a very strange time in my life."
(media.patriots.win)
THE FIRST RULE Q CLUB IS:
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Tyler Durden: You know why they put oxygen masks on planes?
Narrator: So you can breath.
Tyler Durden: Oxygen makes you high. In a catastrophic emergency, you're taking giant panicked breaths. Suddenly you become euphoric, docile. You accept your fate.
Yeeeees normies. Accept the awakening... Accept that nothing can stop what is coming... Might as well take a hit of that oxygen while you're at it! This ride is just getting started!
u/#Unacceptable
So crazy personal story. Last year, went to the dentist to have wisdom teeth removed. They overdosed me on nitrous oxide. I'd haved it used before, just eases the anxiety, makes you a little loopy, but completely conscious. But this time, somebody screwed up. Was either a bad mix or not timed with the right mix. Once the nitrogen started pumping in, I could feel myself going under. It was 5 seconds of this feeling of a complete loss of control over my body. My mind was still completely aware of what was going on. I said in my head, at least what I thought was just in my head, "it's ok to take me now, this world sucks anyway, just take care of my wife." I felt myself go. Was so easy to let go too. Next thing I know, a faint voice yelling at me to wake yup. I was consciously aware of the voice, but was trying to hard to resist it. Within maybe 10 seconds, after 3 or 4 yells, it felt like I had just been traveling 100mph and slammed to a halt, woke up. Was totally alert and conscious, unlike when you come back from anesthesia. Started laughing. Realized, well, guess I'm stuck here a little while longer. The oral surgeon says "we thought we lost you, and you were talking to extraterrestrials!" Apparently when I thought I was just silently talking to God, I said it out loud. Funny stuff really. Of course, it felt like it had been 4 hours, but nope, only 5 minutes. They hadn't even pulled the damn teeth yet. Unpleasant side effect of getting OD'd... started puking everywhere. Thank goodness they got it cleaned up and pulled the damn teeth. Wasn't going back home without the teeth pulled after dealing with this shitshow!
It's hard to really explain the feeling though, of letting go, of that euphoric acceptance of the end, as described by Tyler. I'm guessing others who've had near death experiences will feel similarly, but with that gas going through my nose, it was about as close to a plane crash as I could get.
Happy to be alive, especially in such exciting times
joe? is that you?
It's entirely possible!
Yes! You can make a difference for better, or for worse, the people you come in contact with on a daily basis. A kind word, is much better than a snarky remark.
What do you do when life has sucked the life out of you?
Everyone is happy, everyone is kind
Feel good music
I talk to toads 🐸 👍🏽
God Bless. -Demitri
God bless you too fren :)
LSD did it for me multiple times but not up close n personal
Damn, I wish I could get my hands on some!
How can you get this stuff in the US? I feel I am ready for it personally but am having serious trouble finding any sort of spiritual psychedelics due to our ignorant laws. Not asking for sources or anything bannable but even a nudge in the right direction will do.
Lol. If we knew each other in real life, I would be exactly "your guy".
Mushrooms grow in LOTS of places, especially the Pacific Northwest.
HOLY SHIT FREN ... That's one hell of a story.
One time I did a hit of poppers, really went mad, like ten breaths. I saw what was like a pie chart, in each segment was video playing of all my memories, except I could follow all the "slices" at the same time, hundreds of them, each one a clear memory, of childhood, parents, early years, everything. My whole life flashed before me and apparently I passed out. Definitely a near death experience.
Poppers?
amyl nitrate - basically a very volatile aromatic solvent. Not big or clever, just headaches
most Oral Surgeons would start an IV and give you a deep sedation/general anesthesia for wisdom teeth. Some use nitrous with it, some don't. I preferred not using nitrous as an adjunct which I came to prefer over the years. Propofol works wonders. Are you sure this wasn't a general dentist playing oral surgeon?
I guess things have changed. 35 years ago I was numbed up locally, they pulled all 4, and I drove myself home.
Whoa you’re lucky!! The USAF pulled all 4 of mine & they used IV valium. Massive pain for 24 hours in Hospital on Demerol. Yikes!!
Me too...all 4 out at the school of dentistry, drove myself home. Had to wait until Dad got home to go fetch my painkillers. Brutal.
Yup, now they recommend full anesthesia. All these funny videos of kids waking up and only being semiconscious, blabbering incoherently afterwards with no memory of acting and talking like a drunk... but that's not what happened with me, I remember everything. The nitrous isn't supposed to knock you out. Just help ease the anxiety, then get your mouth numbed up and yank the suckers. Should have been easy. First time 2 years ago was easy. This time however...
Mine were removed many years ago, and they knocked me out with Sodium Pentothol.
I opted not to go under, not to do anesthesia since the first wisdom tooth I had done 2 years ago was just fine using nitrous. I've always tried to avoid anesthesia whenever possible. Had the idea of going under. Funny thing is the first time I had it done, it was just a general dentist who said she felt comfortable enough to do it. No problems with the nitrous. But this time was an oral surgeon and them craziness happened. It's possible that the assistant just screwed up. I had the thing over my nose running oxygen for what seemed to be way too long. I was listening to music through headphones and the hour long track I was on had gotten at least 2/3 of the way done before they finally came back to get working. Maybe all that oxygen for 35 minutes just didn't react well once the nitrous was kicked on? But it was definitely not supposed to do what it did. The oral surgeon seemed legitimately concerned when I woke up. Texted me throughout the day to keep checking in on how I was doing.
Glad you made it fren!
Interesting post. Thanks for sharing
Welcome back, Patriot. We are blessed by your presence and good company!
thank you for sharing this. I just opened up GAW and this is the first post i opted to open. Normally I don't open Q posts. Idk know enough about Q, it's too cryptic for me.
BUT, I found out that a niece I was once close to died 2 months ago from a gliablastoma. She was 46. My family is pretty healthy except for self abuse induced illnesses. It was such a shock. Brain cancer at 46? I'm guessing she was vaxxed.
I just couldn't believe how hard it hit me. My hope is that she is with my mom (her Nana) who died on her 21st or 22nd bday. Just comforting to hear about the experience of accepting crossing over.
sorry to hear you barfed. no fun there!
God Bless.
Glad it made some kind of positive impact on you fren.
Barfing was hilarious. I was laughing through the whole thing. Poor dental assistants who had to clean it up. I'm glad I was fully cognitive so I remember it all.
yes it did!
barfing and laughing? lucky you didn't aspirate!
Keep sharing-- I suspect you have more "inspiring" stories!
My brother had an experience like that while undergoing a screening colonoscopy. They use mod sedation but something went wrong and when he woke, he said everyone looked very worried and the nurse was crying. He was freaking out, to hear him tell the story, it's a scream, he's very funny anyway.
While we're sharing stories, here's a surfing one haha!
That "letting go" feeling is extraordinary. I had a near drowning experience when I was 18/19 yo. I was surfing the biggest waves I'd been in up until that point in my life. Wasn't experienced enough to properly deal with a wipeout that drove me deep underwater, So deep that everything went black. I was completely disorientated, didn't know which way was up, swimming in the blackness in all directions and unable to find the surface. I was panicking. Then something happened. I felt that same euphoric calm you alluded to. I'd accepted my fate. Moments later my foot touched the bottom. I snapped back to reality. You described it so well, "100mph and slammed to a halt". Finally I knew which way was up. Many kicks and strokes later I broke the surface, coughing and spluttering. I was underwater, it felt like, forever.
Fast forward a few years and I'm surfing WAY larger waves at a sketchy reef break in the South Pacific. I was by myself. The biggest wave I'd ever encountered reared up in front of me. I thought I was in the perfect spot and scratched into it as hard as I could. I didn't quite make the drop, the nose of my board dug in and I went down, then up and over the falls, then DEEP down into the blackness again. This time was different though. This time that feeling of calm came over me immediately. I maintained that calm until eventually I got my bearings and found my way to the surface. No big deal. Thankfully I didn't slam the live coral reef. Anyway, afterwards I bumped into to a bloke who unbeknownst to me had seen the wipeout from the cliff. He thought I had died. Apparently I was under for a LONG time, the second wave of the set actually rolled over me before I came up.
So I guess my story is about perspective and attitude in potentially life threatening situations. Essentially- Try your best to stay calm and, DON'T panic :)
Also, that's an insane story... especially to have two very similar experiences. So when you experienced that feeling of slamming to a halt, did you "hear" a big "snap" sound right before you regained consciousness?
I would probably describe it best as my 'euphoric drifting away consciousness' being jolted back into my body the instant my foot touched that sand deep underwater. That's how I related to your 100 mph - halt analogy. I don't recall hearing anything, I may have though, it happened over 30 years ago.
Bingo. Panic only ever results in bad things
LOL
I remember when I was under narcosis for biopsy. After daughter's birth, had had terrible sleep deprivation first year and total sleep issues for 7 or 8 years already. And then, totally relaxed, every thought and problem gone, I just slept OUT for a day. Oh, what a joy it was! Hubby laughed that soon I'll be creeping around the hospital in hopes to get anesthetized and sleep out once more :D
Glad you're here, deburger.
nice post.
Hahaha nah man you just hit the 4th plateau of disassociation from nitrous oxide. Back when I was doing work in the festival scene, I used to fuck with nitrous oxide (we call em whip its). I used to completely lose touch with reality and one time doing them on mushrooms, i revisited some of the ancient biblical stories and watched them occur in real time.
It's baffling how powerful the minds imagination is. If all reality is but electrical signals and arbitrary interpretions of stimuli, who's to say those hallucinations that followed the same physics snd logical sequences of our baseline reality, aren't as valid or real?
It is called a whippit dream. The mixture must have had too much nitrous. I would not call it an ID. I would call it a wild ride. Mind puts you in a dream that you feel is 15 min long when it's less than a minute. We used to take acid or ecstacy or acid and ecstacy with nitrous when we were younger at raves in S Florida.
I almost died in childbirth before an emergency C-section. The pain started drifting away, and I got tunnel vision...like I was suddenly looking at everything at a distance, not unlike looking through a paper towel roll or something. You're totally right about the letting go. My mother was with me, and I told her I was about to die and that it was SO okay with me. Woke up 45 mins later in the recovery room very shocked and slightly disappointed to be alive, tbh.
u/#Trumphappening
No, they put oxygen masks on planes because if the cabin depressurizes, you don't have enough oxygen partial pressure to breathe and die from anoxia.
Oxygen makes you high? No it doesn't.
LOL, tylers spin fits the mod of the movie well, but let's remember, the lad was a little bonkers.
The oxygen is there cos like, 20 km up, there's really not much of that stuff around. And in most cases, humans need oxygen for sustain living.
I helped design & build some planes for a mission in Iraq. Flew one of them from Milwaukee to Balad Iraq, all the way VFR at 7,000 feet. When we got over the mountains of Kurdish territory we took her up to 17,000 (to avoid ground—>air missiles) and went on O2. I tried not using the Oxygen to see what it was like…not good. Vision started going towards tunnel-vision so I quit messing around.
I was in Balad for a year, had great dining facilities.
Exciting story. What happened? Did you make it back?
jks.
Is you currently located in Norway? What's with the flag?
In enough concentrations it makes you sleepy. The air we breathe has a so.ewhat low concentration of oxygen and is mixed with other gasses. In a more pure form, the effects are different than normal air.
As I understand it, 100% oxygen at sea level pressure is fatal. There can be too much of a good thing. Deep diving gas mixtures are nearly entirely helium, because the oxygen fraction has to be within the safety limit for the depth pressure of operation.
It doesn't make you sleepy, 100% oxygen keeps you awake and alert. This is why military aircraft have a oxygen regulator so the pilot can keep his concentration in times of high stress levels. Its also very good for hangovers.
Thanks for that.
Try hyperventilating. It sure isn't the nitrogen.
I used 100% oxygen lots of times from the aircraft I serviced when in the military, it does not get you high. Its very good for hangovers though, which is why me and lots of others used it.