tinyfox
Student
- Nov 26, 2025
- 142
I've been thinking more and more about the method of drowning while unconscious.
I'm working out a plan where I go to a secluded body of water, swim out to deep water, and—while holding onto an inflatable mattress or something similar—take benzodiazepine tranquilizers and alcohol. Then I'll lie there with my head in the water, and in theory, I should lose consciousness and drown.
I've come across cases where people drowned even in their own bathtubs without drugs, just from alcohol.
If, in my case, I can lose consciousness and drown without regaining it, it will be a quick and painless death. However, I can't find any information on whether prescription drugs and alcohol would be enough to cause drowning without regaining consciousness.
As for the method itself, if you manage to lose consciousness underwater and no one rescues you, you'll die of asphyxiation within 6 minutes of starting to swallow water anyway.
Can anyone tell me if a combination of prescription drugs (Benz) and alcohol is enough for this method?
I'm working out a plan where I go to a secluded body of water, swim out to deep water, and—while holding onto an inflatable mattress or something similar—take benzodiazepine tranquilizers and alcohol. Then I'll lie there with my head in the water, and in theory, I should lose consciousness and drown.
I've come across cases where people drowned even in their own bathtubs without drugs, just from alcohol.
If, in my case, I can lose consciousness and drown without regaining it, it will be a quick and painless death. However, I can't find any information on whether prescription drugs and alcohol would be enough to cause drowning without regaining consciousness.
As for the method itself, if you manage to lose consciousness underwater and no one rescues you, you'll die of asphyxiation within 6 minutes of starting to swallow water anyway.
Can anyone tell me if a combination of prescription drugs (Benz) and alcohol is enough for this method?