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EndingItAll

EndingItAll

Member
Oct 13, 2024
6
6 stories, concrete sidewalk/road. Would that be too risky for this jump height? Unfortunately I do not have access to higher buildings.
 
Defenestrator

Defenestrator

Experienced
Jan 17, 2020
284
Honestly, if you do this make sure you leap head first as much as possible - the chance of surviving with horrific injuries is unfortunately a possibility when it comes to jumping.

I'd also argue against it off a building onto a pathway as you could land on someone.
 
locked*n*loaded

locked*n*loaded

Archangel
Apr 15, 2022
8,947
Doubt that's high enough. Just saying the probability of death from that height isn't great. Sure, you could die from that height. If jumping, I would need more assurance than "coulds" or "mights".
 
LostLily

LostLily

Why do I exist?
Nov 18, 2024
755
Honestly, if you do this make sure you leap head first as much as possible - the chance of surviving with horrific injuries is unfortunately a possibility when it comes to jumping.

I'd also argue against it off a building onto a pathway as you could land on someone.
Rats, I'm the 6th floor. The windows can't be open anyway because I'm on the psych ward
 
W

weallhaveourghosts

Student
Mar 2, 2025
121
6 stories, concrete sidewalk/road. Would that be too risky for this jump height? Unfortunately I do not have access to higher buildings.
6 stories is what I'm planning. According to Claude there's a lot of factors but the main one seems to be landing position. Feet first has more chance of survival. Head or back less so. Here's what Claude says exactly

For falls from a 6-story building (approximately 60-72 feet) onto concrete, landing head or back-first would almost certainly result in:
  • Catastrophic traumatic brain injury
  • Cervical spine fractures with high likelihood of cord transection
  • Massive thoracic trauma with multiple rib fractures penetrating vital organs
  • Immediate or very rapid death at the scene
While medical literature doesn't provide precise survival percentages for head-first falls from this specific height, the combination of these factors makes survival extremely unlikely, with mortality rates approaching 95-100% based on the mechanics of impact and documented injury patterns.


Claude can make mistakes.
Please double-check responses.
 
Linda

Linda

Member
Jul 30, 2020
2,041
Not advisable. It's not high enough. You might die, but there is a real risk you could end up alive but badly injured.
 
moonflow3r

moonflow3r

Knocking on heaven’s door
Oct 6, 2023
228
Technically yes
 
bankai

bankai

Enlightened
Mar 16, 2025
1,829
Here's the straight facts. Falling is extremely unpredictable. A variety of factors such as wind, vegetation can come into play and cushion your fall. It's why I won't try it. I'll give you one more possible Horror Story that I've been playing through my mind. There are many places where if you jump and fall, people won't even go to look for you because it's not worth the manpower or resources or risk.Now imagine. You were lying at the bottom with severe injuries, but you weren't killed.A deep gorge, perhaps? So you get the idea. In this situation, you will stay alive for days. Think about that. Think about it. Terrible pain, no medication, no treatment. Starving, unable to sleep because of the pain. Yeah. To be able to go painlessly is a blessing. Painlessly and quick.
 
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