It depends totally on the specific techniques used and how long the choke is being applied. Choking to unconsciousness is always dangerous. Choking against a windpipe is always dangerous. A proper blood choke is relatively safe so long as the recipient has no underlying health issues and no drugs are involved. Things like poppers or viagra increase the danger tremendously. Once you take a choke to the "buzz" state, it should be released immediately. Repeated chokes to that state or beyond can cause headaches and flu like symptoms the following day. But if you're referring to a competitive submission match as opposed to a fetish encounter, if you tap out as soon as you feel you can not escape from the choke, the risk is quite minimal.
Technically, once. Choking someone is always dangerous. I did several videos on it on my channel. You can rupture an artery, induce cardiac arrest, cause and rupture an aneurysm, cause a stroke, and inside respiratory arrest. While risk goes up each time you do it it shouldn't be assumed the level of risk is ever low or even moderate. There are no studies on repeated choking as the ethics would be atrocious and most of what we do know comes from martial arts (where chokes are rarely held long or hard), spousal abuse (where choking is done aggressively without technique, or when someone dies from autoerotic asphyxiation. There has been a demographic study of young girls in college which relies almost entirely on subjective reporting and another which was conducted on reddit.
Point is we really just don't know and everyone is different and you may find yourself in a situation where you have someone who doesn't wake up on the first time, are you prepared to deal with that? Are you prepared to call 911 and do cpr and face the consequences. Not trying to kink shame, I choke people out, but this is the reality of this kink and you should be aware of the very real risk that comes with it.
TxWrestle (48 )
2024-09-21 16:00It depends totally on the specific techniques used and how long the choke is being applied. Choking to unconsciousness is always dangerous. Choking against a windpipe is always dangerous. A proper blood choke is relatively safe so long as the recipient has no underlying health issues and no drugs are involved. Things like poppers or viagra increase the danger tremendously. Once you take a choke to the "buzz" state, it should be released immediately. Repeated chokes to that state or beyond can cause headaches and flu like symptoms the following day. But if you're referring to a competitive submission match as opposed to a fetish encounter, if you tap out as soon as you feel you can not escape from the choke, the risk is quite minimal.
ChrisWrestling (43 )
2024-09-21 07:27Technically, once. Choking someone is always dangerous. I did several videos on it on my channel. You can rupture an artery, induce cardiac arrest, cause and rupture an aneurysm, cause a stroke, and inside respiratory arrest. While risk goes up each time you do it it shouldn't be assumed the level of risk is ever low or even moderate. There are no studies on repeated choking as the ethics would be atrocious and most of what we do know comes from martial arts (where chokes are rarely held long or hard), spousal abuse (where choking is done aggressively without technique, or when someone dies from autoerotic asphyxiation. There has been a demographic study of young girls in college which relies almost entirely on subjective reporting and another which was conducted on reddit.
Point is we really just don't know and everyone is different and you may find yourself in a situation where you have someone who doesn't wake up on the first time, are you prepared to deal with that? Are you prepared to call 911 and do cpr and face the consequences. Not trying to kink shame, I choke people out, but this is the reality of this kink and you should be aware of the very real risk that comes with it.
Tapmeout3920 (3)
2024-09-20 18:04Just curious what is the most times you can be put in a chokehold before it may become dangerous per match.