6 Answers

  1. I do not know what deep fainting means. I once fell into a normal one and my feelings were different from those that have already been written. So unpleasant that the subsequent pre-fainting states I try in every possible way not to bring to the fainting itself.

    It should be said that I have low blood pressure, so fainting is a holiday that is always with me. No warm baths, no baths, no fasting.

    I fainted for the first time when I was a teenager. My cousin gave me a great diet, but the trouble was, I didn't like everything about it. And in the heat, without eating anything, I went to the store and standing at the counter just lost my sight. She went limp and sat down – although there was nowhere to sit down. I woke up from the fact that people nearby were saying something to me, they gave me validol. Vision began to return. The first time was so scary that I thought it was death. And in principle, it seems so to me every time – so I always desperately cling to the opportunity to stay conscious.

    After this time, there were still a lot of pre-fainting states, and all of them were in approximately the same scenario:

    • my head starts to feel dizzy and slightly nauseous
    • my eyes are blurry
    • it's getting hot and stuffy it seems only water will save you
    • then complete loss of vision
    • hearing as if under water

    I always try to sit down – wherever I am, or better yet, lie down if I have time. Sometimes it helps, but more often it doesn't. In the bathroom, I pour super cold water over myself.

    I agree about the consequences of fainting – then you walk like a boiled egg all day and want to sleep. They say chocolate really helps to restore strength – but I don't like it, so I just drink coffee or eat it through force.

  2. If deep fainting is understood as loss of consciousness, then first the condition worsens, sometimes quite briefly, then “awakening”, the sensations of which, I think, are comparable to spinning around on an office chair with a working alarm clock tied to your head. Curiously, during this time, you can even understand that you just fainted, although there is a ringing in your head, and there is no clear picture in front of your eyes. Perhaps others have it differently

  3. I don't know if it's deep or not, but I've fainted many times. In general, at first it becomes difficult to breathe, the head seems to squeeze and black ripples with white noise appear before your eyes, your legs become wobbly and you fall 🙂

  4. At first I always feel a little dizzy, then everything starts to blur in my eyes. And now I'm watching some kind of dream, the moment of falling is not remembered(as well as falling asleep), and then thoughts like “What's going on?”, “I did something before, why am I sleeping?” start to appear. And during this time, consciousness begins to “awaken”.”At the same time, when the first thought appears with a suspicion that something is wrong, a sense of speed begins to appear(this can be the beginning of a fall, the beginning of a ride, etc.) and a sound. As you realize that you are not sleeping, the speed begins to increase, the sound increases, and in the body itself there is a heaviness, as if a huge stone slab has been placed on you, which also begins to push harder and harder. And so it goes on until it reaches its peak, after which you wake up, and people are around you ☺ ️

    For me personally, this is always the case, and I even remember what I “dreamed”about

  5. In a state of deep fainting, nothing is felt, because consciousness is completely turned off. Another thing is the feeling a few seconds before fainting. Everyone feels it differently. I know the feeling of darkening of the eyes and pressure on the head. After you wake up, you see yourself on the floor in a supine position, and it is impossible to get up immediately without assistance. Within a few hours after fainting, a severe headache is felt.

  6. In short, we once went by train to the Crimea, about seven years ago. On a hike on the eighth of March. And I woke up in the morning with such a strange feeling, like I want to lie down. Okay. I went to the miracle toilet. And he's so smelly, you know. I washed my face and then woke up sitting on a bucket. Look how lucky I am. One corner of the toilet is a sink, the second is an empty piss – soaked floor where the door opens, the third is a smelly toilet, and the fourth is an overturned bucket for God knows what. So sitting on this bucket, I woke up. I'm a little shaken up. Well, I think, okay, I need to brush my teeth. I get up, pick up the pasta, close my eyes, open my eyes , and sit on the bucket again. This convinced me that in the moments before you faint, you are still in a state of semi-consciousness, which allows you to choose where to fall, even though you don't remember it later. In short, I experienced two fainting spells in just a few minutes. In complete shock from the situation, I decided not to brush my teeth out of harm's way. I opened the door and went into the compartment. I asked my husband if I'd been there for a long time, otherwise I might have passed out for half an hour. He said no. Well, that's nice. I lay down until I arrived, and then went on a hike. Well, nothing, it was normal. And since then it hasn't happened again, thank God.

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