laserdisc10
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2011
- Messages
- 1,478
- Reaction score
- 87
I did find this example, though, of self-impalement being carefully planned:
An 80-year-old man with pancreatic adenocarcinoma and depression was found with his head impaled on a bolt that had been screwed into a hole that had been drilled in the floor of a shed at his home address. Once the bolt was in place the decedent had winched a heavy weight above it, using a pulley that he had attached to the metal roof frame, and the front fork of a bicycle frame. The latter had been bolted to a nearby work bench as a winching device. After the weight had been positioned, he had placed his head over the bolt and cut the rope with a kitchen knife. The impact of the falling weight had forced his head onto the bolt with penetration of the cranial cavity. The complexity of the design of the suicide apparatus is exceedingly rare in our experience and the time taken to set up the device indicated that there had been a considerable degree of premeditation. The finding of complex apparatus at a death scene may provide useful information in ascertaining the manner of death and also in providing some indication as to the decedent's level of determination to succeed.
http://www.researchgate.net/publication/225295710_Head_impalement_-_An_unusual_form_of_suicide
I think part in bold is what helps to negate Jenny's death as a suicide - if she was bent on success, she would not be tying a sheet around her head, as that significantly reduces her chances.
Ausgirl, I saw the example of the 80 year old's suicide when I was searching. Talk about a determined man! There was another, not sure if it was true or supposed to be a joke. About a German man who demonstrated typical thoroughness or something is what it said. Claimed he stood on a bridge, a hangman's noose around his neck. The water below was shallow (neck brake). Before jumping to his death, it said he swallowed poison then shot himself in the head, then jumped
Anyway, the reason I posted the example above was because it involved someone attempting to kill themselves via their claimed deepest fear, i.e., obsessive fear of being speared, yet the person tried to impale themselves upon a tree stump
Something about it tickled a memory of something else I'd heard or read about someone seeking out the death or injury they'd always feared most, but I can't remember it just yet
Jenny's mother and others I think, said Jenny was afraid of 'sharp' things - was afraid of injections, for instance, same as the person above who, despite a lifelong fear of impalement nevertheless attempted to die via impalement on a tree stump
In trying to look at Jenny's death from all angles, it seemed the above example was possibly something to at least consider