"Once the brain realizes the body has been injured, and it could be life threatening, it goes into survival mode" Why not creative mode instead? So the body literally turns invincible
I was shot in Afghanistan in 2010 while serving food to the kids. Felt like someone punched me on my back initially, then I ran really fast to take a cover and had to indulge in gunfight with the militants. After like 20 minutes the rescuers arrived, then I realized that I had been shot, the pain level went from 3/10 to 8/10. But that only lasted for a few seconds as I got unconscious. That part of the muscle was sore for 2 weeks and after 4 months I was declared "fit for duty." I also know guys who were shot in the head and survived, and they told me that the pain was lesser than a headache.
@@user-b-n7x Initially, hurt a little. During the gun fight I almost completely forgot that I got shot. But the pain went terrible as I realized it was like someone really stabbed me on my back.
I've been shot before, I was hit in a firefight betwen some security officers in a gas station and robbers. I was hit by 2 9mm to the legs. The impact felt like a weak punch, didnt feel anything imediately after that and figured I was really shot only a few minutes later, I even sprinted away no problem, then I ducked behind a car, when I sat on the ground I could feel some burning and numbness/pulsing in my leg and saw the blood in my pants. The video is right though, recovery is terrible and takes long even if it didnt hit any bone, you will always feel the area you were shot a bit differently because the bullet tore through your muscles, and my case was a best case scenario. Dont get shot kids...
“Most people say they didn’t even feel the pain at first they only noticed when they look at the blood” Tom (Tom and jerry): *is walking on air and doesn’t fall till he looks down*
thats how it was when i crashed by bicycle as a youngling. I had landed on my face first and dragged it along the asphault on the ground about 5 feet and ripping my lower lip in 2 floppy sides. i didnt feel any pain until i looked down and saw all the blood dripping out of my face onto the ground.
Updated comment below. My daughter said it felt like a bee sting. The bullet severed a nerve and arteries, so we saw blood immediately soak through her shirt. She was only 10. She stayed calm but was losing a lot of blood so she began to come in and out of consciousness, but her eyes never closed. It was terrifying! She was paralyzed on her right upper side until they repaired her nerve, which took 6 hours. She's 12 now and doing better. She has little feeling in her right arm, has a gnarly scar from her neck to her wrist, but she does have use of her right hand and arm. I just read the comments. It was August of 2020, we had gone to the gun range that day and later that evening I asked my husband if he could site in my red dot as it was off, my daughter was in the bathroom next next to our bedroom, my husband was sitting on the bed and I was at the end of the bed, a few minutes after handing him my gun a Ruger security 9, I hear a pop, and my ears were ringing i looked at him in shock, and he says, "I didn't even pull the trigger!" We run out of the bedroom to make sure everyone was ok, and my daughter comes out of the bathroom and asks what that was? She didn't even realize she had been shot. Blood soaks through her shirt immediately as a major artery and nerve were hit. I called 911 and the dispatcher tells me to locate the wound, I take my daughter's shirt off and lay her on the ground, we put her feet on a chair and I hold her shirt on her bullet wound, she looked at me with glossed over eyes and asked me why she keeps falling asleep, her eyes never closed, which scared me horribly! She was talking to her dad who died in 2015, she said things like "I don't want to stay daddy, I want my mama." Ohmg this is hard! Why do I feel like i need to explain myself to strangers?! Im done. The police took the gun, they took our stories, and my daughter was in the trauma center alone until I was cleared! They took my husband to the police station, but cleared him that night. A gun specialist determined there was a misfire. However this could have been avoided had we checked the clip AND the chamber. He is military trained, he would constantly tell me to clear my chamber. And this happened. My daughter had to have 14 blood transfusions, had to have her heart shocked back into rhythm, and had a wound vac, and intense physical therapy. They stimulated her nerves with light shock therapy, and the pain as her nerve grew back was HORRIBLE! Thankfully though the gun had range bullets and not self defense bullets! She probably wouldn't be with us today. That's the story of my comment. I'm not sure why anyone would make that up. And I'm not sure why I felt like I needed to justify myself to strangers, it struck me in a strange way. Thinking about that night isn't something I do very often, not to mention talk about it. I didn't think there would be people who said I was lying. I guess it was so traumatic, I can't see anyone making that up about their own kid.
I can tell you it is. I had pretty much the same, but worse in form of snapping my shinbone in a motorcycle accident. Shattered the top of the bone even worse, there was 8 big chunks going all over the place and a lot of small shrapnell that was just scooped out and they put some filler back in.
it is crazy, a couple buddies have told me stories of getting hit and someone else saying "Hey, you were hit are you ok?" and they are completely fine.
yea it’s fax in sports u see it all the time guys get hurt but play the whole rest of the game then find out they’ll be missing the next week after bc once the adrenaline from the game is over the injury’s affect is shown
My brother, who was took a bullet three times, reported that he didn't know at first that he was hit, but when he was grazed on the neck he said it was excruciating. Being grazed hurt more than being directly hit according to him, RIP this is actually the 8 year anniversity of his passing.
Perhaps. The video is wrong saying that once shock wears off the body begins damage control. Shock is literally the first and arguably most important damage control.
6:12 Yes, it is much easier to survive a headshot if the entire round is jammed into the skull. It would be significantly more painful if the round was actually fired.
“Pistol with a small caliber bullet” *proceeds to show a guy shooting a desert eagle, a handgun that fires the highest caliber pistol cartridge on the civilian market
Actually, it makes perfect sense why gunshot wounds do not hurt that much. Because while a searing hot bullet is piercing through your flesh, it does it so quickly that you do not notice it. By the way, this fact is actually quite horrifying to me, because you don't immediately notice the damage, even though it is extremely damaging.
I didnt feel it going through my body at all. However after a couple of minutes a violating suffocating agony became the center of my existence. You cant consiously process all of the pain at first, your brain has never recieved so much pain information at once before. Oh, but it learns quick. And it starts to be able to process more and more hurt. Its like a volume mixer too, mixing other awful sensations with the ever increasing pain, like the stench of cordage and blood, it hurt "that much" actually more. It cant be described. Forgive me for posting my disagreement, I am not trying to ridicule your comment. What you said might be true for some, but not all gunshot survivors.
Funny but true story, a guy was shot but conscious and alert and when they were rushing him to the operating room they asked as they always do, "Are you allergic to anything?" (Again nurses and doctors were prepping him for surgery very quickly, running around and he said he was but asked them all to listen to him carefully which they did.) And when they asked again what he was allergic to he smiled and said, "Bullets." :) They all started laughing, appreciated his humor the operation was a success and he went on to make a full recovery. True story I read it a while back.
One of my great-grand-fathers was shot in the lower hip during World War One. It severed one important nerve. He survived, but with constant pain until his death in the 70's. The family said the pain gave him a constant very bad mood, whereas he'd been gently mannered before that.
I survived a gunshot to my stomach when I was 17 years old. 9mm hit me just below my belly button and a little to the left. This video is very accurate. No pain at first, only pressure and numbness, the bullet went clean through me so I had an entrance and exit wound. I was not sure what happened at first and then my friend came up to me and was asking if I was ok and I looked down and saw all red and lifted up my shirt and saw the hole. The second I saw the hole the worst pain I have ever felt in my life took me over and I collapsed to the ground screaming. I felt insane pressure and a sharp burning pain in my stomach and through to my back and this pain only got worse with time. The pain I felt I was insane. I still have no idea how I am alive.
In Kosovo I was hit just above the knee by a 7.62 round and it shattered my bone. I remember the impact, not being able to walk but no pain. It felt like being hit in the leg, with a bat, so it swung me around to land on my back, but no pain. They eventually had to amputate my leg. I just about bled to d e a th so I’m thankful for a tourniquet, I then lost consciousness, I do remember the intense burning. Just before I blacked out. Even for a while I was conscious but don’t remember that I was telling jokes. Recovery was no problem. They had my meds dialed in well. It took a while for phantom pain to kick in. Yes PTSD is an issue but that’s more attributed to the ethnic cleansing I saw.
I can tell you from personal experience how it feels like. Been shot on two different occasions, one in my hand and one in my leg. Will answer any questions about my experience. When I got shot in my leg, it felt like someone punched me right in the calf, then burning sensation. Adrenaline kicked in and I could still walk around with my leg spurting blood out; which was a weird sight. The bullet (small caliber, I'm guessing a .22 short or something) lodged itself in my calf muscle where it is still there to this day. I don't really feel it unless if the weather changes or something then it aches. After the adrenaline wears off, it's like what you'd expect. You're in a fair amount of pain but nothing too bad. When shot in my hand it felt like it was aching and burning as well as sickness when you break a bone and soon after felt a burning throbbing pain. Of course I had surgery soon after to repair a few ligaments and broken bones so I didn't get to suffer that long. Before you ask why didn't the doctor take it out. I asked him that to which he responded it would be more damage filleting my calf in half than just leaving it in there. I asked about lead poisoning, he mentioned that my body would create a lining around the bullet or something.
@@malachid3107 given from my past experiences, I'd say adrenaline would still be in effect i.e. fight or flight. Then again it really matters where you got shot as well as calibers etc. I'm sure a gutshot wound would be a painful way to go vs a gunshot that tears a major artery where you bleed out in minutes. For me, it took around 5-10 minutes for the adrenaline to wear off.
@@codybrown4855while there are a myriad of different slugs out there, lead is still a major projectile since it doesn't score or damage the barrel. However, when I got shot in the leg it was around 20 years ago in a bad area of Indianapolis.
My older brother was just shot in the jaw a month ago. Crazy to think what that experience was like and how PTSD is going to have a huge impact on his life forever now. Everyone be safe out there love y’all
shot in THE JAW?! dafuq?! so like half of his teeth are out or what? fck, what a horrible painful injury that has to be! geus he needed to eat trough a straw for who knows how many months
Hi, in July of this year I was shot in the calf with a 9mm from a Beretta . At first all I felt was pure numbness in my leg. I could tell something was wrong, but I felt no pain. I looked down and saw a hole in my pant leg, lifted and it up and then started spraying blood everywhere. I was able to walk away from the situation and kept a cool head while telling my shooting buddies I got hit. It wasn’t in it about 2 hours later when I was in the hospital that I felt any pain. My pain came in the form of extreme cramps and a pulsating sensation, like every time my heart pumped, so did my leg. The craziest part is due to a medical condition, I have little to no feeling in my legs, which explains why I never got that burning sensation. It also took me about a month on a cane before I was able to walk on my own again. Since then I have been living with PTSD and the occasional leg cramp. The doctors never took the bullet out of me, so I set off metal detectors, can’t get MRIs, etc. Overall I would rate the experience a 2/10. Would not recommend.
@@DC-YumpyYotemeal_4026 When a bullet is in a part of body that doesn’t have any vital parts, it isn’t particularly necessary to remove it. If it is, it can obviously become a serious problem in the future and that is when they decide to take it out. Surgery is not something easy, there is a good reason surgeons get paid a lot. 1 mistake can make the situation much worse. For example, the bullet in the leg might be an inconvenience, but one wrong cut can leave you crippled.
It depends on the person and what were you doing when you got shot. I was running during a civil war, I was faced by 4 attackers with AK47. I turned around and continued running. A bullet hit the asphalt and bounced backward entering my foot from the top and getting out of ankle (exploded at the ankle exit). I knew I was shot, but I continued to run (adrenaline very high by now) about 200 yards. found a safe place away from them and stayed there. It was a house. Then the pain started, but I remember did not feel much, I just wrapped towels around it and sat down. Then again I have a very high tolerance for pain. I bled for 6 hours, but I was drinking water and sugar 🙂 which I think saved my life.
Bro, thankfully you are alive. But never, NEVER, drink or eat something after suffering a wound that can potentially cause blood loss. Even if the blood is not visible, it can be happening inside of your body (more common in a car crash or a fall). There are two reasons for not drinking water or ingesting something in these situations: 1) Water and foods that have sugar, salt, minerals, proteins, fat (so, everything you can possibly ingest) increases your blood pressure, wich means that you will loose blood quicker and in greater ammounts. 2) If you need surgery, they will give you anesthesia, and there is a big possibility that you throw up the contents of your stomach wihle you are sedated, and choke on them. Actually, all surgeries (emergency or elective) requires no food or drinks at least 12 hours due to that. If im not wrong, the drugs used in sedation induces the vomit impulse. Of course, physicians can detect if you vomited, but it will reach your lungs before they realize. That beign said, stay strong my friend. I hope the war is over and you are recovering well!
My husband was shot 3 times. (At work. In a drive by that was intended for some one else) Air lifted to the trauma unit. Months in a coma. Endless complications and infections. Learned to breathe again basically. Learned to walk again. Is permanent disabled. But a warrior and a champion. He agreed with many of these points. One thing for sure ....... a gunshot doesnt affect a single person. It affects a family. It changes countless lives forever.
@@maram242-s thank u so much. Honestly it's kindness from people like yourself that have gotten us through our darkest days. Didn't have to be people we knew. The kindness meant and means so much❤ there's so much more to our story. But he's here. I didn't have to explain to our babies why daddy's not coming home ever. And despite the challenges (of where there are many) at the end of the day that's all that matters
Been shot up my jaw 2 years ago with a .40, it surprised me at how cliche it felt. Had my eyes closed at the time of the shot, but I still saw a set of white upward-facing muzzle flashes (one for each eye?) Then my vision turned everything into greyscale. Don’t really recall any pain, and the ringing was temporary, no more than a minute. Was able to stagger to the street when a passerby picked me up. Stayed conscious for about 10 minutes, remember being wheelchaired into the front door of a hospital but then started black out after that. Woke up about a day later not knowing what happened until I tried to speak to my dad who was with me in the OR
One year ago I got shot from my shoulder to my chest and through my bicep, no organs were hurt, and it was shocking cuz i didn’t feel anything, I noticed the shot almost one block away (I was running) and as the video says, I entered into survival mode, I had lack of breath, intense dizziness and dry mouth, pain came 10 minutes later,
Hardly believable, how would the bullet still be in his chin, they would have had to remove it right? Maybe I don't know something, but when someone is shot, the main goal is to extract the bullet from the wound, not leave it in the body where it can cause even more damage.
@@timebandit07 my grandpa wast fataly harmed he just didnt want it to be removed and his skin grew over it it sounds insane but it is true i mean it was like 50 years ago and my grandpa told thath so dont blame me i wasnt there
Whenever i got shot in my dreams in the past, it felt exactly the same as you described for some reason. I’ve never been shot and I’ve never read or heard what it feels like being shot.
I just got shot in my dreams and this video was in my recommend when i wokeup? I also felt the same pain. But i think its just your brain connecting to what was said. This is nuts to think about, technology reading my dreams.
I was stabbed 5 times when I was 16 wrong place at the wrong time. Honestly I felt nothing and only knew I was stabbed once I saw blood. I walked almost 2 miles before I got home and was sent to the Hospital. I honestly felt more pain in the hospital than anything.
4:27 I love how they're talking about a smaller caliber on a handgun bullet but then showing a Desert Eagle next to a rifle with a noticeably smaller barrel.
I heard getting gut shot is the worst possible pain, but thankfully never found out for myself. I love your shows. They remind me of when my girls were young and I told them every day before school: "Learn something new today!" Thanks for all the knowledge~
It is I was shot in my stomach with a Glock 40, it left me partially paralyzed. When the incident happened I couldn’t hear anything but a loud ringing noise,my leg IMMEDIATELY got stiff as a board and I couldn’t move. I had to get multiple surgeries the doctors said I’m lucky to be alive. Years later I have severe nerve pain because the bullet went thru my body hitting multiple organs and damaging my L2 vertebrae. It left me with PTSD and extreme anxiety. In no way am I asking for sympathy. I just crossed ur comment and thought I would share my experience and what I’ve been thru getting shot.
Happened to me with 380. The bullet entry small wound surgery to get the 7 pieces out left me with a huge long pink scar from right below belt line halfway up stomach
I love the cute animation and the people screaming with the wiggling uvulas. I also learned something new, most gunshots initially don't hurt. I never knew that.
I was shot last year with a 7.62 it felt like someone poured molten metal in my veins, I was shot in the upper thigh and felt pain all the way to my toes
@Peso Bandzz thank you, I’ve gon through rehabilitation and pain management and I’m walking normal again , just have a huge scar. This was one of the reasons I left Philadelphia
I know 2 people that have been shot. My buddy was shot 3 times in NC and he said he didn’t even notice until afterwards and he said his chest got hot and wet. The other person I know got into a fight and the guy shot him 6 times and he didn’t panic even talking to EMS casually until he got to the hospital for surgery
“The burning sensation is the brain realizing it’s been shot” or just the fact that the metal inside you is as hot as every descriptor you’ve said since it’s literally breaking the sound barrier and air friction
The burning sensation is not mainly caused by bullet temperature but the hemorrhaging and contusion of the cavity created by the bullet. The repeated stinging or sledgehammer sensation is the actual heart beat pressure. Its the same if you hit your finger with hammer.
Just a FYI, the CDCs numbers on gun deaths includes suicide, which account for the vast majority of deaths involving a firearm. Another thing to note is that the caliber of bullets from handguns is usually higher that that of rifles. Rifles often use smaller caliber bullets, that are longer and heavier with more gunpowder behind them, resulting in higher speeds and energy behind them. It's this higher speed that makes rifle rounds so much more dangerous than pistol rounds
@@koldhearted1 The most common rifle caliber in the US is 5.56, far smaller in diameter than a 9mm or .45 pistol round. Even larger rifle calibers like .308 are still smaller in diameter than a 9mm. The thing that makes rifles more deadly is the velocity. The impact of a round moving faster than about 2,200fps stretches the flesh around the impact further than it can recover from. This causes tearing damage all around the impact. Pistol calibers don't move fast enough to do this, so they only damage the flesh the bullet actually touches.
@@koldhearted1 My experience is 2 handguns (40S&W & 9mm), an AR-15 in 5.56 and an AR-10 in .308 with a spare upper in 12GA, and both ARs I built from part kits with 80% lowers. I use hand loaded cartridges for the .308. What experience do you have?
I thought pistols were more dangerous because of the shrapnel and bone fragments. But now that I think about it it makes sense that a rifle round would be more dangerous on account of the unplugged hole left behind and the flesh tear
@@databaca3859 look up 5.56 ballistic gel tests on UA-cam and compare that to tests with 9mm. Or if you like, watermelon is much more entertaining, and dramatic
I was shot in the foot by an "unloaded" .22 pistol when I was a teen. My shoes were off and I was wearing socks. I didn't feel it but freaked out when I saw a smoking black hole in my sock. The bullet did a lot of damage to the bones in the foot that never properly healed (I'm 76 now). The pain of being shot was minimal but a week later, when the doctor removed the gauze stuffed in the hole through my foot, the tearing of muscle and dried blood had me begging for him to stop. In the Marines, I had a stint in Bethesda Naval Hospital (now Walter Reed) for a different injury. I saw many Vietnam injuries where the recovery was far worse than the actual injury. I was surprised how accurate this video actually was.
I remember when my homie got shot in the forearm with a 9mm. He said he felt like his whole arm was set on fire. I remember watching him jump up and down and seeing his arm just swinging freely like it was fake. He eventually passed out and we had to drive him to the hospital. Another friend who was with us got hit in the stomach and litteraly just sat on the ground pressing his hand to the wound didn't make a sound the whole drive to the hospital he was just staring out the window in silence. It was surreal seeing both of them have completely different reactions. I remember everything happened so fast by the time I got up from the ground and saw the sidewalk covered in blood I litteraly felt like I could jump and just fly away it's like my mind was trying to trick me into thinking it was all a dream. Yea though both of them said the recovery was the most painful part.
Sounds like you see a lot of violence in your life. I’m sorry man. Glad both your friends are above ground still, I hope anyways. Stay safe out there man and keep your head on a swivel. God speed to you.
There’s a video around of police interrogating a kid who was acting kind of weird. It took them quite awhile before they finally figured out he had a bullet in his head. It’s pretty crazy.
I remember. It was awful! But, for educational purposes, he did say that his head hurt, but he seemed to mostly be having trouble with his feet. He kept lifting his feet up, complaining that his feet were cold and that they hurt a lot.
My uncle was a medic during the Vietnam war. He was shot in the chest by a shotgun, but survived. He has nasty scars from the wound, but that’s not the point of my text. He told me lots of stories of what he witnessed during his tour before he was wounded. One of the incredible ones was a young soldier was hopping down a path to the rear for medical help on one leg. After getting the other leg blown off. It’s amazing what the human body can do when it’s full of adrenaline. Unbelievable how fragile, and robust our bodies actually are. I think a lot has to do with one’s own mindset. Some guys after losing a leg would just lay and yell for help, and others ( like the before mentioned soldier) would help themselves as much as possible. Our will to live is incredible! When I got hit in the wrist I didn’t know it until it was pointed out to me later. My wrist was sore, but I thought I’d just jammed or twisted it. I don’t know when it happened or what caused it either. Bullet, bounding Betty, or shrapnel? I’ve no clue. Have a decent scar though from it. I think the surgeons made it larger then whatever made the wound. It went clean through my wrist.
@@seanyoung4904 Like a .44 magnum? A .50 bullet is .5” in diameter, regardless if it was fired from a M2 or Desert Eagle. Stop calling “battle rifles” “assault rifles”, only the StG 44 is called anything close to assault rifle (StG means Sturmgewehr, Storm Weapon).
I have been shot twice, once in the hand and once in the calf. It hurt both times and it hurt immediately. I think the shot to the hand hurt the worst, but I had no treatment for that one for a couple of days and ended up losing my trigger finger.
You said you have been shot in the calf which is worse being shot in tha same area or getting cramp in the same muscle area ??? describe to me how painful the burning sensation in both injuries that oyu have sufferd from getting shot ?? Lastley is the pain that worse or it can be handled without a medecation ??
@@bdwej2068 Kind of cool questions! For me a cramp in my calf is more debilitating than getting shot in the calf was, the tourniquet is way worse than both of those put together though, as far as pain is concerned. I had third degree burns over 22% of my body, that hurt bad and is the only pain I have ever suffered that I am not sure I could have handled without drugs. Getting shot you can just grit your teeth and get through it most times, I think.
Had a friend who worked at fast food. Couple of guys(3) rob the place and tell everyone to get in the back. I think it was 5 people in total including him. except him sense he knew where all the money was kept. After they took it, they shot him in the chest. But managed to acoid all the important bits. He said it didnt feel anything as he got shot. Its something so instant it takes time to register what just happeend. After they ran, and the girls in the back ran towards him. He said thsts when it stsrted to kick in and was like just burning sensation for 10 min until the parameds arrived
I didn’t feel it until they took the tourniquet off at the hospital. Then once the blood returned to my leg it started to hurt. It was only a day and I was hobbling around with a cane and within a week I was walking with a slight limp. It really wasn’t that bad. One EMT asked me if I’d ever been shot before because she said I was really calm as she was checking my vitals on the way to the hospital. I’m sure a leg is way different from being hit in the torso.
Pain without love pain I can’t get enough Pain I like it rough cause I rather feel Pain than nothing at all Pain without love Pain I can’t get enough Pain I like it rough cause I rather feel Pain than nothing at all
@@idhantjoshi7110 It's a poem he wrote wanna hear one of mine ? You're sick of feeling numb, You're not the only one, I'll take you by the hand And I'll show you a world that you can understand, This life is filled with hurt When happiness doesn't work, Trust me and take my hand, When the lights go out, you'll understand.
I was once shot in the head with a slingshot in my youth. It was my friend that did it with a black widow we were fooling about with.. I swear time slowed down after he had fired and I knew I was in deep doo doo. Anyhow the bearing hit me just above the ear behind my temple and was immediately followed by blackness and an intense ringing sound, like a large bell had been struck. I was out for a few minutes, had a big lump and a deep cut, but fortunately no lasting damage. I didn't go to hospital so never found out if my skull got damaged at all.
Never got shot in my life, but it can't be worse than appendicitis pain. It felt like someone was stabbing me in the intestines over and over, it was so bad I threw up everything in my stomach, and then when there was nothing else to be thrown up I started throwing up stomach acid. I squirmed down on the hospital floor and bawled out like a baby. That was the worst pain I felt in my entire life.
Many “assault rifles” actually use smaller caliber bullets. The additional damage comes from the higher velocity and elongated shape of the bullet which tends to tumble as it rips through flesh.
I was going to point this out myself , I hate that as smart as this channel is they called it an “assault rifle “ as that’s well you know, false. However him and most other people seem to forget that majority of these “assault” rifles or ar platform rifles usually use a 2.23/5.56 which is really nothing more than a glorified vermin round
I was shot by a .22 in the left calf in 2001. I felt the initial impact (it felt like being hit with a paintball), and experienced almost no pain from it, even during recovery. The round entered the left side of my calf, bounced off the back of the tibia, and exited the right of my calf. The staff in the emergency room were surprised when I walked into the lobby with no warning, and asked how i got there. I honestly walked the three and a half miles to get there, and they couldn't believe that I was barely feeling the effects of it. I guess some of us are just built different.
@@chinglesscheddar i dont think a persons size has much to do with it, some people just have a higher pain threshold or tolerance than other people. I know big guys (im talking like 350+ lbs) that cant handle small amounts of pain, while another guy i know that is roughly same size has been stabbed and didnt realize it until it was pointed out to him that he was bleeding.
@@Bill_DeBerry It boils down to many different factors including the caliber of the gun to the velocity of the round. A .22 round is very low in caliber and doesn't produce much mass when it hits a target. Mainly a .22 is just for wounding, it doesn't normally have enough force behind it to really rip into you and do major damage so its not very surprising you could walk on it. Of course, there are .22 rounds that account for this shortcoming and break up into shrapnel upon impact to maximize internal damage, but a normal round doesn't usually produce enough force to get deadly results. Actually there have many accounts where people have gotten shot in the head by a .22 and our skulls were strong enough to stop the bullet. This is also assuming it isn't a point blank shot to the body, that's a different story regardless of the caliber.
@@rawrtunaisgod i know all of that, but i also know that a .22 usually starts to tumble once it hits its target. Now consider the fact that it hit the back of my tibia, and with how soft lead is, there is a very high probability that the round deformed more than if it was just travelling through flesh, further increasing the amount of damage it was causing. If you had seen the damage to my calf you would have been surprised too. This is 20 years after the fact, the scar is still visible, and you can easily tell that the damage done on exit was extensively worse than the entrance.
Getting shot is a weird feeling and most of the time you don’t feel it and yessss that’s the scariest part Knowing that the pain isn’t there like knowing your hit an don’t know where or how many times your hit initially.
I recall reading an interview with the late "Walking Tall" Sheriff, Buford Pusser, back in the 1970's. This man had been shot and stabbed multiple times in his adult life. Regarding being shot, he said at first you do not feel pain, you feel an impact and then warm blood running out. He said the pain comes later. He described the August 12 ambush where his wife was killed and his jaw was shot off. He noted that during the ambulance ride to the hospital, he had this euphoric, floating, sensation and the feeling that everything was going to be okay.
I had taken some 12G bird shot ricochet to the legs some years ago. It hit an old dryer, then concrete before coming at me, so I was also blasted by what felt like sand-That was broken up concrete. I felt it on my entire front on all exposed skin. It stung, but was more along the lines of being in a heavy sandstorm than anything else. I didn’t even know I had 4 pellets stuck in my shins. I didn’t realize I had been hit for quite some time. Maybe 15-20min? With the high adrenaline, time may have seemed to slow down. I only noticed I was struck when the pellets cooled down. They cooled & went from a slight burning sensation to an intense pain in mere moments. I initially asked for a ride to the hospital, but right after asking, it was hurting worse I realized the pain was only going to continue to escalate. Just being in my legs, I used a pocket knife to cut small crosses on the pellets to pop them out. They didn’t even bleed badly, it didn’t appear as though those pellets were able to fit through the tiny slits in my skin, but you could see the lumps on my shins. Other pellets I assume were flattened on concrete, as it look like I had a bunch of tiny cuts & small circular blood blisters all along my legs. I counted 46 places that drew blood, just from ankle to knee. After cutting the pellets out, my legs began to bleed much worse. Cutting them out did hurt, but once the pellets were removed, I felt relief. I’m thankful for it to have just been the legs, and that it hit another surface before bouncing back at me. My walking wasn’t impaired in the slightest bit until the heat came on, at which point I had to sit down.
When I was in my mid-twenties I was shot in the thigh from about 5' away. It was a through-and-through wound so no bullet remained in my body. I had been staying in my parent's house while they were away for 9 months and I had made a bit of a mess out of the place. My mother is a clean freak and I was terrified of what would happen when they got home. The wound barely bled, more like a constant little dribble so I wrapped a dishtowel around it. I spent the next 3 hours cleaning the house; washing dishes, scrubbing out the tub, doing laundry, etc. until I began to feel faint and weak at which point I took a cab to the ER. I never felt any pain during all this. What really hurt was the exam they had to do to be sure I hadn't injured an artery. That was a big needle into the groin and I shrieked. The whole area remained numb for years and never caused me pain but the muscles that had been shredded took a long time to heal and hurt a LOT in the beginning as I had to start stretch them out to tighten them up again. However this only took about 2-3 months. I have an amazing scar on my thigh but no other consequences of the incident. Today at 70 y/o I look back and realize I was one tough kid.
An “assault” rifle actually shoots a smaller bullet than most handguns. A 5.56 is tiny compared to a 9mm. And civilians own both. 5.56 is one of the most common calibers owned by civilians and it’s the same caliber used in combat.
Exactly it bother me seeing the graphics of the entry hole of a 5.56 bigger then a 9mm. What makes a caliber more devastating isn’t the size but speed but you also have hollow points shotguns just so many variables that this video acknowledged
We have a friend who is a Army trauma surgeon, and he had the opportunity to help a little girl at the Kabul Airport gate who was there at the bombing. She had a piece of shrapnel go straight through her head, and they were able to get her stable & on a flight to a out-of-countrey hospital. Absolute miracle.
Relative in Afghanistan of mine was shot by a 5.45x39 round. If you didn’t know, these bullets coined the nickname “poisoned Bullet” because they fragment and expand so much on impact, however are still incredible at piercing most ballistic armor. Because of this, even though they hadn’t been hit in a critical spot (femoral artery,etc) it had expanded so much that the fragmentation itself severed his femoral artery and he ended up loosing his leg.
Hope he’s doing well. Crazy how he was shot by a powerful caliber and only lost his leg instead of his life. Are bodies truly are way more resistant to damage than we think
I went to Yellowstone national park back in 2016.... I wish i can go back, we stayed at cody wyoming. I live in the city so taking vacation at Nature National Park was like heaven.
@@kishgo I mean while your not wrong statically your chances of being shot outside of the ghetto are extremely low because most the time you have to have someone targeting you and shooting you on purpose to get shot outside the ghetto, on the other hand in the ghetto you have cowards doing drive-by shootings injuring innocent people
"The weapons used in military warfare are probably not the same weapons used by civilians" - compares a Barrett 50BMG to a desert eagle 50AE......... yea my fellow gun nerds will understand.
This makes so much sense. When I was younger I was in a car accident and broke both of my legs in half. When the first person on scene was asking me questions, I told them calmly I broke both of my legs. I had zero pain though. The pain didn’t escalate until about 30 minutes afterwards.
Got shot in my chest less than an inch from my heart by a 7.62 round. Honestly didn’t even know I was hit at first. Overall, I’m happy to be alive with minimal injury.
Props to the guy who tested this and told us.
Real monsterisablock???????????????????????????????
@@restrictin8904 yea, this is my alt i cant comment on this channel with my main account for some reason.
Nice
I am sure after this video there will be a couple hundred people to give props to.
No problem
"Once the brain realizes the body has been injured, and it could be life threatening, it goes into survival mode"
Why not creative mode instead? So the body literally turns invincible
Ah, there it is the man himself, with no likes 3 minutes ago it’s a fresh find.
I see u everywhere
Hope I'll get more like than this comment (•‿•)
just some guy without a life
*the void awaits your arrival*
“Like a small pebble was thrown at her”
Chucks a huge rock at her back
😂
Exactly
FR LOL
😂
Bro, I read this before I watched it... I'm so ready to see this girl🏃♀🪨🌬
I was shot in Afghanistan in 2010 while serving food to the kids. Felt like someone punched me on my back initially, then I ran really fast to take a cover and had to indulge in gunfight with the militants. After like 20 minutes the rescuers arrived, then I realized that I had been shot, the pain level went from 3/10 to 8/10. But that only lasted for a few seconds as I got unconscious. That part of the muscle was sore for 2 weeks and after 4 months I was declared "fit for duty." I also know guys who were shot in the head and survived, and they told me that the pain was lesser than a headache.
Thank you for your service!
Did is hurt
@@user-b-n7x Initially, hurt a little. During the gun fight I almost completely forgot that I got shot. But the pain went terrible as I realized it was like someone really stabbed me on my back.
@@shrekxrohankishibe no you were not in Afghanistan
@@Ichigo_bankai_tensa_zangetsu I never said I was mate.
I've been shot before, I was hit in a firefight betwen some security officers in a gas station and robbers. I was hit by 2 9mm to the legs. The impact felt like a weak punch, didnt feel anything imediately after that and figured I was really shot only a few minutes later, I even sprinted away no problem, then I ducked behind a car, when I sat on the ground I could feel some burning and numbness/pulsing in my leg and saw the blood in my pants. The video is right though, recovery is terrible and takes long even if it didnt hit any bone, you will always feel the area you were shot a bit differently because the bullet tore through your muscles, and my case was a best case scenario. Dont get shot kids...
That’s crazy you were able to run still, I always thought that would drop people immediately
Lol, I like the takeaway. Like, "man, I'm glad this guy told me not to get shot, there go my saturday plans"
Glad you're still with us.
@@drippy623 only if you shot in the head even then tho it takes a few second till they fall and depends as the person
Hey man glad you’re above ground another day. Stay frosty
“Most people say they didn’t even feel the pain at first they only noticed when they look at the blood”
Tom (Tom and jerry): *is walking on air and doesn’t fall till he looks down*
for example When you get punched by someone do you look at his hand and then feel pain huh
Big brain
Exactly lol-
thats how it was when i crashed by bicycle as a youngling. I had landed on my face first and dragged it along the asphault on the ground about 5 feet and ripping my lower lip in 2 floppy sides. i didnt feel any pain until i looked down and saw all the blood dripping out of my face onto the ground.
@@ianhellsing3327 same story but my knee and leg, I felt some pain but not serious pain, when I looked at the wound I felt ALL OF IT.
Love how they use a desert eagle as the example of a small caliber pistol
They use a website for free models and stuff so they didn’t make it lol, probably not that many options to use
Yeah they should’ve used a 9mm or .380, max a .45.
50 ae and the 50bmg are the same size
@@big4jake112 .45 is pretty big and painful.
@@clashitron7878 same size kinda. Same hole, different amount of hydrostatic shock, speed, and amount of energy transferred
Updated comment below. My daughter said it felt like a bee sting. The bullet severed a nerve and arteries, so we saw blood immediately soak through her shirt. She was only 10. She stayed calm but was losing a lot of blood so she began to come in and out of consciousness, but her eyes never closed. It was terrifying! She was paralyzed on her right upper side until they repaired her nerve, which took 6 hours. She's 12 now and doing better. She has little feeling in her right arm, has a gnarly scar from her neck to her wrist, but she does have use of her right hand and arm.
I just read the comments.
It was August of 2020, we had gone to the gun range that day and later that evening I asked my husband if he could site in my red dot as it was off, my daughter was in the bathroom next next to our bedroom, my husband was sitting on the bed and I was at the end of the bed, a few minutes after handing him my gun a Ruger security 9, I hear a pop, and my ears were ringing i looked at him in shock, and he says, "I didn't even pull the trigger!" We run out of the bedroom to make sure everyone was ok, and my daughter comes out of the bathroom and asks what that was? She didn't even realize she had been shot. Blood soaks through her shirt immediately as a major artery and nerve were hit. I called 911 and the dispatcher tells me to locate the wound, I take my daughter's shirt off and lay her on the ground, we put her feet on a chair and I hold her shirt on her bullet wound, she looked at me with glossed over eyes and asked me why she keeps falling asleep, her eyes never closed, which scared me horribly! She was talking to her dad who died in 2015, she said things like "I don't want to stay daddy, I want my mama." Ohmg this is hard! Why do I feel like i need to explain myself to strangers?! Im done. The police took the gun, they took our stories, and my daughter was in the trauma center alone until I was cleared! They took my husband to the police station, but cleared him that night. A gun specialist determined there was a misfire. However this could have been avoided had we checked the clip AND the chamber. He is military trained, he would constantly tell me to clear my chamber. And this happened.
My daughter had to have 14 blood transfusions, had to have her heart shocked back into rhythm, and had a wound vac, and intense physical therapy. They stimulated her nerves with light shock therapy, and the pain as her nerve grew back was HORRIBLE!
Thankfully though the gun had range bullets and not self defense bullets! She probably wouldn't be with us today.
That's the story of my comment. I'm not sure why anyone would make that up. And I'm not sure why I felt like I needed to justify myself to strangers, it struck me in a strange way. Thinking about that night isn't something I do very often, not to mention talk about it. I didn't think there would be people who said I was lying. I guess it was so traumatic, I can't see anyone making that up about their own kid.
Oh my god! I hope everything is well
How did your daughter got shot ? School shooters?
How did your 10yr. old daughter get shot? 😟 I'm assuming it was an accident?🤔
this person is lying
i dont think their daughter would get shot out
in. the open and I doubt someone with a anime profile picture would be a mom
@@AWGragg007 ikr
Just the thumbnail alone looks excruciatingly painful.
The bullet is facing backwards
Facts
I can tell you it is. I had pretty much the same, but worse in form of snapping my shinbone in a motorcycle accident. Shattered the top of the bone even worse, there was 8 big chunks going all over the place and a lot of small shrapnell that was just scooped out and they put some filler back in.
it’s literally the mini femur breaker, *it’s destroying its path, including bone*
@@brandsinator1800 bullets don't always face straight forward they can spin around depending on distance, windspeed and just straight up bad guns
Depends on the scenario. Sometimes in combat you won't even know until the gunfight is over. Adrenaline is a crazy thing
it is crazy, a couple buddies have told me stories of getting hit and someone else saying "Hey, you were hit are you ok?" and they are completely fine.
Word. When i be in combat i never know what's going on until afterwards
@@logandemar8208 shut up
Brother, you know ! I served two tours in the Gulf War. HOOYAH! Thank you for your Service!
yea it’s fax in sports u see it all the time guys get hurt but play the whole rest of the game then find out they’ll be missing the next week after bc once the adrenaline from the game is over the injury’s affect is shown
My brother, who was took a bullet three times, reported that he didn't know at first that he was hit, but when he was grazed on the neck he said it was excruciating. Being grazed hurt more than being directly hit according to him, RIP this is actually the 8 year anniversity of his passing.
Rip, God bless.
RIP sorry for your loss
RIP
RIP
I'm sorry for your loss. God bless you and your family.
I asked a wounded deer once, I actually showed him the video and he told me it was pretty spot on.
Be quiet next time, please. Clearly, you've nothing to say.
@@LuznoLindo this is the best comment on the video wdym
@@LuznoLindo you must be fun at parties ☺️
@@bassingbasics6621 now that's what we call dark humour on humans!!🙂
😂😂😂 sounds like something a family guy character would say
this is a certified hood classic.
Can confirm
*WHEEZE*
You comment on channels other than orange peanut?
Litterally just found u in that gta mexican taxi song
Hi dad
"One man was *accidentally* shot by his wife."
* Shows wife holding the gun barrel one inch from his head.*
Yeah she was checking it was real or not
XD
feminists
@@wirmaple7336 LOL ok
@Nezuko LOL ok
That means Wolverine doesn't feel pain when he gets shot cuz his healing kicks in before the pain starts.
😂😂 neither does Deadpool
You sound like my medical school teacher😅
That would explain how deadpool wasn’t fazed by bullets in the movie
230 like and 4th comment ye lol ol ye
Perhaps. The video is wrong saying that once shock wears off the body begins damage control.
Shock is literally the first and arguably most important damage control.
0:15 bro why is he eating as fast as he can
@@TheRealAnnnoyingdog fr
I eat like that.
He's actually punching himself in the face while watching the new Star Wars Films
6:12
Yes, it is much easier to survive a headshot if the entire round is jammed into the skull. It would be significantly more painful if the round was actually fired.
hahaha
XD
yeah a shotgun round doesnt just come out whole
I survived the shot on head wene my helemet is on
@@tygical *Nails the 12 gauge with a hammer*
Those animated screams are killing me 😭😭😭😂
now i cant unhear them XD
The brain sounds like minions
😂😂😂
😂😂😂
Sadistic approved
“Pistol with a small caliber bullet”
*proceeds to show a guy shooting a desert eagle, a handgun that fires the highest caliber pistol cartridge on the civilian market
Desert Eagle 💀
Should have shown Glock 44
lol i thought i was the only one who noticed
L
I came here to say this. That desert eagle literally has a .50AE vs that "assault rifle" which is a measly .223 in comparison lol
Actually, it makes perfect sense why gunshot wounds do not hurt that much. Because while a searing hot bullet is piercing through your flesh, it does it so quickly that you do not notice it. By the way, this fact is actually quite horrifying to me, because you don't immediately notice the damage, even though it is extremely damaging.
I didnt feel it going through my body at all. However after a couple of minutes a violating suffocating agony became the center of my existence. You cant consiously process all of the pain at first, your brain has never recieved so much pain information at once before. Oh, but it learns quick. And it starts to be able to process more and more hurt. Its like a volume mixer too, mixing other awful sensations with the ever increasing pain, like the stench of cordage and blood, it hurt "that much" actually more. It cant be described. Forgive me for posting my disagreement, I am not trying to ridicule your comment. What you said might be true for some, but not all gunshot survivors.
I feel pain years later at 27 & I was 12 when I got shot
Funny but true story, a guy was shot but conscious and alert and when they were rushing him to the operating room they asked as they always do, "Are you allergic to anything?" (Again nurses and doctors were prepping him for surgery very quickly, running around and he said he was but asked them all to listen to him carefully which they did.) And when they asked again what he was allergic to he smiled and said, "Bullets." :) They all started laughing, appreciated his humor the operation was a success and he went on to make a full recovery. True story I read it a while back.
Laughter is the best medicine
Sources: trust me bro
@@bendavis6457 just ask him to give link to you and then say source isn't wrong
Wow
@@bendavis6457 yeah Glen. that’s a story you’d just make up
One of my great-grand-fathers was shot in the lower hip during World War One. It severed one important nerve. He survived, but with constant pain until his death in the 70's. The family said the pain gave him a constant very bad mood, whereas he'd been gently mannered before that.
well yeah pain does put you in a bad mood
yes
literally doctor house
@@tvthecat we don't know if he was addicted to pain meds
War can make a person mentally unstable so the change in his attitude may not 100% related to the pain alone.
I survived a gunshot to my stomach when I was 17 years old. 9mm hit me just below my belly button and a little to the left. This video is very accurate. No pain at first, only pressure and numbness, the bullet went clean through me so I had an entrance and exit wound. I was not sure what happened at first and then my friend came up to me and was asking if I was ok and I looked down and saw all red and lifted up my shirt and saw the hole. The second I saw the hole the worst pain I have ever felt in my life took me over and I collapsed to the ground screaming. I felt insane pressure and a sharp burning pain in my stomach and through to my back and this pain only got worse with time. The pain I felt I was insane. I still have no idea how I am alive.
What is the back story
how was ur friend not shot
@@llloo7 bank robbery
@@MrKyelucas k thanks
@@llloo7 no problem for the misinformation
7:23 I love how the animation shows the whole cartridge inside the stomach
One of the surgeons put it there to prank her.
Shot by an Aperture Science turret.
She actually gave birth to a fully functional round of ammunition
@@simsosamso2200 During labor it will shoot itself out 💀
In Kosovo I was hit just above the knee by a 7.62 round and it shattered my bone. I remember the impact, not being able to walk but no pain. It felt like being hit in the leg, with a bat, so it swung me around to land on my back, but no pain. They eventually had to amputate my leg. I just about bled to d e a th so I’m thankful for a tourniquet, I then lost consciousness, I do remember the intense burning. Just before I blacked out. Even for a while I was conscious but don’t remember that I was telling jokes. Recovery was no problem. They had my meds dialed in well. It took a while for phantom pain to kick in. Yes PTSD is an issue but that’s more attributed to the ethnic cleansing I saw.
Thanks. I won't go to Kosovo.
wow
Thank you for sharing your story!
Amputated leg from a gunshot?
@@volf4o yup. It happens.
Narrator: " How does being shot feel? Let's find out." (I duck.)
Lol
Why be me?
@@daduck5441 lol
I can tell you from personal experience how it feels like. Been shot on two different occasions, one in my hand and one in my leg. Will answer any questions about my experience.
When I got shot in my leg, it felt like someone punched me right in the calf, then burning sensation. Adrenaline kicked in and I could still walk around with my leg spurting blood out; which was a weird sight. The bullet (small caliber, I'm guessing a .22 short or something) lodged itself in my calf muscle where it is still there to this day. I don't really feel it unless if the weather changes or something then it aches. After the adrenaline wears off, it's like what you'd expect. You're in a fair amount of pain but nothing too bad.
When shot in my hand it felt like it was aching and burning as well as sickness when you break a bone and soon after felt a burning throbbing pain. Of course I had surgery soon after to repair a few ligaments and broken bones so I didn't get to suffer that long.
Before you ask why didn't the doctor take it out. I asked him that to which he responded it would be more damage filleting my calf in half than just leaving it in there. I asked about lead poisoning, he mentioned that my body would create a lining around the bullet or something.
That's interesting. Do you think dying quickly from a gun shot would be super painful ? Or get hit then adrenaline kicks in and pass out?
@@malachid3107 given from my past experiences, I'd say adrenaline would still be in effect i.e. fight or flight. Then again it really matters where you got shot as well as calibers etc. I'm sure a gutshot wound would be a painful way to go vs a gunshot that tears a major artery where you bleed out in minutes. For me, it took around 5-10 minutes for the adrenaline to wear off.
And most bullets(now adays) are made up of steel to prevent lead poisoning if you eat a shotgun bb or something along them lines
@@codybrown4855while there are a myriad of different slugs out there, lead is still a major projectile since it doesn't score or damage the barrel. However, when I got shot in the leg it was around 20 years ago in a bad area of Indianapolis.
Hope you are better
As someone whos been shot before, it hurts really bad.
Do a gun Shot Really Hurts??? How Does it Feel???
My older brother was just shot in the jaw a month ago. Crazy to think what that experience was like and how PTSD is going to have a huge impact on his life forever now. Everyone be safe out there love y’all
I got shot in my right leg the same month the video came out in the same spot as in the thumbnail by a .38 hollowpoint
Brewing a cup of coffee feeling like you need to duck or always looking out for attackers on rooftops
Love you too man
Only military personnel suffer from PTSD.
shot in THE JAW?! dafuq?! so like half of his teeth are out or what? fck, what a horrible painful injury that has to be! geus he needed to eat trough a straw for who knows how many months
Hi, in July of this year I was shot in the calf with a 9mm from a Beretta . At first all I felt was pure numbness in my leg. I could tell something was wrong, but I felt no pain. I looked down and saw a hole in my pant leg, lifted and it up and then started spraying blood everywhere. I was able to walk away from the situation and kept a cool head while telling my shooting buddies I got hit. It wasn’t in it about 2 hours later when I was in the hospital that I felt any pain. My pain came in the form of extreme cramps and a pulsating sensation, like every time my heart pumped, so did my leg. The craziest part is due to a medical condition, I have little to no feeling in my legs, which explains why I never got that burning sensation. It also took me about a month on a cane before I was able to walk on my own again. Since then I have been living with PTSD and the occasional leg cramp. The doctors never took the bullet out of me, so I set off metal detectors, can’t get MRIs, etc. Overall I would rate the experience a 2/10. Would not recommend.
That’s wild man
Thank god
Why they didn't took the bullet off????
They would have to filet a large part of the calf in half, it would cause more damage than its worth getting it out
@@DC-YumpyYotemeal_4026 When a bullet is in a part of body that doesn’t have any vital parts, it isn’t particularly necessary to remove it. If it is, it can obviously become a serious problem in the future and that is when they decide to take it out. Surgery is not something easy, there is a good reason surgeons get paid a lot. 1 mistake can make the situation much worse. For example, the bullet in the leg might be an inconvenience, but one wrong cut can leave you crippled.
50 Cent after being shot 9 times: "It doesn't hurt as much as people imagine it hurts - because of the adrenaline. But it hurts after”
9times ain’t Nuffin Ik sb that was shot 18 times and survived
Rumor is that he exaggerated a few of those shots
@@clapp3z_yt141 There was a navy seal who got shot 20 something times durning a battle and survived
It depends on the person and what were you doing when you got shot. I was running during a civil war, I was faced by 4 attackers with AK47. I turned around and continued running. A bullet hit the asphalt and bounced backward entering my foot from the top and getting out of ankle (exploded at the ankle exit). I knew I was shot, but I continued to run (adrenaline very high by now) about 200 yards. found a safe place away from them and stayed there. It was a house. Then the pain started, but I remember did not feel much, I just wrapped towels around it and sat down. Then again I have a very high tolerance for pain. I bled for 6 hours, but I was drinking water and sugar 🙂 which I think saved my life.
Where was this civil war?
Bro, thankfully you are alive. But never, NEVER, drink or eat something after suffering a wound that can potentially cause blood loss. Even if the blood is not visible, it can be happening inside of your body (more common in a car crash or a fall). There are two reasons for not drinking water or ingesting something in these situations:
1) Water and foods that have sugar, salt, minerals, proteins, fat (so, everything you can possibly ingest) increases your blood pressure, wich means that you will loose blood quicker and in greater ammounts.
2) If you need surgery, they will give you anesthesia, and there is a big possibility that you throw up the contents of your stomach wihle you are sedated, and choke on them. Actually, all surgeries (emergency or elective) requires no food or drinks at least 12 hours due to that. If im not wrong, the drugs used in sedation induces the vomit impulse. Of course, physicians can detect if you vomited, but it will reach your lungs before they realize.
That beign said, stay strong my friend. I hope the war is over and you are recovering well!
@@pietroromano8108 thankyou i didnt know this
@@pietroromano8108 thanks for the information
My husband was shot 3 times. (At work. In a drive by that was intended for some one else) Air lifted to the trauma unit. Months in a coma. Endless complications and infections. Learned to breathe again basically. Learned to walk again. Is permanent disabled. But a warrior and a champion. He agreed with many of these points.
One thing for sure ....... a gunshot doesnt affect a single person. It affects a family. It changes countless lives forever.
I am so sorry he had to go through this.
@@maram242-s thank u so much. Honestly it's kindness from people like yourself that have gotten us through our darkest days. Didn't have to be people we knew. The kindness meant and means so much❤
there's so much more to our story. But he's here. I didn't have to explain to our babies why daddy's not coming home ever. And despite the challenges (of where there are many) at the end of the day that's all that matters
@@justhereforthevideos2798 jeez, going outside is scary
I’m very sorry to hear this. This is very unfortunate. Can you send him my regards?
I’m so sorry
Been shot up my jaw 2 years ago with a .40, it surprised me at how cliche it felt. Had my eyes closed at the time of the shot, but I still saw a set of white upward-facing muzzle flashes (one for each eye?) Then my vision turned everything into greyscale.
Don’t really recall any pain, and the ringing was temporary, no more than a minute. Was able to stagger to the street when a passerby picked me up. Stayed conscious for about 10 minutes, remember being wheelchaired into the front door of a hospital but then started black out after that.
Woke up about a day later not knowing what happened until I tried to speak to my dad who was with me in the OR
Ok boomer
@@bosniakslayer6614 ok zoomer
@@bosniakslayer6614 You're doing it wrong.
@@bosniakslayer6614 wow ,why toxic much ?
Who shot you?
"one man was accidently shot in the head by his wife while he slept", excuse me, WHAT
Hearing her nagging hurt a lot more than the gunshot
@@dumbedits6737 basically any girl
😂
"Honey, I have a crazy headache." "HOW ARE YOU NOT DEAD?!"
How does that not wake you up?
One year ago I got shot from my shoulder to my chest and through my bicep, no organs were hurt, and it was shocking cuz i didn’t feel anything, I noticed the shot almost one block away (I was running) and as the video says, I entered into survival mode, I had lack of breath, intense dizziness and dry mouth, pain came 10 minutes later,
Only thing i knew before watching this was that it won't hurt me more if i was the main protagonist
While the background characters get one-shotted or feel intense pain from a gun shot 😂
‘The game’s been rigged from the start’ fallout new vegas
And it would heal in less than a week or two
@@lolcatzidk background character nah bro!!
he is will be dead 2 days ago from the moment he got shot
I feel for the man whose wife shot him. I hope she was still arrested
She will probably going to get life without parole and spend the rest of her life behind bras
@@ori1676 bras?
@@ori1676 probably 6 years justice system for males very different
She’s a woman. She will get probation.
All women get life behind bras
The character's uvulas jiggling around when they scream was perfect. 😂😂😂
yeah, that was funny
my grandpa got shot in the chin once by a hunting rifle the bullet is still in there
you can litteraly feel it
Woah
Hardly believable, how would the bullet still be in his chin, they would have had to remove it right? Maybe I don't know something, but when someone is shot, the main goal is to extract the bullet from the wound, not leave it in the body where it can cause even more damage.
@@timebandit07 my grandpa wast fataly harmed he just didnt want it to be removed and his skin grew over it
it sounds insane but it is true i mean it was like 50 years ago and my grandpa told thath so dont blame me i wasnt there
@@boomspoon4004 Dang that really is insane
@@timebandit07 yeah luckely it wasnt a bit more above cuz it could have been worse
Hopefully no one that sees this video ever experiences this
Let's hope
Gee thanks man
Sadly quite a few of us have lol
Yup :/
If I would go through it again I would could say most but not all helps them for the better. Mentally wise
Extremely painful, I would imagine.
surprising no
Nope. at first you don't feel it because adrenaline. Then it just kind of burns.
If it misses bone you wont even feel it
“It would be extremely painful”
first hand exp ...hurts but it was a upper arm pop when I was 15. Was lucky but some ppl aren't at all. It hurt tho trust me
and yet my gta character acts like nothing has happened after he's been shot with a shotgun right in his back
gta characters are special
They are drunk
Same with RDR2 Story characters and your online character
bro is just built different
It's the screams that get me LOL!😂😂😂
I thought the title said:
"What it feels like to be short".
I was gunna say thats a bit of a violation.
It feels short to be short
Source: not a short guy
Personally I wouldn’t have it
Stop it ur reminding me of my ex :,)
Same lol
Literally same 😂😂
Soldier2: hey you got shot
Soldier1: really?
Soldier2: yes
Soldier1: huh classic
JOHN CENNNAAAAAA!!!!!!
@@SomeRandomGuy789 DA DA DADA DAAAAAAAA
@@SomeRandomGuy789 DA DA DA DAAAAAAA
@@SomeRandomGuy789 DA DA DA DAAAAAAAA
So the shot is the alcohol one right I got the joke?
Whenever i got shot in my dreams in the past, it felt exactly the same as you described for some reason. I’ve never been shot and I’ve never read or heard what it feels like being shot.
Hope this dream doesn't come true😂😂😂
Do you die In the dreams you got shot in? I do.
@@Kruton3 i usually wake up.
I just got shot in my dreams and this video was in my recommend when i wokeup? I also felt the same pain. But i think its just your brain connecting to what was said. This is nuts to think about, technology reading my dreams.
Over 10 years ago I had a similar dream, shot in the leg and it just burned for a time until eventually the dream just ended and I woke up.
came here to do research for my story and this was really helpful. Thanks!
@@caribarts01 FUNNY! 😃 😊
I was stabbed 5 times when I was 16 wrong place at the wrong time. Honestly I felt nothing and only knew I was stabbed once I saw blood. I walked almost 2 miles before I got home and was sent to the Hospital. I honestly felt more pain in the hospital than anything.
i dont mean to sound rude but, do the stab wounds still affect you to this day?
Wrong place wrong time? Was there a madman stabbing people with a knife?
@@phoenixflamegames1 could be it’s not implausible
@@phoenixflamegames1 people dont always want to share what happened to them ya know?
Tell me what country you are living so i can avoid it
4:27 I love how they're talking about a smaller caliber on a handgun bullet but then showing a Desert Eagle next to a rifle with a noticeably smaller barrel.
That rifle behind the deagle is modeled after a .50 BMG which is a considerably larger round
@@gkman815 They're the same caliber, just diffrent shapes and lengths
@@ClayThunder a 50 bmg is a a giant round compared to 50AE.
As a person who lives in a country with no guns, I don't know anything you just said
Exactly lol
I heard getting gut shot is the worst possible pain, but thankfully never found out for myself. I love your shows. They remind me of when my girls were young and I told them every day before school: "Learn something new today!" Thanks for all the knowledge~
It is I was shot in my stomach with a Glock 40, it left me partially paralyzed. When the incident happened I couldn’t hear anything but a loud ringing noise,my leg IMMEDIATELY got stiff as a board and I couldn’t move. I had to get multiple surgeries the doctors said I’m lucky to be alive. Years later I have severe nerve pain because the bullet went thru my body hitting multiple organs and damaging my L2 vertebrae. It left me with PTSD and extreme anxiety. In no way am I asking for sympathy. I just crossed ur comment and thought I would share my experience and what I’ve been thru getting shot.
@@deebee2893 Preciate u for telling us
@@hdot1254 No problem TY for reading
@@deebee2893 how did it happen?
Happened to me with 380. The bullet entry small wound surgery to get the 7 pieces out left me with a huge long pink scar from right below belt line halfway up stomach
I love the cute animation and the people screaming with the wiggling uvulas.
I also learned something new, most gunshots initially don't hurt. I never knew that.
“1 man was accidentally shot in the head by his wife while sleep”
😐
Suuuuuuureeeeee accident suuuuuuureeeee
Yeah some accident all right😒
If it was a man who shot his wife “accidentally” he’d be sentenced to 70 years without parole
Thats sad
and the guy survived and told her wife (his killer) that he thinks he has an headache 💀
"The weapons used in military warfare are probably not the same used by civilians."
*Holds up two .50 Cal weapons*
The desert eagle is not a 50 BMG weapon.
@@bhka6423 I know. It's 50AE. Stop trying to act smart.
@@bhka6423 good job, holmes
@@bhka6423 The Barrett M82 shoots .50 BMG, while the good ol deag shoots .50 Action Express, so both are .50 cal weapons.
You will just break your wrists when you shoot
I was shot last year with a 7.62 it felt like someone poured molten metal in my veins, I was shot in the upper thigh and felt pain all the way to my toes
@Peso Bandzz thank you, I’ve gon through rehabilitation and pain management and I’m walking normal again , just have a huge scar. This was one of the reasons I left Philadelphia
@@jameseff Don't come to my hometown-Baltimore!
@@jameseff how did you get shot?
Good God
That sounds awful
I know 2 people that have been shot. My buddy was shot 3 times in NC and he said he didn’t even notice until afterwards and he said his chest got hot and wet. The other person I know got into a fight and the guy shot him 6 times and he didn’t panic even talking to EMS casually until he got to the hospital for surgery
At first I thought it said, "what it feels like to be short" and I clicked immediately to watch a video about my life. This is cool too tho lol
😡
its ok to be of any height
@@spacebarbarian._ I understand love, but it was just a joke. Like I said, that's what I thought I read
HAHA me too
same
“The burning sensation is the brain realizing it’s been shot” or just the fact that the metal inside you is as hot as every descriptor you’ve said since it’s literally breaking the sound barrier and air friction
The burning sensation is not mainly caused by bullet temperature but the hemorrhaging and contusion of the cavity created by the bullet. The repeated stinging or sledgehammer sensation is the actual heart beat pressure. Its the same if you hit your finger with hammer.
Just a FYI, the CDCs numbers on gun deaths includes suicide, which account for the vast majority of deaths involving a firearm.
Another thing to note is that the caliber of bullets from handguns is usually higher that that of rifles. Rifles often use smaller caliber bullets, that are longer and heavier with more gunpowder behind them, resulting in higher speeds and energy behind them. It's this higher speed that makes rifle rounds so much more dangerous than pistol rounds
@@koldhearted1 The most common rifle caliber in the US is 5.56, far smaller in diameter than a 9mm or .45 pistol round. Even larger rifle calibers like .308 are still smaller in diameter than a 9mm. The thing that makes rifles more deadly is the velocity. The impact of a round moving faster than about 2,200fps stretches the flesh around the impact further than it can recover from. This causes tearing damage all around the impact. Pistol calibers don't move fast enough to do this, so they only damage the flesh the bullet actually touches.
@@koldhearted1 My experience is 2 handguns (40S&W & 9mm), an AR-15 in 5.56 and an AR-10 in .308 with a spare upper in 12GA, and both ARs I built from part kits with 80% lowers. I use hand loaded cartridges for the .308. What experience do you have?
I miss me
I thought pistols were more dangerous because of the shrapnel and bone fragments. But now that I think about it it makes sense that a rifle round would be more dangerous on account of the unplugged hole left behind and the flesh tear
@@databaca3859 look up 5.56 ballistic gel tests on UA-cam and compare that to tests with 9mm. Or if you like, watermelon is much more entertaining, and dramatic
I was shot in the foot by an "unloaded" .22 pistol when I was a teen. My shoes were off and I was wearing socks. I didn't feel it but freaked out when I saw a smoking black hole in my sock. The bullet did a lot of damage to the bones in the foot that never properly healed (I'm 76 now). The pain of being shot was minimal but a week later, when the doctor removed the gauze stuffed in the hole through my foot, the tearing of muscle and dried blood had me begging for him to stop. In the Marines, I had a stint in Bethesda Naval Hospital (now Walter Reed) for a different injury. I saw many Vietnam injuries where the recovery was far worse than the actual injury. I was surprised how accurate this video actually was.
Imagine killing your husband while he’s sleeping and then he wakes up and says he got headache
"tis but a scratch!"
Welcome to Florida
Merely a flesh wound.
@@NeoDragoon159 you liar
TIS BUT A SCRATCH!
"One man accidentally was shot by his wife in the head while he slept" this had me down 😂😂😂
"accidentally" 🤔
😂😂😂😂😂
Henry hill
Shi I can’t stop laughing
I hope theywhacked that one
I remember when my homie got shot in the forearm with a 9mm. He said he felt like his whole arm was set on fire. I remember watching him jump up and down and seeing his arm just swinging freely like it was fake. He eventually passed out and we had to drive him to the hospital. Another friend who was with us got hit in the stomach and litteraly just sat on the ground pressing his hand to the wound didn't make a sound the whole drive to the hospital he was just staring out the window in silence. It was surreal seeing both of them have completely different reactions. I remember everything happened so fast by the time I got up from the ground and saw the sidewalk covered in blood I litteraly felt like I could jump and just fly away it's like my mind was trying to trick me into thinking it was all a dream. Yea though both of them said the recovery was the most painful part.
Sounds like you are from the hood. Sad story, by the way
Sounds like you see a lot of violence in your life. I’m sorry man. Glad both your friends are above ground still, I hope anyways. Stay safe out there man and keep your head on a swivel. God speed to you.
How he got shot
100th like and also i dont care if anyone says no one cares
@@acu7741 no one care
There’s a video around of police interrogating a kid who was acting kind of weird. It took them quite awhile before they finally figured out he had a bullet in his head. It’s pretty crazy.
I remember. It was awful! But, for educational purposes, he did say that his head hurt, but he seemed to mostly be having trouble with his feet. He kept lifting his feet up, complaining that his feet were cold and that they hurt a lot.
Husband was shot in the head by his wife in suspicious circumstances, but let's just say it was accidental since he didn't die
Is he ok?
My uncle was a medic during the Vietnam war. He was shot in the chest by a shotgun, but survived. He has nasty scars from the wound, but that’s not the point of my text. He told me lots of stories of what he witnessed during his tour before he was wounded. One of the incredible ones was a young soldier was hopping down a path to the rear for medical help on one leg. After getting the other leg blown off. It’s amazing what the human body can do when it’s full of adrenaline. Unbelievable how fragile, and robust our bodies actually are. I think a lot has to do with one’s own mindset. Some guys after losing a leg would just lay and yell for help, and others ( like the before mentioned soldier) would help themselves as much as possible. Our will to live is incredible! When I got hit in the wrist I didn’t know it until it was pointed out to me later. My wrist was sore, but I thought I’d just jammed or twisted it. I don’t know when it happened or what caused it either. Bullet, bounding Betty, or shrapnel? I’ve no clue. Have a decent scar though from it. I think the surgeons made it larger then whatever made the wound. It went clean through my wrist.
Great story
wow
It's funny how they show a desert eagle while saying "a pistol with a small-caliber bullet" Desert Eagles shoot very powerful rounds
.50 cal right lol
@@Ch33secakeGaming 50 ae litterally just a small 50 cal round
It’s just an example , calm down you gun nazis
They have made this mistakes before with the stealth bomber video.
@@seanyoung4904 Like a .44 magnum? A .50 bullet is .5” in diameter, regardless if it was fired from a M2 or Desert Eagle.
Stop calling “battle rifles” “assault rifles”, only the StG 44 is called anything close to assault rifle (StG means Sturmgewehr, Storm Weapon).
I have been shot twice, once in the hand and once in the calf. It hurt both times and it hurt immediately. I think the shot to the hand hurt the worst, but I had no treatment for that one for a couple of days and ended up losing my trigger finger.
You said you have been shot in the calf which is worse being shot in tha same area or getting cramp in the same muscle area ???
describe to me how painful the burning sensation in both injuries that oyu have sufferd from getting shot ??
Lastley is the pain that worse or it can be handled without a medecation ??
@@bdwej2068 Kind of cool questions! For me a cramp in my calf is more debilitating than getting shot in the calf was, the tourniquet is way worse than both of those put together though, as far as pain is concerned. I had third degree burns over 22% of my body, that hurt bad and is the only pain I have ever suffered that I am not sure I could have handled without drugs. Getting shot you can just grit your teeth and get through it most times, I think.
Shooting someone in the head by accident while they sleep is the most suspicious premise
The tonsils waggling in the mouths is everything.
*uvulas
they’re not tonsils, they’re uvulas
tonsils are on the sides, so it's not
lol I hated that.
For me it's the talking. Blah blah blah, blah blah, blah blah blah blah.
Karens shooting themselves in the arms:
"It builds immunity because our body is built to handle this"
who tf are karens
Covidian humour. Got it 👍👋
@@GoGnBowlTorChowr human
Relevance?
@@chevyjohnson7457 this reply section has turned kinda mean
Had a friend who worked at fast food. Couple of guys(3) rob the place and tell everyone to get in the back. I think it was 5 people in total including him. except him sense he knew where all the money was kept. After they took it, they shot him in the chest. But managed to acoid all the important bits. He said it didnt feel anything as he got shot. Its something so instant it takes time to register what just happeend. After they ran, and the girls in the back ran towards him. He said thsts when it stsrted to kick in and was like just burning sensation for 10 min until the parameds arrived
I love how he said "a different caliber" and pulled out a deagle
the gun behind the deagle is much bigger, and has bigger bullets
I didnt realize that lol
@@TheRealJesus42069 did a guy just delete a comment? i just got a notification from this
No no one deleted a comment
I also love the fact that he called an m82 "assault rifle"
I didn’t feel it until they took the tourniquet off at the hospital. Then once the blood returned to my leg it started to hurt. It was only a day and I was hobbling around with a cane and within a week I was walking with a slight limp. It really wasn’t that bad. One EMT asked me if I’d ever been shot before because she said I was really calm as she was checking my vitals on the way to the hospital. I’m sure a leg is way different from being hit in the torso.
it's about the mental state as well, you probably knew you'd be fine in the long run so your brain didn't kick into overdrive.
What does it feel like?
A. Pain.
B. Pain.
C. Pain.
D. Pain.
E. Pain.
F. Pain.
G. Pain.
Pain without love
pain I can’t get enough
Pain I like it rough cause I rather feel
Pain than nothing at all
Pain without love
Pain I can’t get enough
Pain I like it rough cause I rather feel
Pain than nothing at all
@@idhantjoshi7110 It's a poem he wrote wanna hear one of mine ?
You're sick of feeling numb,
You're not the only one,
I'll take you by the hand
And I'll show you a world that you can understand,
This life is filled with hurt
When happiness doesn't work,
Trust me and take my hand,
When the lights go out, you'll understand.
If it hits the brain no...
@@idhantjoshi7110 It's a song named Pain by Three days Grace
I would say F
Props to the virtual actors. Each and everyone of them seems to be super talented in acting screaming scenes 😂
Uhh! Just seeing the visuals is giving me painful sensations right now!! Gee,can't even begin to imagine how much it hurts when it really happens
@Veer Aggarwal you never know nowadays. There can be a war in 30 years you never know
@Veer Aggarwal yeah scary. But the way America is heading and COVID-19 mandates there is a high chance people will start a Civil war
I love how it shows the entire round (casing and all) entering the body.
Most people don’t know that the casing is a separate part and doesn’t get fired out of the barrel
@@Chadow-ranger everyone knows that
@@Dannymart_88445 I guarantee you most people do not know that
@@ikewenger1593 everyone knows that
@@russkimc most people dont know the difference between semiautomatic and fully automatic. How would they know the casing doesn’t get shot out???
I was once shot in the head with a slingshot in my youth. It was my friend that did it with a black widow we were fooling about with.. I swear time slowed down after he had fired and I knew I was in deep doo doo. Anyhow the bearing hit me just above the ear behind my temple and was immediately followed by blackness and an intense ringing sound, like a large bell had been struck. I was out for a few minutes, had a big lump and a deep cut, but fortunately no lasting damage. I didn't go to hospital so never found out if my skull got damaged at all.
appreciate you telling the story, similar happened to me haha
Glad you're alright man!
People are shooting in theyr head in America and they dind t go to hospital. Crazy if you ask me
A happy ending to you. Cheers
Sue your friend
Never got shot in my life, but it can't be worse than appendicitis pain. It felt like someone was stabbing me in the intestines over and over, it was so bad I threw up everything in my stomach, and then when there was nothing else to be thrown up I started throwing up stomach acid. I squirmed down on the hospital floor and bawled out like a baby. That was the worst pain I felt in my entire life.
Many “assault rifles” actually use smaller caliber bullets. The additional damage comes from the higher velocity and elongated shape of the bullet which tends to tumble as it rips through flesh.
Wow, good to see someone else with some basic terminal ballistics knowledge. 👍
I was going to point this out myself , I hate that as smart as this channel is they called it an “assault rifle “ as that’s well you know, false. However him and most other people seem to forget that majority of these “assault” rifles or ar platform rifles usually use a 2.23/5.56 which is really nothing more than a glorified vermin round
@@EVLfreak666 thanks! I shoot a lot of rifles and handguns. Also, I pay a lot for ammo so I like to know what exactly is happening with each type.
I never felt it even after I noticed it. The area is still numb even after decades.
Your nerves probably died right there
Where were you shot? In the head? Lol
I was shot by a .22 in the left calf in 2001. I felt the initial impact (it felt like being hit with a paintball), and experienced almost no pain from it, even during recovery. The round entered the left side of my calf, bounced off the back of the tibia, and exited the right of my calf. The staff in the emergency room were surprised when I walked into the lobby with no warning, and asked how i got there. I honestly walked the three and a half miles to get there, and they couldn't believe that I was barely feeling the effects of it. I guess some of us are just built different.
@@chinglesscheddar i dont think a persons size has much to do with it, some people just have a higher pain threshold or tolerance than other people. I know big guys (im talking like 350+ lbs) that cant handle small amounts of pain, while another guy i know that is roughly same size has been stabbed and didnt realize it until it was pointed out to him that he was bleeding.
Nanomachines, son!
@@Bill_DeBerry It boils down to many different factors including the caliber of the gun to the velocity of the round. A .22 round is very low in caliber and doesn't produce much mass when it hits a target. Mainly a .22 is just for wounding, it doesn't normally have enough force behind it to really rip into you and do major damage so its not very surprising you could walk on it. Of course, there are .22 rounds that account for this shortcoming and break up into shrapnel upon impact to maximize internal damage, but a normal round doesn't usually produce enough force to get deadly results. Actually there have many accounts where people have gotten shot in the head by a .22 and our skulls were strong enough to stop the bullet. This is also assuming it isn't a point blank shot to the body, that's a different story regardless of the caliber.
Suiiiiiiiiiiiii
@@rawrtunaisgod i know all of that, but i also know that a .22 usually starts to tumble once it hits its target. Now consider the fact that it hit the back of my tibia, and with how soft lead is, there is a very high probability that the round deformed more than if it was just travelling through flesh, further increasing the amount of damage it was causing. If you had seen the damage to my calf you would have been surprised too. This is 20 years after the fact, the scar is still visible, and you can easily tell that the damage done on exit was extensively worse than the entrance.
Getting shot is a weird feeling and most of the time you don’t feel it and yessss that’s the scariest part
Knowing that the pain isn’t there like knowing your hit an don’t know where or how many times your hit initially.
I recall reading an interview with the late "Walking Tall" Sheriff, Buford Pusser, back in the 1970's. This man had been shot and stabbed multiple times in his adult life. Regarding being shot, he said at first you do not feel pain, you feel an impact and then warm blood running out. He said the pain comes later.
He described the August 12 ambush where his wife was killed and his jaw was shot off. He noted that during the ambulance ride to the hospital, he had this euphoric, floating, sensation and the feeling that everything was going to be okay.
I had taken some 12G bird shot ricochet to the legs some years ago. It hit an old dryer, then concrete before coming at me, so I was also blasted by what felt like sand-That was broken up concrete. I felt it on my entire front on all exposed skin. It stung, but was more along the lines of being in a heavy sandstorm than anything else. I didn’t even know I had 4 pellets stuck in my shins. I didn’t realize I had been
hit for quite some time. Maybe 15-20min? With the high adrenaline, time may have seemed to slow down. I only noticed I was struck when the pellets cooled down. They cooled & went from a slight burning sensation to an intense pain in mere moments. I initially asked for a ride to the hospital, but right after asking, it was hurting worse I realized the pain was only going to continue to escalate. Just being in my legs, I used a pocket knife to cut small crosses on the pellets to pop them out. They didn’t even bleed badly, it didn’t appear as though those pellets were able to fit through the tiny slits in my skin, but you could see the lumps on my shins. Other pellets I assume were flattened on concrete, as it look like I had a bunch of tiny cuts & small circular blood blisters all along my legs. I counted 46 places that drew blood, just from ankle to knee. After cutting the pellets out, my legs began to bleed much worse. Cutting them out did hurt, but once the pellets were removed, I felt relief. I’m thankful for it to have just been the legs, and that it hit another surface before bouncing back at me. My walking wasn’t impaired in the slightest bit until the heat came on, at which point I had to sit down.
I was shot in the left upper leg 4 yrs ago I still feel numbness and burning in my foot most days, but life goes on.
So how do you sleep whit that burnest and numbness
Learned to live with it, sometimes it does help me awake also feels like there is something in my shoe or stuck to the bottom
When I was in my mid-twenties I was shot in the thigh from about 5' away. It was a through-and-through wound so no bullet remained in my body. I had been staying in my parent's house while they were away for 9 months and I had made a bit of a mess out of the place. My mother is a clean freak and I was terrified of what would happen when they got home. The wound barely bled, more like a constant little dribble so I wrapped a dishtowel around it. I spent the next 3 hours cleaning the house; washing dishes, scrubbing out the tub, doing laundry, etc. until I began to feel faint and weak at which point I took a cab to the ER. I never felt any pain during all this. What really hurt was the exam they had to do to be sure I hadn't injured an artery. That was a big needle into the groin and I shrieked. The whole area remained numb for years and never caused me pain but the muscles that had been shredded took a long time to heal and hurt a LOT in the beginning as I had to start stretch them out to tighten them up again. However this only took about 2-3 months. I have an amazing scar on my thigh but no other consequences of the incident. Today at 70 y/o I look back and realize I was one tough kid.
An “assault” rifle actually shoots a smaller bullet than most handguns. A 5.56 is tiny compared to a 9mm. And civilians own both. 5.56 is one of the most common calibers owned by civilians and it’s the same caliber used in combat.
Exactly it bother me seeing the graphics of the entry hole of a 5.56 bigger then a 9mm. What makes a caliber more devastating isn’t the size but speed but you also have hollow points shotguns just so many variables that this video acknowledged
F=ma 🥲
Yes but shot much faster and designed to do more “damage”
@@lengendaryblackmgmt438 Fdt=mdv.
@@Gamer_field yes. They should say that. And it’s still the same round owned by civilians.
We have a friend who is a Army trauma surgeon, and he had the opportunity to help a little girl at the Kabul Airport gate who was there at the bombing. She had a piece of shrapnel go straight through her head, and they were able to get her stable & on a flight to a out-of-countrey hospital. Absolute miracle.
Imagine getting shot and then just going ow
*Yes, very sad, anyways*
@@sunny-nm5qk 😂😂😂😂
Oh no! Anyways
sir it seems you have impaled me with a hot piece of metal
@@agaypersonn9664 but it’s such a burning sensation
My grandfather was shot in the head by some pistol, and he survived for a few hours. Sadly at the hospital, he passed away.
Relative in Afghanistan of mine was shot by a 5.45x39 round. If you didn’t know, these bullets coined the nickname “poisoned Bullet” because they fragment and expand so much on impact, however are still incredible at piercing most ballistic armor. Because of this, even though they hadn’t been hit in a critical spot (femoral artery,etc) it had expanded so much that the fragmentation itself severed his femoral artery and he ended up loosing his leg.
Soo sad!
Hope he’s doing well. Crazy how he was shot by a powerful caliber and only lost his leg instead of his life. Are bodies truly are way more resistant to damage than we think
Y’all should do an episode on “Why Wyoming is always windy.”
Wyoming doesn't exist
@@fascistwhiterunguard7919 is this a joke
@@eastonb.9 no
@@eastonb.9 no
I went to Yellowstone national park back in 2016.... I wish i can go back, we stayed at cody wyoming. I live in the city so taking vacation at Nature National Park was like heaven.
For some reason I read this as “How does it feel to be short.” I clicked it to, even though I’m 5’ 0’ so I know how it feels.
5'0 is pretty short lol
Lol
Rip
is there a correlation between gunshot wounds and uvulas? Awesome video as usual!
Imagine just walking down the street enjoying your day, you look down and you have a massive bullet wound in your arm
"Oh heck not again"
"Tis a flesh wound."
@Samoht Still Lives!!!! fun fact: not everyone who's been shot lives in the ghetto. crazy right??😱
@@kishgo wow!1!1! what a crazy concept 🤪 who would’ve thought? 😧
@@kishgo I mean while your not wrong statically your chances of being shot outside of the ghetto are extremely low because most the time you have to have someone targeting you and shooting you on purpose to get shot outside the ghetto, on the other hand in the ghetto you have cowards doing drive-by shootings injuring innocent people
"The weapons used in military warfare are probably not the same weapons used by civilians" - compares a Barrett 50BMG to a desert eagle 50AE......... yea my fellow gun nerds will understand.
Yea but we technically dont know that it was 50AE as many different deagles exist
But 50bmg has a average force of over 10k lbs
50AE is like 1300
This makes so much sense. When I was younger I was in a car accident and broke both of my legs in half. When the first person on scene was asking me questions, I told them calmly I broke both of my legs. I had zero pain though. The pain didn’t escalate until about 30 minutes afterwards.
Got shot in my chest less than an inch from my heart by a 7.62 round. Honestly didn’t even know I was hit at first. Overall, I’m happy to be alive with minimal injury.