People can be turned on by clips featuring real medical anaesthesia, such as "Sophie Going Under."
Gas has often been used as a plot device in television and fiction, where the gas is slipped through the air vents of rooms:-
Or sometimes, cars and taxis:-
Sometimes the gas attack takes the form of a grenade or gas bomb:-
Sometimes, the gas is introduced to sedate a whole group of people as a prelude to an attack, or to abduct or subdue them:-
Sometimes the gas is sprayed into the victim's face:-
And of course, let's not forget our favourite superheroes, such as Wonder Woman, who got gassed more than once:-
And Batgirl, who got in on the action a few times:-
Not to mention Sue Storm:-
And Lois Lane:-
And The She Spies:-
And then, of course, there is the vintage champagne of knockout gas scenes, Airport 77:-
This post would not be complete without references to other pages in this blog which contain embedded videos.
The Airport 77 Gas Scene (the new page)
Laughing Gas Scenes
As well as sleeping gas scenes, a variety of scenes feature people being rendered helpless by laughing gas. Sadly, real nitrous oxide doesn't work like this, but people get a huge turn-on by watching entire rooms full of people be rendered helpless by the old giggle gas:-
Conclusion
The fetish comes in a variety of forms, but they all have the same kind of theme - the subject being sedated by gas. We can probably speculate on why people get turned on by images of billowing clouds of anaesthetic gas filling rooms, knocking out people - but nobody can deny that it is a very powerful kink, for those who have it.
Nighty night ...
In 1986, I had a medical oxygen company make a 'calibration cylinder' for me which was 60% N2O and 40% O2. Little did I realize I had nearly invented Entonox. Four years later, I took the idea with me to college when I studied respiratory care but sadly, none of the instructors thought it was a good idea to have such a mixture handy for use in emergency rooms, ambulances and such. The instructors and physicians with whom I discussed the idea thought the mixture's percentages would vary too much from full to empty, which is one reason why commercial Entonox is a 50-50% mixture. *shrugs*
ReplyDeleteNever did ask them about the 60% N2O, 20% O2 and 20% cyclopropane mixture I'd envisioned using. Oh well! ~ Calimore Callierionde
I would love to try that special mix.
DeleteBreathing Cyclopropane is supped to be a pleasant way to go under.
I've always loved 60% N2O, 40% O2 and 3% Halothane a great way to get put into the warm world of Anaesthesia.
Here's one I didn't see on your roster:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CWRbimnZLIc
I was saving it for a special, once this post hit its six thousandth page view - which could be today or tomorrow, at this rate.
DeleteHowever, many thanks for the link. Much appreciated. :)