Oh, I should have commented on this thread ages ago, when I first found out about breathplay I used a silicone swim cap and a coated woven swim cap which had micro holes from the stitching that allowed for breathing.
These days however I found a very controllable, very innocuous, much safer than a bag way of doing it that also eliminates co2 based issues. I just take an N100 mask harness. Pop off the filters, cut off 2 finger tips from a disposable glove, punch a few holes in the tips and put them in the empty filter cartridges. Tada. Not much different then a gas mask, it allows air in with difficulty but is very easy to breath out of, no co2 hazard, very easy to take on and off, strength is easily adjustable
(10 Jun 2019, 16:07 )Like Ra Wrote: Kigurumi breathplay
This is just rhetorical, but how do they avoid fainting? Last time I tried breath play I didn't even last 1 minute, 3+ minutes would definitely need some superhuman abilities. For me the best/worst part was that vacuum-like feeling on the lungs, however the excruciating pain was enough for me to stop doing it. It costed me a near miss to discover that just holding my breath made the cut for me.
I guess that the real thrill comes from the struggle to release yourself, not from the actual loss of oxygen. Although that kigurumi video is just insane. I can't even begin to imagine the desperation of trying to reach for your mouth and finding a doll face instead.
Actually, she has a "security", i.e. someone watching silently.
This is OK, unless the "security" leaves the room to answer a phone call. Then she fainted until the guy returned later. This is shown in this video
Also makes me cough and recall the stink of my clothing from being in pubs in the 80's - not a nice memory, I keep wondering how much passive smoking may have damaged my health.
Plus my GF suffers from chronic asthma - that's not sexy at all.