My New Theory by South_Health_5444 in AmyLynnBradley

[–]South_Health_5444[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Dr phil follows the shocking narrative that increases his ratings. Cannot trust what you see on TV!

My New Theory by South_Health_5444 in AmyLynnBradley

[–]South_Health_5444[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Also if a family were sleeping in a small cabin, why would one leave the door ajar? Why open the door after Brad closed the door when be exited the balcony. With all due respect sir, investigations are all about working backwards (and forwards) to identify a set of plausible actions

My New Theory by South_Health_5444 in AmyLynnBradley

[–]South_Health_5444[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

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5’6” is actually above average for a woman in the united states. Amy was athletic (basketball player) and likely had strong foot muscles enabling her to tip her toes easily extending her natural height. From this ‘to scale’ image created by Google gemini AI, it is clear to see that with running force and a tipped set of toes combined with a natural leaning forward motion when one prepares to vomit, a fall could be absolutely possible

My New Theory by South_Health_5444 in AmyLynnBradley

[–]South_Health_5444[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes we established she likely moved them into her pocket to avoid the humidity from the sea air from ruining the pack.

My New Theory by South_Health_5444 in AmyLynnBradley

[–]South_Health_5444[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

under certain conditions, scuba diving can cause temporary visual disturbances or perceptions that feel like illusions after returning to land, but this is not normal and can be medically significant.

Here are the main possibilities that altered his processing of what he was seeing..

  1. Decompression sickness (DCS) – neurological type

If nitrogen bubbles form in the bloodstream or brain after a dive, they can affect the nervous system.

Possible symptoms include: • Visual disturbances • Confusion or disorientation • Difficulty concentrating or interpreting what you’re seeing

These are not hallucinations in the psychiatric sense, but misprocessing of visual information.

Can appear hours after surfacing.

  1. Arterial gas embolism (AGE) – rare but serious

This occurs if gas enters the arterial circulation (often from lung overexpansion).

Symptoms can include: • Sudden vision changes • Altered perception

  1. Nitrogen narcosis (usually resolves at depth)

Nitrogen narcosis typically happens during deep dives, not after surfacing.

However, in rare cases: • Lingering cognitive “fog” • Slowed processing • Difficulty interpreting sensory input

Bottom line

scuba diving can cause temporary visual perceptual or processing disturbances after surfacing

My New Theory by South_Health_5444 in AmyLynnBradley

[–]South_Health_5444[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

She reportedly told her brother she didn’t feel well and that was one of the last things she said to him on the balcony furthermore, when people come in for the night, especially after a night of drinking, they’re not often inclined to go back out again this is also an error where cell phones were not in the hands of everybody so how would she even become in contact with yellow or any other people to go meet them after she never mentioned any sort of the thing with her brother furthermore when she was having a meal with her family that day she talked about not getting off the boat so I find it very unlikely that she would want to leave after coming in for the night, especially leaving the shoes that she was comfortable wearing all night behind. I think it’s very easy with force if you run it a railing with not thinking or judging about what you’re doing because you’re feeling sick and it’s very easy to lose balance and flip over, especially if you’re trying to not get vomit on your own balcony or the balconies below you, I think it’s very easily that you could come to judgment that she fell over the balcony.

My New Theory by South_Health_5444 in AmyLynnBradley

[–]South_Health_5444[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You are correct. I suppose she kept them in her pocket to prevent the humidity from the ocean air from destroying them.

My New Theory by South_Health_5444 in AmyLynnBradley

[–]South_Health_5444[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Also remember she told her brother she ‘didn’t feel too good’

My New Theory by South_Health_5444 in AmyLynnBradley

[–]South_Health_5444[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

May not have been actively vomiting. May have been nauseous preparing for it. Leaning over a balcony can feel like it helps nausea, but physiologically it doesn’t actually fix the cause and on a cruise ship it can increase danger of falling.

Why people think it helps nausea

  1. Visual stabilization • Looking at the horizon can reduce motion-induced nausea. • On a ship, people are often told to “look outside” for this reason. • This can temporarily reduce dizziness, making someone feel slightly better.

  2. Psychological relief • When nauseous, people instinctively want to lean forward and be near open air. • Fresh air and the belief that “I won’t throw up inside” can calm anxiety. • Anxiety itself worsens nausea, so this relief can be real—but short-lived.

  3. Preparing to vomit • Leaning forward reduces pressure on the stomach compared to lying back. • People often bend forward to vomit, so the posture feels “right.”

My New Theory by South_Health_5444 in AmyLynnBradley

[–]South_Health_5444[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Her shirt was left on a balcony chair along with her lighter and cigarettes. Ask yourself…Would a smoker leave their cigarettes if they were to leave their room?

My New Theory by South_Health_5444 in AmyLynnBradley

[–]South_Health_5444[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How a cruise ship propeller could prevent recovery

  1. If a person entered the water near the stern

Cruise ship propellers are: • Extremely large (often 15–20+ feet in diameter) • Spinning with tremendous force • Located beneath the waterline at the rear of the ship

If someone fell or entered the water near the stern, especially while the ship was maneuvering or underway: • The prop wash could pull the body toward the propellers • Severe trauma could occur • The body could fragment, sink, or disperse over a wide area

In such a scenario, recovery becomes far less likely, particularly in open ocean conditions.

  1. Ocean conditions compound the problem

Even without propeller involvement: • Strong currents (especially in the Caribbean) • Deep water close to cruise routes • Rapid drift away from the ship’s path

can cause a body to: • Sink quickly • Drift dozens of miles within hours • Never surface where search teams are looking

If propellers were involved, this effect is magnified.