Thank you for the explanation! I have been keen to experiment with a small amount, and now that I know it is not as dangerous as I had read before, I'll be happy to give it a try. Keep up the good work!
It does metabolise faster, but that doesn't change the amount of alcohol available for absorption. The cases where people have died involved large quantities of high-proof spirits and even then such incidents are rare. According to the doctor I discussed this with most recently, the main risk is that it might disrupt the gut flora. You can find the full discussion on fetlife in my writings. My username there is damnedhorse. It is not without risk, but this is the case with all fetish play. Under the circumstances, the risk is acceptable.
Hi, thank you for your comment. I don't have any scientific publication to prove the validity of my comment. It raises from an article I have read stating that inserting alcohol via the colon is dangerous, because it bypasses the liver and gets directly to the blood system. I think it even stated that some people had died to that. But I am happy to stand corrected if that is not the case.
I normally limit it to a single glass. Ongoing consent is crucial to everything I do. While I want her to relax a bit, I would never want her judgement impaired nor for her to struggle to communicate. Also, @jukkar is partially correct - it is the volume and the concentration of alcohol that causes problems. This is why I do not use spirits, only beer and wine. If I ever do use spirits, they will be heavily diluted.
Okay makes sense. And I imagine she can get pretty drunk fast with the amount of wine you use? How much wine did she get and how would you judge her drunk level? I like drunk women BTW, a lot less reluctance and self control, and my wife gets the best orgasms when she has been drinking
Can you provide your medical credentials and/or cite reputable, convincing sources in support of this assertion, please? If you look on my fetlife account (damnedhorse), I wrote an analysis in conjunction with a doctor regarding the safety ('Alcohol enema analysis') and we discussed - but never followed through - publishing a peer-reviewed article in a Gastroenterology journal.