Many people have a phobia of elevators and there is nothing worse than being stuck in one. Some fear it because of a traumatic experience, and many times the phobia is related to the fear of closed spaces. For some, the fear is ingrained, because they are afraid of him because his relatives or friends have had a bad experience with him and because of the feeling of empathy they share the distress. If only about 10 percent of people experience this, the accident never rests and if, for example, the supporting steel cable breaks or the braking mechanism of the cabin breaks, we all need to know how to survive a free fall with an elevator.
Those who have phobia of elevators in it, they can experience a panic attack, and each individual tries to manage the distress in his own way. The best "therapy" is clear stairs. Although most of us do not encounter this, we can still panic in the elevator if, for example, the supporting steel rope breaks or if the brake system fails. That's when it's good to know how to do that elevator fall we survive.
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Yelling sure doesn't help, it works, yes we survive the free fall with the elevator is that we do not have direct contact of our feet with the ground or that we succeed between the ground and our body accumulate as many things as possible. The more of them there are (that is, the more "gap" there is between you and the floor), the more we will be mitigated the impact force and thus, in the worst case scenario, take her away with external injuries, but not with internal organ injuries, which in such cases is usually fatal. More about this in the video.