Ashley Summers: 35-year-old Indiana woman dies suddenly and unexpectedly; mainstream media debut “drinking too much water” as the #ABV excuse

TheCOVIDBlog.com
August 28, 2023

Ashley Summers.

LAFAYETTE, INDIANA — A 35-year-old wife and mother-of-2 is dead; and mainstream media have convinced the masses that she died from drinking too much water.

The U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine recommends that the average adult man drink 125 ounces (3.7 liters) of water per day. That’s just under one gallon. The average woman should drink 2.7 liters (91 ounces) of water per day.

The typical plastic bottle of water in the U.S. is 16.9 ounces, or 500 mL. That means you must drink eight bottles of water per day to hit one gallon. This blogger easily downs four bottles of water (about 68 ounces) daily during the typical two-hour workout.

We’ll circle back to Mrs. Summers in a bit.

What is water intoxication?

Water intoxication is a real medical phenomenon. But the amounts of water one must drink to die of water intoxication are extreme. A 2003 case study published in the Journal of Clinical Pathology chronicled a 64-year-old woman who drank “30-40 glasses of water” before going to bed. The general consensus is that a standard glass of water contains eight ounces (.25 liters). The woman drank upwards of 320 ounces, or about 2.5 gallons (9.4 liters), of water in a very short time period.

She vomited up some of it before going to sleep, according to the case study. The woman died in her sleep. The cause of death was hyponatraemia – when sodium concentration is abnormally low in the blood. Theoretically, based on the foregoing, if she ate a few salty potato chips, french fries, or unhealthy sugary sports drinks, she’d probably still be alive despite drinking enough water to drown herself.

The case of Zyrees Oliver is another example of the extremes necessary to die from drinking too much water.

The 17-year-old Georgia football player (pictured above) drank four gallons of water and Gatorade after a practice session. He collapsed later that evening at home and died six days later, on August 11, 2014. In other words, despite drinking enough fluid to fill two Honda Accord radiators, Zyrees lived for six days until he died. The cause of death was brain damage.

Some of the other cases of water intoxication death were due to deliberate stupidity.

Ms. Jennifer Strange (pictured above) was a 28-year-old Rancho Cordova, California woman who died on January 12, 2007. She participated in a water drinking contest sponsored by a radio station. The winner received a Nintendo Wii.

Ms. Strange placed second (and won two tickets to a Justin Timberlake concert), after reportedly drinking two gallons (7.6 liters) of water in less than 45 minutes. She died five hours later from brain swelling. The radio station ended up paying a $16.5 million wrongful death judgment to her family.

Mr. Matthew Carrington (pictured above) was a 21-year-old Chico State University (California) student. He died on February 2, 2005 as a result of a fraternity hazing ritual where he was forced to drink at least five gallons of water in less than 90 minutes. The same ritual killed a State University of New York student in March 2003.

We could keep going with this. But you get the picture.

What about alcohol?

Now let’s talk about America’s favorite liquids. Beer, wine and whiskey are all diuretics, meaning they cause you to pee a lot and become dehydrated fast. Thus drinking alcohol not only chemically intoxicates you, but also dehydrates you simultaneously.

The general consensus is that a 0.40 blood alcohol level (BAL) is the danger zone for alcohol poisoning. But for the average person to get to that point, they’d have to drink 25 cans/bottles beers, five bottles of wine, or a bottle and a half of rum in a couple hours to die. Most people passed out before reaching that point. If alcohol poisoning was a common thing, Generation X kids would have dropped dead in droves.

This blogger got an OWI (the Iowa equivalent of a DUI) in the late-1990s. He had a 0.31 BAL. The last thing this blogger remembers from that night was being at a college party, drinking a bottle of Boone’s Strawberry Hill, then bonging four beers all at once. This was fairly typical back then for teenagers and college kids. For those unaware, this is a beer bong (but a single beer one).

The next memory was waking up in jail. If liquid intoxication was that easy to achieve, this blogger and all of his friends would have died in their teens or early 20s. Fast forward to July 2023.

“She never woke up again”

We want to be clear in that there is no definitive evidence that Mrs. Summers received the injections. Indiana also has the fifth-lowest vaccination rate in the country, with only 64% of its residents being at least single-vaxxed.

The state, however, opened vaccination to child care workers on March 3, 2021, the same priority as teachers and other school staff. Mrs. Summers has been a daycare worker for most of her adult life. Further, with #ABV deaths like “happy heart syndrome,” “long QT syndrome,” and “touching ground soil causes heart attacks” (and large numbers of people buying this crap), every death during The Great Reset must be carefully scrutinized.

Mrs. Summers and her family were at Lake Freeman near Monticello, Indiana for the Fourth of July holiday. They were out on a boat from July 1 to July 4. But on the afternoon of July 4, Mrs. Summers felt “lightheaded and had a headache.” Her “head was spinning” and “she felt dizzy.” Mrs. Summers started feeling “dehydrated,” so she drank “four bottles of water” in 20 minutes.

RELATED: Sara Stickles: 28-year-old suffers ruptured brain aneurysm, dead five days after second Pfizer mRNA shot (February 12, 2021)

 

The family made it home from the lake. But Mrs. Summers collapsed after getting out of the car in the garage. She was rushed to a nearby hospital, but pronounced dead on July 6. Mrs. Summers was brain dead upon collapse. Doctors blamed “water intoxication” and the family went along with it.

Now the family wants to “raise awareness” about water intoxication.

Critical thinking is crucial in 2023

Mrs. Summers reportedly died of water intoxication after drinking four bottles of water, or around 67 ounces (about a half gallon), in 20 minutes. The average amount of water consumed in the four water intoxication deaths we chronicled at the beginning of this article is 3.4 gallons, with all of said cases happening in less than 90 minutes. The lowest amount to death was two gallons of water.

Even if Mrs. Summers kept her pace of four bottles of water per 20 minutes, that would have only been 1.5 gallons in an hour, still a half gallon less than the lowest threshold above. Again, many kids bong 48 ounces of beer (a dehydrating liquid) all at once. One death from bonging alcohol was in New Zealand, when a kid continually bonged liquor and beer as people kept pouring it in the funnel. Note that bonging beer is stupid. Bonging liquor is on the same level of stupidity as receiving mRNA injections.

Ms. Martina Greco was a 27-year-old physical therapist from Italy. She suddenly, out of nowhere, suffered an excruciating headache. She died from a ruptured brain aneurysm less than an hour later, on September 11, 2022.

Ms. Sara Stickles, of Wisconsin, suffered severe headaches five days after her second Pfizer mRNA injection. Doctors diagnosed her with a ruptured brain aneurysm. She died on February 10, 2021, nine days after the injection.

Ms. Anne VanGeest, of Michigan, suffered headaches everyday after her April 8, 2021 Johnson & Johnson viral vector DNA injection. She died from a ruptured brain aneurysm on April 19, 2021.

Mrs. Summers, on the other hand, suddenly got sick, had a severe headache, was lightheaded, then collapsed and died…of “water intoxication.” The worst part is that millions of people are now trying to convince themselves that drinking water is dangerous because mainstream media said so.

The general consensus is that humans can survive no longer than five days, in ideal conditions, without water. That time period shortens significantly as the temperatures rises. Hypothermia will kill you before dehydration when the temperature is below zero (-17 Celsius). Further, anywhere from 60% to 70% of the human body is water.

The powers-that-be (“TPTB”) want you dead or spending money in their medical industrial complex. We’ve now reached the point of The Great Reset where TPTB have turned water, the most vital element to human survival, into a fearmongering campaign. Warmongers and academics call water “the new oil.” Humans can live for over a month without food. Famine is typically ushered in by drought. Water is more powerful than bombs and missiles in the war arena.

This blogger challenges everyone reading this article to drink one gallon of water per day for 30 days. You will definitely notice positive changes in your body, your skin and your mood, since most people don’t drink near as much water as they need to. TPTB want you taking experiment gene therapies, but discourage drinking water. Those still listening to mainstream media and doctors are already dead.

Stay vigilant and protect your friends and loved ones.

 

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Indomitable
Indomitable
7 months ago

I had a roommate who drank 3 gallons of water a day for 2 weeks when he started a new workout program, on the theory it would help with weight loss and reduce water retention because you were signalling to your body that it was always going to have plenty of water, so it did not have to retain it.
He did not complain of any ill effects, aside from not being fun forcing himself to ingest that much water. He did actually trim down some too, I will admit.

Dslayer298
7 months ago

I purposefully drink 1 gallon of filtered water per day-in addition to any other liquids consumed daily.

Each morning, after my walk, I drink 1/2 gallon in 15-20 minutes tops just to get half of it out of the way.

I have been doing this for a long time and never even feel bad-much less die!!

WPTam
WPTam
7 months ago

So, no one reasons that it seems like she was feeling headachy and dizzy before she began her 20-minute water binge? Was it too much heat? She was young. I can’t believe the family easily accepts too much water as a C.O.D.

Auntie Vyris®
Auntie Vyris®
7 months ago

I wonder how many posts fingering the injections, were deleted in the threads referring to Mrs. Summers’ untimely passing. When I read these threads they often feel like 80% bots. “How terrible!”, “Oh that’s just awful!”, “I’m so sorry!”, etc., with none of the comments pointing out the jabs.

Jesus is my vaccine
Jesus is my vaccine
7 months ago
Reply to  Auntie Vyris®

They do not want to hear about the jabs. They are stubborn and ignorant

Annie
Annie
7 months ago
Reply to  Auntie Vyris®

Probably not as many as you think. The covidians seem to congregate together. And now as word is slowly filtering out about the jabs and it is not so “safe or effective,” they are closing ranks. Social media has these vapid types always ready to sympathize and virtue signal each other. Doesn’t go much farther than that. I am so glad I gave it up in 2016.

Jack Sparrow
Jack Sparrow
7 months ago

This poor girl was probably experienced an aneurysm and tried drinking water because she felt dehydrated. So her problem clearly started before drinking any water. It also appears obvious that one or two bottles and she was not feeling any better.I am kind of surprised that climate change was not blamed. I wonder if she was also having her period which could cause some dehydration and many women have suferred from heavier bleeding since the shots.

Clown World
Clown World
7 months ago

The sheep accept all possible reasons for COVID, yet when it comes to the COVID vaccine, they turn a blind eye. “Foolish conspiracy theorists. It can’t possibly be!” They then blame the stupidest of reasons for their debilitating health condition. One day it’s climate change, even though plants need carbon dioxide to make oxygen. Now, they think drinking too much water is the problem.

Honestly, they deserve their fate at this point. If all these deaths, strokes and turbo cancers can’t wake them up, what else will? Does hell need to open up from the ground for them to see the truth? That might be the foreseeable future as long as they continue in their delusion.

Thomas
Thomas
7 months ago

I half jokingly said to someone that if so-called “health experts” were to state that water has been discovered to be toxic then great deals of people would be scared to drink it. Looks like I was almost right, sadly enough. I bet also if they were to claim that water can be dangerous but cola (which is actually toxic, whether with sugar or with artificial sweeteners) is perfectly safe in large amounts, many would buy that as well. Just look how many believe their lies that toxic “vegetable” sees oils, like canola and sunflower, is healthy while healthy fats like coconut oil and lard is bad for you.

KarlM Alias
7 months ago
Reply to  Thomas

Unfortunately, much of the water (esp. US) is poisonous. Many states still add fluoride/chlorine – together with all the trace poisons already present.

Netters
7 months ago

I will take the challenge of one gallon of water per day for 30 days. I do already drink plenty of water, but I never add it up. I take 2 or 3 containers of water from my home to work each day. My home sink has a reverse-osmosis system for the drinking water. Each container holds 20 oz, so I will add it up. I had known long ago that drinking water is always good for your health. I saw a small article about Ashley and I knew it was bogus and #ABV. People need to wise up to this type of propaganda by TPTB!

Honey Bee
Honey Bee
7 months ago

My grandma was always telling me to drink a lot of water. She was born in 1911 and lived to be 87 years old and she still had great skin. I didn’t drink it like I should have when I was younger. I really like it now. It’s another lie, trying to make people fearful. They will get sick if they stop drinking it. I’m sure that’s their plan.

freefall
freefall
7 months ago

Yep. And Bronny James has a congenital heart defect, vaccines are safe and effective, most big weather disasters are natural, the war in Ukraine is for freedom and democracy, smart cities lead to a fulfilling life and supporting one psychopathic politician will save you from another.

Lonnie Gunn
Lonnie Gunn
7 months ago
Reply to  freefall

Wow, you really drank ALL the Kool-Aid that the government is selling. If it were water you’d be dead. 🙂

Bubbles
Bubbles
7 months ago
Reply to  Lonnie Gunn

A little slow on the uptake, eh? Sarcasm and irony eludes you, Lonnie! ????

Last edited 7 months ago by Bubbles
KarlM Alias
7 months ago

It is known that in the elderly the thirst impulse can be misinterpreted as hunger. So if you are a bit older, and always feeling hungry, try drinking some more (distilled) water.

professional student
professional student
7 months ago
Reply to  KarlM Alias

Purified filtered water is better than distilled,

Fiji
Fiji
7 months ago

I reached for the big bottle of water last week but stopped myself in time, didn’t want to get a pulmonary embolism.

Bill
Bill
7 months ago

Vax heads all need glass belly buttons so they can see where they are going.

Hmm
Hmm
7 months ago

I went on Twitter just to randomly search The Collective Mind; using “vaccine died” as the words for my search.
Then I read many many Tweets over the last 24 hours.
I would say 14 out of 15 people were pro-vaccine (how wonderful they are!).
These are the naked facts: You cannot fix stupid and you will not fix stupid and you cannot fix crazy.
The people are under what I call a mental block; plenty of other horribly damaging societal insanity operates successfully under that very same fail-safe dyamic.

Boss Hoggman
Boss Hoggman
7 months ago

I got very dehydrated back in the late 80’s in my first ever fulltime job. It was an office job and I was 16 years old. I drank way too much free coffee during the day and it eventually led to me feeling ill, headaches, tiredness, and burning pain when urinating. One GP even diagnosed me cystitis, which is generally a woman’s issue, and only after getting a second opinion was I diagnosed with dehydration. I was told to drink lots and lots of water and non caffeinated or carbonated fluid. I drank like crazy and eventually got better. Being young and impressionable I developed a bit of an obsession with water for a good while, drinking it excessively, and peeing far more than necessary. I was told by another GP not to do this because it would cause me to pee out the nutrients and vitamins my body needed. If I ate something the over consumption of water would not give my body enough time to absorb what was necessary from my food. I eventually listened and developed a far more sensible approach to staying hydrated.

At no time during this period did I ever have an issue where I got ill and could have died. No headaches, no brain swelling, nothing. Just a lot of needless bathroom visits. I’m not saying it can’t happen. We know it can, but it would need far more excessive drinking in a short period of time than that poor lady engaged in, but I guess we are deep into a time of more and more obscure and insane excuses for sudden deaths.

Jeff
Jeff
7 months ago

In a similar vein, the EPA is preventing the Berkey Water Filter company from selling their filters because they can kill viruses, like Covid, so the EPA is considering them “pesticides”. This, despite the EPA allows you to buy dangerous, persistent pesticides from any hardware store. Also, another water filter company’s whole inventory was bought up “for Maui” relief. Water is the next target of these globalists.

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