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G'Day,
Thoroughly enjoying the writing and fantastic canonical referencing in this show, and finding it very witty and well done. However, there is one small issue that annoys me, the pulse taking at the wrist:
"I took your pulse. Elevated. Pupils dilated. I imagine John Watson thinks love’s a mystery to me, but the chemistry is incredibly simple and very disruptive.." A Scandal in Belgravia
.. and, of course, when Sherlock lies on the pavement.
Possible connection - ball - fall - no pulse..
The magician asks a spectator to feel his pulse and count with it. After a couple of seconds the magician's pulse stops. At the magicians command it slowly begins to start again.
The secret for this tricks is very simple. All you need is a tennis ball. That's right only a tennis ball will create one of the most baffling tricks ever.
What you need to do is simple. Place the tennis ball under your armpit. When you want your pulse to stop (in your wrist) gently squeeze it.
However, I am still not quite clear why both Sherlock and John as an army doc check for pulse rate at the wrist? I am a response medic and it really bugs me. Or did the writers have to set this standard so the final pulse taking on the pavement was consistent, and coming up negative?
Please do share your theories!
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Hello to you, Doctor!
What an appropriate first thread for someone with your name -- a real medical (wo)man!
My thoughts: taking the pulse at the wrist isn't as exact, but it is possible, right? I mean, Sherlock would have been hard-pressed to get his hands on Irene's throat without tipping her off about what he was doing.
As for the Fall, there is another responder next to Sherlock who is taking the pulse at the neck... it seemed to me, from that scene, that John did it from the wrist because the neck was already "occupied."
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For Sherlock, I think the wrist was easiest to check without being obvious.
For John, the "ER doc" had his hand on the carotid. And John was being held back. He grabbed the closest available pulse location.
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I like your argument(s). However, after flailing one arms to stablise a rather rapid descent - could a ball really cut off the raised pulse so quickly?
I've been known to 'check out' MacGyver scenes but this one goes too far for any reenactment ;) as indeed did many MacGyver tricks!
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Notice how Sherlock conveniently allowed his hand to flop in front of John, knowing that his friend would pick it up to take his pulse...also knowing that one of his assistants would be there to remove him seconds later and pull him back...It was all pre-planned.
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The Doctor wrote:
I like your argument(s). However, after flailing one arms to stablise a rather rapid descent - could a ball really cut off the raised pulse so quickly?
I've been known to 'check out' MacGyver scenes but this one goes too far for any reenactment ;) as indeed did many MacGyver tricks!
A more apt question would be, where was the ball on the way down?
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I guess he could've used a ball to stop his pulse, but I don't think so. Tho he would've had to use something (if indeed, the body was Sherlock's) cos falling from a height like that, there would be lots of adrenaline running through your system and your heart would be beating a million miles an hour.
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Was John taking Sherlocks pulse, or just grabbing at whatever part of his friend he could reach the way he was being restrained.
(oddly, I have a large pulsing artery visible on my forearm. I don't have to feel my pulse, just look at it).
Last edited by butterfly grl (June 20, 2013 1:28 am)
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butterfly grl wrote:
Was John taking Sherlocks pulse, or just grabbing at whatever part of his friend he could reach the way he was being restrained.
Exactly. The other "doctor" had his fingers on Sherlock's carotid artery, preventing John (who would have checked there first) from being able to do so. The people gave him a couple of seconds to "check" the radial pulse, the pulled him away. After that, the shock of what happened pretty much takes John over (it would most people).
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I just wonder: If you are upset yourself (John), is it even possible for you to check someone else's (Sherlock's) pulse properly? Hm.....
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Mattlocked wrote:
I just wonder: If you are upset yourself (John), is it even possible for you to check someone else's (Sherlock's) pulse properly? Hm.....
I doubt it, You have to feel gently for a pulse. He was hanging on for dear life.
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I don't particularly like the ball-stopping-the-pulse theory. For one, where would the ball be when Sherlock is falling? Becuase if you have the ball-stopping-the-pulse theory, then the body falling is definitely Sherlock's. The ball most likely would not stay in place while he was falling, and we don't see him put it into place when he is lying on the ground. Also, that theory (to me) just doesn't seem very Sherlock? I don't know, it could be right, but I don't know...
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The ball could be anywhere - in his pocket, in the hands of his helpers on the ground.
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If he used a look-alike body on the ground, Sherlock would have a few seconds to get ready and switch out before John could get over to him. Put the ball under the arm that is easiest for John to grab, and have someone else with his fingers already on Sherlock's carotid artery so that John can't check it. Easy
But you can see as Sherlock leaves the lab, he pockets the ball in his suit jacket (super slo-mo on a Blu-ray will show it).
Last edited by sj4iy (June 24, 2013 12:14 pm)
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For me, feeling a pulse is not easy on the wrist. You have to have your fingers in just the right place to feel anything, and I don't think John did. Plus, he was in shock. He could only think about what he'd just seen and probably couldn't focus.
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To me, John felt the body in order to tell the audience that it couldn't be a dummy that fell. John would have been able to tell the difference between flesh and prosthetic.
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kittykat wrote:
For me, feeling a pulse is not easy on the wrist. You have to have your fingers in just the right place to feel anything, and I don't think John did. Plus, he was in shock. He could only think about what he'd just seen and probably couldn't focus.
John has it on roughly the right spot, but people are yanking his hand back. It's mostly psychological anyway, though. He thinks his friend is dead, which is what Sherlock was going for.