Drowning is a horrible way to die, any death where your last moments are in involuntary terror can be ruled out as peaceful. How you can tell someone drowned is because they have water deep in their lungs, instincts overruling the logical part of the brain forcing a breath. The brain then overreacts to something foreign in the lungs, sending them into gasping spasms, adrenaline gets dumped into the blood making yourself hyper aware you are going to die. You might suffer from shock or even have a heart attack, but every brain cell will be screaming before they silence forever.
Actually guest...
Once the water gets into your lungs, your body goes into shock. Your brain stops receiving/processing pain signals very quickly and the shock does something which releases some chemical which makes you euphoric. So you're aware you're gonna die before you inhale the water and that's the terrifying part, but once the water gets into your lungs it's a massive tripfest to death.
I've seen drowning people pulled from the water with brain damage if they're lucky, but sometimes they just didn't make it. They all had the look of pure terror on their face and didn't even realise they were out of the water, they were in such panic (the conscious ones). Shock sets in to protect the brain, but if you survive, you will be traumaticly scarred. Not one would call it "a massive tripfest". Yes, most were suicidal, but not even wanting to die will make a drowning death less horrifying.
Working on a phone isn't that easy. It's not hard, but if you're gonna criticize at least realize that typing on a phone is a slight pain, and often we're doing it really fast because of whatever going on in real life so we don't have time to bother checking if we actually did hit that caps button.
Once the water gets into your lungs, your body goes into shock. Your brain stops receiving/processing pain signals very quickly and the shock does something which releases some chemical which makes you euphoric. So you're aware you're gonna die before you inhale the water and that's the terrifying part, but once the water gets into your lungs it's a massive tripfest to death.
The joke
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Your head