The Accident - Andrea Cooper
Transcription
The Accident - Andrea Cooper
How to Supercharge Your Brain •• ----L---l!---I I~ rd.com ucy Her passion, love, and heartbreak PAGE 160 50 Best Jokes - How Laughter Heals - What's Funny Now eel en It was just a fender benderthen a loaded truck lost control BY AND REA. COO PER USANHAYES DIDN'TWANTher husband, Tim, to go to work this bitter January morning. Six inches of snow had fallen on Charlotte, N.C., during the night and more was coming. "Call in sick," she cajoled. "Who's going to make it to work today anyway?" "Honey, I've got to go," he said. Tim, 32, was a crew chief for Medic-the Mecklenburg County EMS agency. His colleagues nicknamed Him "Black Cloud" because he always seemed to get the toughest cases. While the baby slept, Susan fixed Tim's lunch and went out to scrape the windows of the SUV. They kissed goodbye in the doorway, his six-foot frame towering over her. Tim smoothed back her blond hair and 98 smiled. Then she walked him to the car, and watched him drive away. STEERINGTHROUGHstill-unplowed roads on his way to work, Tim heard that 1-85, the main highway, was at a standstill. The temperature hovered at 21 degrees, turning traffic-compacted snow to ice. He detoured down one service road, only to find a tractor-trailer jackknifed, blocking his way. No one was hurt, so he turned back and charted another route, As he drove, he talked to Susan on the cell phone. It was one way they'd stayed connected since Kaitlyn was born. In order not to put the sixmonth-old in day care, Susan scheduled her hours as a nurse at Carolinas Medical Center when Tim was off work. They loved being parents, but PHOTOGRAP,HED BY KELLY LADUKE RD I SEPTEMBER 2003 THE ACCIDENT their time together had vanished. At the office, Tim fixed himself another cup of coffee as paramedic Bobby Suarez strolled over. They chatted for a few minutes before agreeing to take a truck out together. Given the weather, the morning was relatively quiet-no heart attacks from snow shoveling, no serious accidents. Just one patient transported to a hospital. Maybe they'd get through the day more easily than they thought. 16. Four years later, it was Tim who put his father on oxygen and started basic care in a dash to. the hospitalbut his dad died. Nothing could have saved him, Tim came to realize, but the death sealed Tim's career choice. He earned a paramedic certification in college and rose to become a crew chief in Charlotte. At the accident scene, Tim and Bobby spotted a Mercedes and a Jeep facing each other in the emergency lane. It didn't look se- Windows eXp'loded. A force rammed rious. Bobby parked SUSANSATONTHECOUCHin her pajamas, nursing the baby. A pot of soup simmered on the stove. To lessen the loneliness, she often called her cousin Stephanie, whose husband, David, was a medic and had once been Tim's partner. Stephanie knew what it Was like to wait for your husband to come off a 12-hour shift. Before picking up the phone, Susan tried the hot soup, but she had a chill she just couldn't shake. on the edge of the lane about 20 feet from the accident, and he and Tim walked toward two women who were standing outside their cars. The medics asked the women to step behind the guardrail for their protection while they waited for the highway patrol. Tim was just about to return to the ambulance to get a medical form when everyone heard the screech. Two cars had skidded on the ice TABOUT 2 P.M., Tim's radio and slammed on their brakes. But a blared: collision at 1-77 tractor-trailer behind them, traveling southbound, near exit 30. about 60 m.p.h., couldn't stop. Loaded Bobby switched on the with steel cable, the truck crashed into ambulance's lights and the first car, which hit the second. Both siren. Underneath the cars spun left while the tractor-trailer snow, an inch of ice glazed veered right. Bobby saw it looming the interstate. over the ambulance in time to yell, After all these years, Tim still felt "Move! That truck's out of control!" his adrenaline surge at a call. He had Tim pushed one WOmandown the begun as an aide to his mother, an EMT snowy embankment to get her out of in West Virginia, when he was only the way. He looked over his shoulder. 100 The ambulance windows exploded. Another thunderous crash. The parked Jeep rammed toward him. An ungodly force pressed him against the guardrail. Oh, Lord, he thought, seeing nothing but sky. I've been hit. SUSANWASGLADTOREACH Stephanie at home. Their families were close. The women chatted about the storm until a beep on David's emergency walkie-talkie interrupted them. "Hang on, I've got to get that," Stephanie said. The caller asked her to wake David. Dreading what he might find, Bobby ran toward Tim. In the 14 years he'd been with Medic, Bobby had lost two partners. Now he braced himself to see something terrible. Tim was conscious, eyes wide, body sprawled across the snow, his arms flung over his head, as if trying to balance. His right leg was missing from the knee joint down. The bone stuck straight up, stripped of flesh. His left leg was worse. The femur was broken, leaving only sharp, jagged edges. Skin and muscle tendons were him against the guardrail. Her voice was loud and insistent. Loud enough for Susan to hear. "There's been a paramedic hit," the caller said. "I think it's Tim Hayes." Stephanie dropped the telephone in shock. "Stephanie? Stephanie?" Susan yelled. And she began to shake. BOBBY WATCHED THEWRECKhappen. After battering the ambulance, the tractor-trailer hit the Mercedes. The Mercedes flew left into another lane. The tractor-trailer plowed on. Its massive cab hammered the Jeep, pushing it forward like a piston. Tim was trapped between the Jeep and the guardrail. As the SUVgrated its way forward, it dragged him 60 feet along the metal barrier. When it finally let him go, Tim flew end over end. He landed about 15feet away, behind the guardrail in the snow. peeled back to the hip, revealing his pelvic bone. . Bobby cradled his partner. "Stay still," he said. "Don't look down." Tim knew his legs were gone. He took one quick glance, and then closed his eyes. He couldn't breathe. Something was wrong with his lungs. He's going to die right here, Bobby thought. Their ambulance was demolished; driving to the hospital was impossible. Putting his arms around his friend, he thought, I can't leave him to die alone. IN THENORTHBOUND LANEa private ambulance was returning .from a trip into Charlotte. It stopped and Bobby ran for it, screaming for help. Rescuers got Tim on a backboard and carried him to the ambulance. Still conscious, Tim struggled to talk. "I think I've got a flail chest. I can't breathe," he said. 101 II RD I SEPTEMBER THE ACCIDENT 2003 A "flail chest" meant his ribs were broken, his lungs bruised. He wasn't getting enough oxygen. And he asked Bobby to bring his severed legs to the hospital, hoping they could be reattached. SUSANWASDRIVENto Carolinas Medical Center-holding Kaitlyn's hands and crying. Her mind kept winding back to early days with Tim. They had met in the most unromantic way possible. As a nursing student, Susan had gone on a "ride-along" to learn how Medic treated patients. That night was busy, ending in a double homicide. She watched Tim with fascination, He was ready every moment, starting IVs, intubating people, saving lives. She thought he was the coolest person she'd ever met. Tim was not really looking for a date; he had just gone through a painful divorce. But Susan softly crept up on him. He found himself in love SOMEONEDID. A few of Tim's colleagues were there-one told her he was upstairs in the CT unit. Susan headed for the elevator. Nurses walked with-her. Susan knew they were there to keep her out of the treatment area. She herself had kept family members outside this very room, afraid they'd see a torn body and scream or faint. But she was finding hidden strength. "I know how to go in There," Susan threatened. "I can just do it." Then she heard someone say, "They're done. They're just getting him on the stretcher." Tim was unconscious, surrounded When Tim saw Susan, he . pulied off his with herlively voice, her pretty face, her kind heart. When Susan arrived at the medical center, a security guard was waiting. He escorted her to the nice roomthe one near the ER. She knew what this room meant. This was where they told family members their loved ones were dead. A social worker from the hospital approached Susan and gently asked, "Can I take your baby?" 102 stroked his face. "Good luck in surgery," Susan said, showing a nurse's control and confidence. "We're right here and we're not going to leave. I'll be waiting for you when you come out. God will be with you." Then she let the doctors take her husband. Susan jerked back, clutching Kaitlyn tighter. "No, you cannot!" "Mrs. Hayes, have a seat," the social worker said. "I'm not stupid. I know where I am. Someone tell me what's happened to my husband!" . . by nurses and physicians. When they saw Susan, everyone grew quiet. The only sound was the bag pushing oxygen into Tim's lungs. Susan could see where the sheets covering him abruptly went flat. His legs were gone. Seeing that made it real. He looked so bad-white as snow. She leaned over him and placed Kaitlyn's hand on his cheek. The baby I RAUMA and orthopedic physicians quickly determined Tim was not a candidate for reimplantation. The medics had transported his legs from the accident scene, but the limbs were too badly mangled. Doctors operated to remove dead tissue. The next day, when his fever unexpectedly spiked, they operated again. Susan, her mother and friends waited and prayed. Tim had been given so much blood-yet his pressure was wildly out of whack. He had five surgeries in all, and doctors induced heavy sedation. He was in a coma-like state for almost eight days. Gradually, his vital signs improved, where he was and that his legs were actually gone. "They aren't there, are they?" he finally asked Susan. "No, they're not," she gently replied. Tim was quiet for a moment; then he said, "But I walked with Jesus." While unconscious, 'he'd had a vivid dream. Tim had seen his father seated on a bench, looking at him and waving. "There was a waterfall. Jesus was showing me around," Tim told her. "But then he turned and said it wasn't my time. It was time to go back." IN THE MONTHSsince the accident, the community of Charlotte, N.C., has poured out its thanks and support to Tim and Susan Hayes. Nearly $400,000 has been raised for their future medical bills. The couple say the accident has brought them closer, and also admit the adjustment is hard. "Before, we didn't have any time together. Now, we have all the time in the world, but we've lost our freedom," Susan says. If they want to go out, it oxygen mask and reached out. and the doctors woke him. Tim was groggy and confused. Waiting for this moment, Susan had lined the walls of his room with family photographs to soften the setting of IV poles, ventilator, heart monitor. When Tim saw Susan, he pulled off his oxygen mask and reached for her. Susan eased him back. It took him about half an hour to understand takes two hours to prepare and gather what they need. Susan misses little things-taking walks, having Tim open the car door for her, a hug standing up. Their days are filled with doctors' appointments, caring for the baby, and exercises to strengthen Tim's upper body and what remains of his legs. "There are times when you think, 103 RD I SEPTEMBER 2003 I don't want to do this anymore. It's too hard," Susan says. Tim works at keeping a positive outlook. Sometimes late at night he wonders how he will be able to resume a normal life. He is considering motivational speaking, starting a business and helping other amputees. Like many other people who have survived catastrophic trauma, Tim feels that "there's a reason I'm here." He's content to GUY wait and see how the plan unfolds. In May, Tim began practicing with prosthetic legs. To help him relearn balance, doctors started him on short artificial limbs that made him about five feet tall. Kaitlyn, unaccustomed to seeing her dad out of a chair, scrutinized him. Kaitlyn is now learning to walk and Tim, so grateful to be alive, will be learning right along with her. STUFF ''A study in The Washington Post says that women have better verbal skills than men. I just want to say to the authors of that study: 'Duh.' " CONAN O'BRIEN, "Late Night" (NBC) "Men do not like to admit to even momentary imperfection. My husband forgot the code to turn off the alarm. When the police came, he wouldn't admit he'd forgotten the code. fie turned himself in." RITA RUDNER "If it ain't broke, you can probably still fix it. That's my motto." TIM ALLEN LAUGHTER, THE BEST MEDICINE ()~e.st ~ ~~v% . hunting whenare U1_-o(!.~CD Dave.keels o~er. JOE AND DAVE v~ Frantic, Joe dials 911 ~.,. on his cell phone and .13 blurts, "My friend just dropped dead! What should I do?" A soothing voice at the other end says, "Don't worry, I can help. First, let's make sure he's really dead." After a brief silence the operator hears a shot ring out. Then Joe comes back to the phone. "Okay," he says nervously to the operator. "What do I do next?" a rabbi, a lawyer A and a doctor walk into a bar. PRIEST, A NUN, The bartender takes one look at them and says, "What is this, a joke?" T guins breaks downwithon 127penthe highHE TRUCK FILLED RD CHALLENGE ANSWERS If you haven't gotten to page 208 yet, don't peek! Here are the answers to those vexing visuals: Squashed Square: The sides are all perfectly straight. The circles trick your eye into thinking the sides of the square bend. Checkerboard Rugs: Both rugs are exactly the same size. But your brain locks onto the long curved side of the first rug and compares it to the short curved side of the other. Hidden Rope Trick: If you guessed the top one, you're wrong. Put a ruler to it and see for yourself. This illusion wouldn't work if the ropes were horizontal or vertical. It's the slant that fools the eye. Top Hat: The height and width are actually the same size. When perpendicular lines of the same length meet-and one is horizontal, the other vertical-the "height" will always look longer. way. The trucker flags down a car and asks the driver to take the penguins to the zoo. The driver agrees, and the penguins pile into the car. A few hours later, his vehicle is repaired, so the trucker goes to the zoo to make sure the 127penguins arrived safely. But at the zoo, there's no sign of the 127 penguins or the driver. Worried, he jumps into his truck and drives around town, finally spotting the 1011 ILLUSTRATED BY P.S. MUELLER driver and the 127 penguins walking down the street. "I thought I told you to take those 127 penguins to the zoo!" he yells. "I did," replies the driver. "I had a little money left over, so I thought I'd take them to a movie." 45-day diet. It's going Igreat. onI'veaalready lost 30 days. WENT D BACK from the auto shop, John said to his buddy Ken, "I'm turning now. See if the blinker's working." "Sure," said Ken, as he rolled down the window and poked his head out. "Yep, it's working," he reported. "Wait, no, it isn't. Yes, it is. No, it isn't. Yes, it is.... " RIVING [L~5IorJ I®