It's my Life Day - 3 year anniversary

748rpilot

Gunny Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Supporter
Mar 18, 2023
738
1,427
USA
I haven't really planned or thought this out, so it's all pretty off-the-cuff and I'm not sure where it's going. It's an important day for me, though, and it's not really something I talk about, or get to talk about, with most people in real life. Most people I know aside from my close friends, don't even know about it. And I guess I just want to talk about it a bit.

June 11th, 2022 was a Saturday, I was finishing up some work before going to meet my realtor at a few house showings. I'd been looking at houses for awhile, with the pandemic buying, money printing and plunging interest rates making buying progressively more difficult. It was a sunny, nice day, I remember that. I finished up what I was working on, realized I needed to meet my realtor, and since it was such a nice day, I grabbed my jacket, keys and helmet, deciding to take my BMW R1200RS. And that's the last thing I actually remember; I have a few memory fragments, pieces of seconds and poorly formed memories. The next thing I remember is coming to in the hospital the next day, or day after, I'm not exactly sure. My dad was there. I didn't know where I was, how I got there, or why I was there. I was laying flat on my back. I asked him why I was there, what happened. I remember telling him, "I'm so fucked." And then I don't remember much else for some time after that.

"Male 35 years old, helmeted single rider in high speed MVA, s.p. motorcycle vs car" is what the hospital intake form said. While I was on my way to meet the realtor, a Lexus pulled out directly in front of me from a parking lot, trying to cross two north-bound lanes to reach the two south-bound lanes. The driver told police he "never saw" me. When I say directly in front of me, I mean --directly-- in front of me. In what ended up being a lucky break for me, the driver behind me caught the entire thing on dash cam and turned it over to police.

Friday before the accident I was a strong, semi-jacked, outdoorsy type guy that loved to motorcycle, lift weights, kayak fish, had fished competitions, hike, camp, and had recently been skiing in Colorado with some good friends. I loved my feisty Brittany Spaniel more than the salt in food. I could squat 315#, bench 255# and deadlift 355# at 168 lbs and had previously overhead pressed 160# at 165 lbs body weight. And now, I was laying in a hospital bed, in the ICU, with no idea how I got there, or why.

I broke my left orbital, upper jaw, some bones in my sinuses and cheek. I broke my neck at cervical vertebrae C6, C7 in several places. I ruptured the ligament on the left side of my C-spine, and my C-spine had displaced a bit over 7mm. I had a spinal cord injury (SCI) at C5. My left distal radius was broken and badly displaced and my left ulna was displaced. I had broken my pelvis at the pubic symphysis, pelvic ring and IIRC had some separation or displacement of both sacroiliac (SI) joints. Thankfully, my pelvis did not displace. I also had a bilateral avulsion of the rectus abdominis --my abs tore off the bone. As I would hear repeatedly, I was absolutely lucky to be alive; I was told by more than one doctor and ICU nurse that most patient they see with my injuries don't survive them. In another bout of good luck, a prominent neurosurgeon was at the hospital and he was able to get me into emergency surgery stabilize my cervical spine anteriorly (from the front), put it back into place and relieve the pressure on my spinal cord.

Because of the broken neck and SCI, I was in a neck brace and entirely immobile. I couldn't move my legs, could barely move my arms and hands and was extremely weak. I would later learn that my dad called my oldest brother and sister and they came to the hospital as well, and, that in spite of the success of the first spine surgery, the surgeon was preparing them for the reality of caring for a quadriplegic and that it was highly likely I'd be in a chair for the rest of my life. In the next day or two, I'd have my second spine surgery to repair and stabilize the spine from the posterior (back). My memory of the first week or two is still pretty sparse from the head trauma and buckets of IV opioids, but one thing that does stand out clearly: after that second surgery when I was back in my ICU room, the surgeon came to check on me. I was half asleep and I have this thing I do where I rub my feet together to help me sleep. I was rubbing my feet together, a little bit but moving them nonetheless, when he came in and he stopped, looking at my feet and said, "oh my God, he's moving his feet." At the time, I didn't understand why this was significant, but according to this neurosurgeon, it was incredible.

A week or so later I was transferred to another hospital where my pelvis was repaired. This time only one surgery.

All in all, I spent three months in the hospital and in care facilities, recovering, rehabbing and learning to make peace with a different reality. I learned to rollover again, to sit up, feed myself and use a knife and fork, to put my socks on and get dressed, and to walk again --which is the thing people always ask about. I spent the next 9 months in day rehab and outpatient rehab for physical and occupational therapy, and had to completely relearn how to use my left hand. In the meantime, I lost my dream job that I had landed only 5 months before my accident. I still had my dog, though, and my best friend and her husband took me in for several months because I wasn't able to live on my own. And I learned a lot about myself and the human spirit.

I'm going to wrap it up here, for now, and get off this couch and get some pistol shooting in. There's so freaking much I could say on this, hell I could probably write a book on it. Maybe I'll add more to this later. But for now I need to step away. Anyway, for anyone that stayed until the end, thanks for reading my story.

If anyone has any questions about my injuries, the accident, SCI stuff, rehab, whatever, I'm pretty likely open to answering them. I recall there was another thread on here dealing with a fundraiser for a shooter that suffered an SCI and there was a decent amount of questions about it, so I'm pretty willing to share my experiences.

But right now, it's my 3rd Life Day, and I'm going to go celebrate.
 
I haven't really planned or thought this out, so it's all pretty off-the-cuff and I'm not sure where it's going. It's an important day for me, though, and it's not really something I talk about, or get to talk about, with most people in real life. Most people I know aside from my close friends, don't even know about it. And I guess I just want to talk about it a bit.

June 11th, 2022 was a Saturday, I was finishing up some work before going to meet my realtor at a few house showings. I'd been looking at houses for awhile, with the pandemic buying, money printing and plunging interest rates making buying progressively more difficult. It was a sunny, nice day, I remember that. I finished up what I was working on, realized I needed to meet my realtor, and since it was such a nice day, I grabbed my jacket, keys and helmet, deciding to take my BMW R1200RS. And that's the last thing I actually remember; I have a few memory fragments, pieces of seconds and poorly formed memories. The next thing I remember is coming to in the hospital the next day, or day after, I'm not exactly sure. My dad was there. I didn't know where I was, how I got there, or why I was there. I was laying flat on my back. I asked him why I was there, what happened. I remember telling him, "I'm so fucked." And then I don't remember much else for some time after that.

"Male 35 years old, helmeted single rider in high speed MVA, s.p. motorcycle vs car" is what the hospital intake form said. While I was on my way to meet the realtor, a Lexus pulled out directly in front of me from a parking lot, trying to cross two north-bound lanes to reach the two south-bound lanes. The driver told police he "never saw" me. When I say directly in front of me, I mean --directly-- in front of me. In what ended up being a lucky break for me, the driver behind me caught the entire thing on dash cam and turned it over to police.

Friday before the accident I was a strong, semi-jacked, outdoorsy type guy that loved to motorcycle, lift weights, kayak fish, had fished competitions, hike, camp, and had recently been skiing in Colorado with some good friends. I loved my feisty Brittany Spaniel more than the salt in food. I could squat 315#, bench 255# and deadlift 355# at 168 lbs and had previously overhead pressed 160# at 165 lbs body weight. And now, I was laying in a hospital bed, in the ICU, with no idea how I got there, or why.

I broke my left orbital, upper jaw, some bones in my sinuses and cheek. I broke my neck at cervical vertebrae C6, C7 in several places. I ruptured the ligament on the left side of my C-spine, and my C-spine had displaced a bit over 7mm. I had a spinal cord injury (SCI) at C5. My left distal radius was broken and badly displaced and my left ulna was displaced. I had broken my pelvis at the pubic symphysis, pelvic ring and IIRC had some separation or displacement of both sacroiliac (SI) joints. Thankfully, my pelvis did not displace. I also had a bilateral avulsion of the rectus abdominis --my abs tore off the bone. As I would hear repeatedly, I was absolutely lucky to be alive; I was told by more than one doctor and ICU nurse that most patient they see with my injuries don't survive them. In another bout of good luck, a prominent neurosurgeon was at the hospital and he was able to get me into emergency surgery stabilize my cervical spine anteriorly (from the front), put it back into place and relieve the pressure on my spinal cord.

Because of the broken neck and SCI, I was in a neck brace and entirely immobile. I couldn't move my legs, could barely move my arms and hands and was extremely weak. I would later learn that my dad called my oldest brother and sister and they came to the hospital as well, and, that in spite of the success of the first spine surgery, the surgeon was preparing them for the reality of caring for a quadriplegic and that it was highly likely I'd be in a chair for the rest of my life. In the next day or two, I'd have my second spine surgery to repair and stabilize the spine from the posterior (back). My memory of the first week or two is still pretty sparse from the head trauma and buckets of IV opioids, but one thing that does stand out clearly: after that second surgery when I was back in my ICU room, the surgeon came to check on me. I was half asleep and I have this thing I do where I rub my feet together to help me sleep. I was rubbing my feet together, a little bit but moving them nonetheless, when he came in and he stopped, looking at my feet and said, "oh my God, he's moving his feet." At the time, I didn't understand why this was significant, but according to this neurosurgeon, it was incredible.

A week or so later I was transferred to another hospital where my pelvis was repaired. This time only one surgery.

All in all, I spent three months in the hospital and in care facilities, recovering, rehabbing and learning to make peace with a different reality. I learned to rollover again, to sit up, feed myself and use a knife and fork, to put my socks on and get dressed, and to walk again --which is the thing people always ask about. I spent the next 9 months in day rehab and outpatient rehab for physical and occupational therapy, and had to completely relearn how to use my left hand. In the meantime, I lost my dream job that I had landed only 5 months before my accident. I still had my dog, though, and my best friend and her husband took me in for several months because I wasn't able to live on my own. And I learned a lot about myself and the human spirit.

I'm going to wrap it up here, for now, and get off this couch and get some pistol shooting in. There's so freaking much I could say on this, hell I could probably write a book on it. Maybe I'll add more to this later. But for now I need to step away. Anyway, for anyone that stayed until the end, thanks for reading my story.

If anyone has any questions about my injuries, the accident, SCI stuff, rehab, whatever, I'm pretty likely open to answering them. I recall there was another thread on here dealing with a fundraiser for a shooter that suffered an SCI and there was a decent amount of questions about it, so I'm pretty willing to share my experiences.

But right now, it's my 3rd Life Day, and I'm going to go celebrate.
Thats exactly why I sold my last scooter, wrecked.

Glad youre on the mend.
 
Damn dude good on you and your recovery. Did the lexus driver have enough insurance to cover your medical bills?

X2. So did the car driver pay for all your medical bills, what about pain and suffering, lost wages etc
Thank you 🙏🏻 So my medical insurance picked up the tab for my medical bills --about $1.3M. Even though I ended up losing my job, they kept me on payroll through the end of the year so that I could have health insurance. They also covered 100% of our premiums. I was left with the deductible and out of pocket maximum, which over two years, ended up costing me roughly $25k out of pocket.

As far as accident settlement, I learned that, at least in this state, you have two options: a) collect from the other driver's car insurance medical coverage, or b) sue them personally and try to collect a judgment. The driver was in his 70s so collecting against future earnings wasn't really in the cards. There is kind of a third option where if they have an umbrella policy, you can collect on that. This driver did not, and my lawyer advised taking the insurance settlement.

I did collect on it, but it didn't even cover the lost wages for the rest of 2022 that I was out of work, let alone part of 2023 I was out of work, and I missed two bonus cycles at work. All told I missed out on a couple-or-few $100k.

Awesome story and a testament to your will to live and thrive.

I always enjoy reading “alive day” stories and hearing them from buddies that served overseas

Glad you seem to be doing well. Very happy for you. Continue to fight for more. 🙏

That’s an incredible story. God speed young man
I truly appreciate the kind words, thank you all. I learned a ton about myself in the process, which, I'm grateful for, though it cuts both ways. I learned that I was capable of doing so much more, how much I limited myself. Laying flat on your back 24 hours a day for a couple months provides one with ample time for reflection. Many of those things are permanently off the table now, but that's not to say I've given up on still doing cool shit and enjoying life.
 
I kept this as a souvenir and a reminder.
Y'all think I took a hearty bump to the head orrr......?

Please wear your helmets!!
20250611_172623.jpg
20250611_172656.jpg
20250611_172712.jpg
 
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God Bless you Brother. This reinforces the fact that I got off lucky and mildly this past Sunday . I smacked a guard rail low speed . Broken arm and partially amputated thumb . Nothing compared to you .
Glad you chose to fight your way back with God's help ..
I've played my own stunt double my whole life . Just remember . You can hurt on the sofa of you can hurt rippin life a new asshole .
In my prayers Warrior .
 
I don’t know why people don’t wear full face helmets, you can tell from the impact it saved you from some face impacts
It's not even a question that it saved my life. Even WITH the helmet, I still broke my left orbital (eye socket), left cheek bones, sinus bones, upper jaw and split my eyebrow open (if you look close you can see the blood on the helmet). The entire left side of my upper jaw and lip, from my front two teeth, was numb for months after.

100% it would have been a closed casket funeral otherwise.
 
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God Bless you Brother. This reinforces the fact that I got off lucky and mildly this past Sunday . I smacked a guard rail low speed . Broken arm and partially amputated thumb . Nothing compared to you .
Glad you chose to fight your way back with God's help ..
I've played my own stunt double my whole life . Just remember . You can hurt on the sofa of you can hurt rippin life a new asshole .
In my prayers Warrior .
Your post helped with the final decision to post about my accident. You did get lucky, and so did I. I've met good people that got SCIs from far lessor accidents than mine, but their outcomes were far more unlucky. Para and quadriplegics that won't get out of the chair. I just can't figure it, why these things turn out how they do.

"I smacked a guard rail low speed . Broken arm and partially amputated thumb . Nothing compared to you."

I personally don't like to think of it that way, in terms of a comparison. Our stories are our own. I'll quote Teddy Roosevelt:
"We cannot avoid meeting great issues. All that we can determine for ourselves is whether we shall meet them well or ill."

I hope you can meet your challenge well 🙏🏻
 
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Haven't been on a bike in a long fkng time. When I was young whether it was motocross, enduro or on the street , always wore a full face helmet. Couple wipeouts doing enduro/ motocross I was fkng thankful I was wearing a full face.
Years ago I actually came up on a bike/car accident before cops/ambulance even got on scene. Biker wasn't wearing a helmet, to say it was gruesome is an understatement. Helmets should be mandatory on motorcycles.
 
Damn, that's brutal. Glad you're still with us. Hung up the leathers myself in '17 after a few that I luckily walked away from. But had some work later on as a result of them.
 
I really like your attitude.

I sold my bike years and years ago after almost wrecking because of a cat.

A freaking cat.

I figured that was God’s way of telling me he didn’t want me on that bike.




P
 
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I haven't really planned or thought this out, so it's all pretty off-the-cuff and I'm not sure where it's going. It's an important day for me, though, and it's not really something I talk about, or get to talk about, with most people in real life. Most people I know aside from my close friends, don't even know about it. And I guess I just want to talk about it a bit.

June 11th, 2022 was a Saturday, I was finishing up some work before going to meet my realtor at a few house showings. I'd been looking at houses for awhile, with the pandemic buying, money printing and plunging interest rates making buying progressively more difficult. It was a sunny, nice day, I remember that. I finished up what I was working on, realized I needed to meet my realtor, and since it was such a nice day, I grabbed my jacket, keys and helmet, deciding to take my BMW R1200RS. And that's the last thing I actually remember; I have a few memory fragments, pieces of seconds and poorly formed memories. The next thing I remember is coming to in the hospital the next day, or day after, I'm not exactly sure. My dad was there. I didn't know where I was, how I got there, or why I was there. I was laying flat on my back. I asked him why I was there, what happened. I remember telling him, "I'm so fucked." And then I don't remember much else for some time after that.

"Male 35 years old, helmeted single rider in high speed MVA, s.p. motorcycle vs car" is what the hospital intake form said. While I was on my way to meet the realtor, a Lexus pulled out directly in front of me from a parking lot, trying to cross two north-bound lanes to reach the two south-bound lanes. The driver told police he "never saw" me. When I say directly in front of me, I mean --directly-- in front of me. In what ended up being a lucky break for me, the driver behind me caught the entire thing on dash cam and turned it over to police.

Friday before the accident I was a strong, semi-jacked, outdoorsy type guy that loved to motorcycle, lift weights, kayak fish, had fished competitions, hike, camp, and had recently been skiing in Colorado with some good friends. I loved my feisty Brittany Spaniel more than the salt in food. I could squat 315#, bench 255# and deadlift 355# at 168 lbs and had previously overhead pressed 160# at 165 lbs body weight. And now, I was laying in a hospital bed, in the ICU, with no idea how I got there, or why.

I broke my left orbital, upper jaw, some bones in my sinuses and cheek. I broke my neck at cervical vertebrae C6, C7 in several places. I ruptured the ligament on the left side of my C-spine, and my C-spine had displaced a bit over 7mm. I had a spinal cord injury (SCI) at C5. My left distal radius was broken and badly displaced and my left ulna was displaced. I had broken my pelvis at the pubic symphysis, pelvic ring and IIRC had some separation or displacement of both sacroiliac (SI) joints. Thankfully, my pelvis did not displace. I also had a bilateral avulsion of the rectus abdominis --my abs tore off the bone. As I would hear repeatedly, I was absolutely lucky to be alive; I was told by more than one doctor and ICU nurse that most patient they see with my injuries don't survive them. In another bout of good luck, a prominent neurosurgeon was at the hospital and he was able to get me into emergency surgery stabilize my cervical spine anteriorly (from the front), put it back into place and relieve the pressure on my spinal cord.

Because of the broken neck and SCI, I was in a neck brace and entirely immobile. I couldn't move my legs, could barely move my arms and hands and was extremely weak. I would later learn that my dad called my oldest brother and sister and they came to the hospital as well, and, that in spite of the success of the first spine surgery, the surgeon was preparing them for the reality of caring for a quadriplegic and that it was highly likely I'd be in a chair for the rest of my life. In the next day or two, I'd have my second spine surgery to repair and stabilize the spine from the posterior (back). My memory of the first week or two is still pretty sparse from the head trauma and buckets of IV opioids, but one thing that does stand out clearly: after that second surgery when I was back in my ICU room, the surgeon came to check on me. I was half asleep and I have this thing I do where I rub my feet together to help me sleep. I was rubbing my feet together, a little bit but moving them nonetheless, when he came in and he stopped, looking at my feet and said, "oh my God, he's moving his feet." At the time, I didn't understand why this was significant, but according to this neurosurgeon, it was incredible.

A week or so later I was transferred to another hospital where my pelvis was repaired. This time only one surgery.

All in all, I spent three months in the hospital and in care facilities, recovering, rehabbing and learning to make peace with a different reality. I learned to rollover again, to sit up, feed myself and use a knife and fork, to put my socks on and get dressed, and to walk again --which is the thing people always ask about. I spent the next 9 months in day rehab and outpatient rehab for physical and occupational therapy, and had to completely relearn how to use my left hand. In the meantime, I lost my dream job that I had landed only 5 months before my accident. I still had my dog, though, and my best friend and her husband took me in for several months because I wasn't able to live on my own. And I learned a lot about myself and the human spirit.

I'm going to wrap it up here, for now, and get off this couch and get some pistol shooting in. There's so freaking much I could say on this, hell I could probably write a book on it. Maybe I'll add more to this later. But for now I need to step away. Anyway, for anyone that stayed until the end, thanks for reading my story.

If anyone has any questions about my injuries, the accident, SCI stuff, rehab, whatever, I'm pretty likely open to answering them. I recall there was another thread on here dealing with a fundraiser for a shooter that suffered an SCI and there was a decent amount of questions about it, so I'm pretty willing to share my experiences.

But right now, it's my 3rd Life Day, and I'm going to go celebrate.
Enjoy the heck out of it brother!
 
A buddy of mine went out for a Saturday morning ride last fall.
A guy on a farm tractor on a rural road turned left right in front of him while he was doing around 50mph. He got off lucky with only bruising from his armpit to his hip and 6 broken ribs.
He also doesn’t remember much of that day.
He was fortunate that the tractor was pretty high off the ground and he slid under it.
 
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Reactions: 748rpilot
Been there, done that...........I've never was a fan of helmets............been down on the road more than once.............more than few miles in 40, years, and yes I have woken up in a hospital after a crash.........not involving another vehichle
but that will be a story for another time.........
 
I only have one question: was your bike OK?? :ROFLMAO:

Sorry, fellow rider so I couldn’t help myself. Glad you weren’t on a nice 748R when it happened, as your name might suggest… ;)

For real though, happy belated life day and glad you’re still with us!
 
Thank you for sharing this,
A positive story gives that gives me hope when I could use some.

My eldest son has been in hospital since Friday the 8th of November after a stupid kid decided to do an illegal U-turn in front of him,
his wife was 34weeks pregnant with their second child at the time.
Very severe traumatic brain injury is the worst of it, a lot of facial fractures, multiple compound jaw fractures, skull fractures & more.

Only just allowed out on day leave in the last week.
Today he has been asking to see his helmet & gear. (It is not good)

Very glad he is still here but the road ahead will be difficult.
 
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Hope you recover fully, we had a similar incident here. My Dad was still racing flat track in 2001 at 74 yo. He wound up in the wall and broke 14 bones including his pelvis in four spots. He spent some time in the ICU and he was told he probably wouldn't walk again. He was a WWII vet and you weren't going to tell him what he could or could not do. Well 30 days later he was driving and a year later he took up skydiving because it was safer. He lived to 91.
One more thing, I have his leathers and his helmet saved, the helmet is full of dried blood inside and the leathers are pretty torn up exactly the way they came off of him.

IMG_1477.jpeg
 
As a teenager, doing 70 mph on a dirt bike, I hit a deer. Miraculously only had lots of road rash.

In 2002 dad passed away in a street bike crash. I was right behind him and saw everything, i was the only one on scene for quite a few minutes.

All that to say, @748rpilot your story means a lot, and it is inspiring. Glad you survived. And thanks for sharing.
Happy third Life Day!

@Drew M thoughts and prayers for your family as you navigate a tough time. Hoping for as full a recovery as possible.
 
I haven't really planned or thought this out, so it's all pretty off-the-cuff and I'm not sure where it's going. It's an important day for me, though, and it's not really something I talk about, or get to talk about, with most people in real life. Most people I know aside from my close friends, don't even know about it. And I guess I just want to talk about it a bit.

June 11th, 2022 was a Saturday, I was finishing up some work before going to meet my realtor at a few house showings. I'd been looking at houses for awhile, with the pandemic buying, money printing and plunging interest rates making buying progressively more difficult. It was a sunny, nice day, I remember that. I finished up what I was working on, realized I needed to meet my realtor, and since it was such a nice day, I grabbed my jacket, keys and helmet, deciding to take my BMW R1200RS. And that's the last thing I actually remember; I have a few memory fragments, pieces of seconds and poorly formed memories. The next thing I remember is coming to in the hospital the next day, or day after, I'm not exactly sure. My dad was there. I didn't know where I was, how I got there, or why I was there. I was laying flat on my back. I asked him why I was there, what happened. I remember telling him, "I'm so fucked." And then I don't remember much else for some time after that.

"Male 35 years old, helmeted single rider in high speed MVA, s.p. motorcycle vs car" is what the hospital intake form said. While I was on my way to meet the realtor, a Lexus pulled out directly in front of me from a parking lot, trying to cross two north-bound lanes to reach the two south-bound lanes. The driver told police he "never saw" me. When I say directly in front of me, I mean --directly-- in front of me. In what ended up being a lucky break for me, the driver behind me caught the entire thing on dash cam and turned it over to police.

Friday before the accident I was a strong, semi-jacked, outdoorsy type guy that loved to motorcycle, lift weights, kayak fish, had fished competitions, hike, camp, and had recently been skiing in Colorado with some good friends. I loved my feisty Brittany Spaniel more than the salt in food. I could squat 315#, bench 255# and deadlift 355# at 168 lbs and had previously overhead pressed 160# at 165 lbs body weight. And now, I was laying in a hospital bed, in the ICU, with no idea how I got there, or why.

I broke my left orbital, upper jaw, some bones in my sinuses and cheek. I broke my neck at cervical vertebrae C6, C7 in several places. I ruptured the ligament on the left side of my C-spine, and my C-spine had displaced a bit over 7mm. I had a spinal cord injury (SCI) at C5. My left distal radius was broken and badly displaced and my left ulna was displaced. I had broken my pelvis at the pubic symphysis, pelvic ring and IIRC had some separation or displacement of both sacroiliac (SI) joints. Thankfully, my pelvis did not displace. I also had a bilateral avulsion of the rectus abdominis --my abs tore off the bone. As I would hear repeatedly, I was absolutely lucky to be alive; I was told by more than one doctor and ICU nurse that most patient they see with my injuries don't survive them. In another bout of good luck, a prominent neurosurgeon was at the hospital and he was able to get me into emergency surgery stabilize my cervical spine anteriorly (from the front), put it back into place and relieve the pressure on my spinal cord.

Because of the broken neck and SCI, I was in a neck brace and entirely immobile. I couldn't move my legs, could barely move my arms and hands and was extremely weak. I would later learn that my dad called my oldest brother and sister and they came to the hospital as well, and, that in spite of the success of the first spine surgery, the surgeon was preparing them for the reality of caring for a quadriplegic and that it was highly likely I'd be in a chair for the rest of my life. In the next day or two, I'd have my second spine surgery to repair and stabilize the spine from the posterior (back). My memory of the first week or two is still pretty sparse from the head trauma and buckets of IV opioids, but one thing that does stand out clearly: after that second surgery when I was back in my ICU room, the surgeon came to check on me. I was half asleep and I have this thing I do where I rub my feet together to help me sleep. I was rubbing my feet together, a little bit but moving them nonetheless, when he came in and he stopped, looking at my feet and said, "oh my God, he's moving his feet." At the time, I didn't understand why this was significant, but according to this neurosurgeon, it was incredible.

A week or so later I was transferred to another hospital where my pelvis was repaired. This time only one surgery.

All in all, I spent three months in the hospital and in care facilities, recovering, rehabbing and learning to make peace with a different reality. I learned to rollover again, to sit up, feed myself and use a knife and fork, to put my socks on and get dressed, and to walk again --which is the thing people always ask about. I spent the next 9 months in day rehab and outpatient rehab for physical and occupational therapy, and had to completely relearn how to use my left hand. In the meantime, I lost my dream job that I had landed only 5 months before my accident. I still had my dog, though, and my best friend and her husband took me in for several months because I wasn't able to live on my own. And I learned a lot about myself and the human spirit.

I'm going to wrap it up here, for now, and get off this couch and get some pistol shooting in. There's so freaking much I could say on this, hell I could probably write a book on it. Maybe I'll add more to this later. But for now I need to step away. Anyway, for anyone that stayed until the end, thanks for reading my story.

If anyone has any questions about my injuries, the accident, SCI stuff, rehab, whatever, I'm pretty likely open to answering them. I recall there was another thread on here dealing with a fundraiser for a shooter that suffered an SCI and there was a decent amount of questions about it, so I'm pretty willing to share my experiences.

But right now, it's my 3rd Life Day, and I'm going to go celebrate.
Wow 😳
We may be kin ?
Sounds like something that could/would happen to me. I had a motorcycle vrs car crash when I was 16. I’ll be 72 in November and I still have residuals haunting me. Knocked my 4 front teeth out , well …down to exposed nerves. I still have issues with them. We’re both lucky to be alive. I’m no cat , they have 9 lives , I’ve had 11-22 !
Good luck with rehabbing. 👍
 
Just seeing this. Congratulations for being a survivor.

Hope you had a great day. As Sirhr said, every day above ground is a good day.

Back in 1998, I was t-boned in the driver's door of my Dodge Dakota by a 20 year old drunk driver. Broken left leg just above the ankle, broken pelvis, lots of internal damage. Spent two weeks or so in critical. 9 hours of emergency surgery after I got to the hospital. Took about a year for recovery until I got a medical release to go back to work.

All that being said, it never really crossed my mind about celebrating the anniversary of my accident. It would be 27 years this October 5th.

I may have to start.

Wishing you a long and happy life.

Cheers 🍻
 
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I really like your attitude.

I sold my bike years and years ago after almost wrecking because of a cat.

A freaking cat.

I figured that was God’s way of telling me he didn’t want me on that bike.




P
This, though mine didnt involve the cat, just too much right hand and a graveled, wrong banked, country road. sold that bike wrecked.

To thee OP.

Glad your mobile, and healing. I fucked up the C2&3 in an accident when I was 5, then the 6-7 and T1-2 when I was about 10. Dr. said another little bit would have cut the spinal cord and at that level you just die From not being able to breathe. Been in level 6-7 pain for 70 years. All that long term pain definately affects you, thank God for the occasional pain med. Ive made a lot of poor life decisions because of that long term pain, it affects you at some deep levels. I know what your facing. Keep that good attitude. You've got real friends, those who took you in, and here. I just found this and it seems really appropriate here.

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I celebrate my life day and birthday on the same day.
Missed a head on on a corner by swinging wide and into a ditch and ending up wrapped around a power pole. 4 broken ribs, torn up elbow and broken tibia.
Happy 18th birthday.
To the op and others - keep smiling. It makes them wonder what you're up to now.
 
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What a story, @748rpilot! As Makinchips208 said our dad wrecked and died. He was on my Honda street bike. My brother in law died on a four wheeler from blunt force trauma after hitting a usfs gate at around 35 mph. I don’t do bikes or quads anymore. Too much trauma for my wife and my mom. I will say that stores like the op and a few others on here make one realize the fragility of life. Doesn’t take a whole lot to end it for someone. Really our bodies are quite fragile. Now I don’t say I live in fear, but at 45 I am more than a little bit aware of my mortality. Glad you survived your terrible accident and I can really respect your will to live the best life you still can.
 
So I spoke of my Dad above, as for me
I was still born and then at 49 when I had my quad bypass I died on the table and crossed over to the light and came back. That is a whole other story. I don't think three is a charm in this case. Mid 60's now and planning on 91 can't let Dad win.
 
I haven't really planned or thought this out, so it's all pretty off-the-cuff and I'm not sure where it's going. It's an important day for me, though, and it's not really something I talk about, or get to talk about, with most people in real life. Most people I know aside from my close friends, don't even know about it. And I guess I just want to talk about it a bit.

June 11th, 2022 was a Saturday, I was finishing up some work before going to meet my realtor at a few house showings. I'd been looking at houses for awhile, with the pandemic buying, money printing and plunging interest rates making buying progressively more difficult. It was a sunny, nice day, I remember that. I finished up what I was working on, realized I needed to meet my realtor, and since it was such a nice day, I grabbed my jacket, keys and helmet, deciding to take my BMW R1200RS. And that's the last thing I actually remember; I have a few memory fragments, pieces of seconds and poorly formed memories. The next thing I remember is coming to in the hospital the next day, or day after, I'm not exactly sure. My dad was there. I didn't know where I was, how I got there, or why I was there. I was laying flat on my back. I asked him why I was there, what happened. I remember telling him, "I'm so fucked." And then I don't remember much else for some time after that.

"Male 35 years old, helmeted single rider in high speed MVA, s.p. motorcycle vs car" is what the hospital intake form said. While I was on my way to meet the realtor, a Lexus pulled out directly in front of me from a parking lot, trying to cross two north-bound lanes to reach the two south-bound lanes. The driver told police he "never saw" me. When I say directly in front of me, I mean --directly-- in front of me. In what ended up being a lucky break for me, the driver behind me caught the entire thing on dash cam and turned it over to police.

Friday before the accident I was a strong, semi-jacked, outdoorsy type guy that loved to motorcycle, lift weights, kayak fish, had fished competitions, hike, camp, and had recently been skiing in Colorado with some good friends. I loved my feisty Brittany Spaniel more than the salt in food. I could squat 315#, bench 255# and deadlift 355# at 168 lbs and had previously overhead pressed 160# at 165 lbs body weight. And now, I was laying in a hospital bed, in the ICU, with no idea how I got there, or why.

I broke my left orbital, upper jaw, some bones in my sinuses and cheek. I broke my neck at cervical vertebrae C6, C7 in several places. I ruptured the ligament on the left side of my C-spine, and my C-spine had displaced a bit over 7mm. I had a spinal cord injury (SCI) at C5. My left distal radius was broken and badly displaced and my left ulna was displaced. I had broken my pelvis at the pubic symphysis, pelvic ring and IIRC had some separation or displacement of both sacroiliac (SI) joints. Thankfully, my pelvis did not displace. I also had a bilateral avulsion of the rectus abdominis --my abs tore off the bone. As I would hear repeatedly, I was absolutely lucky to be alive; I was told by more than one doctor and ICU nurse that most patient they see with my injuries don't survive them. In another bout of good luck, a prominent neurosurgeon was at the hospital and he was able to get me into emergency surgery stabilize my cervical spine anteriorly (from the front), put it back into place and relieve the pressure on my spinal cord.

Because of the broken neck and SCI, I was in a neck brace and entirely immobile. I couldn't move my legs, could barely move my arms and hands and was extremely weak. I would later learn that my dad called my oldest brother and sister and they came to the hospital as well, and, that in spite of the success of the first spine surgery, the surgeon was preparing them for the reality of caring for a quadriplegic and that it was highly likely I'd be in a chair for the rest of my life. In the next day or two, I'd have my second spine surgery to repair and stabilize the spine from the posterior (back). My memory of the first week or two is still pretty sparse from the head trauma and buckets of IV opioids, but one thing that does stand out clearly: after that second surgery when I was back in my ICU room, the surgeon came to check on me. I was half asleep and I have this thing I do where I rub my feet together to help me sleep. I was rubbing my feet together, a little bit but moving them nonetheless, when he came in and he stopped, looking at my feet and said, "oh my God, he's moving his feet." At the time, I didn't understand why this was significant, but according to this neurosurgeon, it was incredible.

A week or so later I was transferred to another hospital where my pelvis was repaired. This time only one surgery.

All in all, I spent three months in the hospital and in care facilities, recovering, rehabbing and learning to make peace with a different reality. I learned to rollover again, to sit up, feed myself and use a knife and fork, to put my socks on and get dressed, and to walk again --which is the thing people always ask about. I spent the next 9 months in day rehab and outpatient rehab for physical and occupational therapy, and had to completely relearn how to use my left hand. In the meantime, I lost my dream job that I had landed only 5 months before my accident. I still had my dog, though, and my best friend and her husband took me in for several months because I wasn't able to live on my own. And I learned a lot about myself and the human spirit.

I'm going to wrap it up here, for now, and get off this couch and get some pistol shooting in. There's so freaking much I could say on this, hell I could probably write a book on it. Maybe I'll add more to this later. But for now I need to step away. Anyway, for anyone that stayed until the end, thanks for reading my story.

If anyone has any questions about my injuries, the accident, SCI stuff, rehab, whatever, I'm pretty likely open to answering them. I recall there was another thread on here dealing with a fundraiser for a shooter that suffered an SCI and there was a decent amount of questions about it, so I'm pretty willing to share my experiences.

But right now, it's my 3rd Life Day, and I'm going to go celebrate.
I've been through one of those. On July 4th, 1985, I was coming home from a party north of Houston in my 4WD vehicle. It was late at night, and I was doing the speed limit (70mph). The next thing I remember, I woke up on the side of the road with parked emergency vehicles and people standing around. I sat up, supporting myself on one elbow, and heard someone say: "Hey, this guy's alive!" Several people and an EMT came over and convinced me to lie still until they could check me out. I spent a week in the hospital while they decided whether or not to remove one of my kidneys. I had many broken ribs, damaged knee, concussion, and broken elbow. I was also bruised from head to toe. The carload of four teenagers that ran a stop sign and T-bone crashed me weren't so lucky. The driver lived.

My 4WD looked like it went through a crusher. At some point in the rolling and bouncing, I was thrown out. Although I wasn't as injured as you, I wonder how or why I lived. Congratulations to you for surviving. If you ever figure out why people like us are given another chance, please let me know, and I will do the same. It haunts me.
 
If you ever figure out why people like us are given another chance, please let me know, and I will do the same. It haunts me.
I've been through a couple of those.

Some would say "God protected you." Nothing against God but I cant buy that one, why didnt he protect the kids in the car?

As far as I can determine it, its just fucking pure chance. You roll the dice sometimes you win, sometimes you lose. Sometimes God may protect you but I think thats way over used.
 
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