So I Just Saved A Life. Have You?

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Boggelz

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Aug 28, 2011
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I work as a lifeguard, and today there was a lot of rowdy kids. At our pool we have a swinging rope into the deep end. When I was watching I noticed a girl struggling to get her head up, after a few seconds i jumped in and pulled her out. She's fine now, but it was my first experience with actually saving someone. When I got the job it seemed all very distant to me. I know I was just doing my job but it felt really good to be able to say I saved someone.

So Escapist, do you have any stories of saving a life(lives)?
 

Laser Priest

A Magpie Among Crows
Mar 24, 2011
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No, but I have plenty of ending them.

And isn't that what really matters at the end of the day?
 

Akytalusia

New member
Nov 11, 2010
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i have. he was grateful and understood what happened, but i didn't make a big deal out of it. just the right person in the right place at the right time. he was lucky. that's all.
 

aba1

New member
Mar 18, 2010
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I have been told by a friend that I saved him from suicide but he tends to be a little dramatic so I don't really take it to seriously.
 

TriGGeR_HaPPy

Another Regular. ^_^
May 22, 2008
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Long story short, my mum and I stood up to (and scared away) a mugger wielding a huge-ass knife when my family was in Uruguay... Didn't save any lives per se, but saved our cameras which he was trying to take from us. And in the end, isn't that just as important? :p

(Seriously though, well done for saving that girl.)

EDIT:
Random Fella said:
Yesterday I decided not to do the deed
Many lives were saved.
The world is truly grateful. Thank you.
 

Random Fella

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Nov 17, 2010
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TriGGeR_HaPPy said:
Long story short, my mum and I stood up to (and scared away) a mugger wielding a huge-ass knife when my family was in Uruguay... Didn't save any lives per se, but saved our cameras which he was trying to take from us. And in the end, isn't that just as important? :p

(Seriously though, well done for saving that girl.)

EDIT:
Random Fella said:
Yesterday I decided not to do the deed
Many lives were saved.
The world is truly grateful. Thank you.
Especially as those lives hold half of the best genetics possible.
 

Supertegwyn

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Oct 7, 2010
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overpuce said:
I was on the 163 heading South towards Missions Valley a few years ago.
Yes. Those are words.

I understand you completely.

OT: None myself. People around me don't get into dangerous situations, I'm afraid.
 

Thaluikhain

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 16, 2010
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overpuce said:
Inside was this lady, probably late 20s early 30s. She was crying and begging me to help her. She was being held upside down and in place by her seat belt. I remember being a little scared because action movies had filled my head full of explosions occurring after car wrecks. So I slipped inside the car and undid the seat belt, and tried to dragged the woman out of the car.

This marine had also stopped behind the SUV. He helped me by carrying her, while I held her neck, back to his car where he had a med kit. A nurse arrived on scene as well, she probably worked at the nearby hospital. I left as soon as I saw the nurse and an ambulance arriving on-scene. Since I wasn't a doctor and didn't have any experience with medicine other than a CPR class I had taken, I wouldn't have been of any use.
Um...a lot of people drag people out of crashed cars, expecting a dramatic Hollywood explosion, but actually it's a very bad thing to do. Moving an injured person is best left to professionals unless there is actual danger in the area.

Cars don't just blow up for no good reason, that Hollywood bullshit further hurts crash victims.
 

Supertegwyn

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Oct 7, 2010
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overpuce said:
Supertegwyn said:
overpuce said:
I was on the 163 heading South towards Missions Valley a few years ago.
Yes. Those are words.

I understand you completely.

OT: None myself. People around me don't get into dangerous situations, I'm afraid.
Every good story should start with words.

Warning: Sentimentalism Incoming!
However, I believe that you've probably saved a life before even if you haven't realized it. This is the internet after all and it seems that some people are a bit too quick to turn to suicide. Funny words on a random forum can change those thought.

Okay... I'm being stupid now.

/Sentimentalism off
It is the hallmark of a bad story to start with numbers.

Never fall into that trap.
 

EeveeElectro

Cats.
Aug 3, 2008
7,055
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Good on you!

I pulled a kid to one side just before he got hit by a car. He kicked a football to the middle of the road and didn't bother looking before he went derping out to get it. Managed to run to him and drag him back before the car struck. The car wasn't gonna slow down, drivers in this city are completely fucking retarded. They'll knock you down if they're late for work.

Nowt special I suppose. I've done it for a few animals too. There was a very sad looking dog just sat in the middle of a road. Manage to lure him over to me with some food (I'd just been shopping) and sat with it until his owner found him.
Maybe the dog was suicidal...
 

ReadyAmyFire

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May 4, 2012
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Twice I've stopped a guy in my class stepping in front of a bus, he's a mathematical genius but can't cross the road safely :S. and last year a middle aged woman who was lost pulled out in front of me. If I'd braked straight and true I'd have gone into her door, so I swerved, lost it, and rolled into a field. Then she had the nerve to say I was driving too fast. *****.
 

Trivun

Stabat mater dolorosa
Dec 13, 2008
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I suppose I sort of did, although the actual bit where someone's life was in danger wasn't really saved by me. I don't normally mention it to be honest, and it was a pretty long while ago (maybe a year and a half now :p), but since you asked...

Basically, I'd been at a gig in town and was walking back home (bear in mind this is Leeds, in the UK, which isn't a large city anyway and my flat was right by the uni, about twenty minutes walk from the city centre). While walking, I decided to stop in Subway, and due to reading the Shortlist magazine in there I was actually there for over an hour. Leaving, I carried on my walk home and noticed a girl and guy arguing outside. This was notable because I actually recognised the girl - she'd been at the gig as well, and had been acting pretty oddly (i.e. she'd been dancing around, full of energy, whereas the rest of the crowd including myself were a lot calmer - sort of 'hipster' dancing rather than proper dancing, if you know what I mean by that...), and flirting with several guys including myself. To be honest, I had every reason to suspect that she was high.

So yeah, this girl was there, arguing with her apparent boyfriend, and stumbling away, falling over every few metres in the road (fortunately there were no cars about) and pickig herself up and carrying on. Her boyfriend gave up trying to follow her and walkedaway, but I decided to follow at a safe distance until I was sure she was okay. She had blood on her, which I think was from the constant falling over, and was in a lot of distress. I followed her a short way until a group of girls on a night out tried to take care of her, but after hanging around for a bit I noticed she'd left them and carried on alone again. Eventually I ended up following her to a bridge over an expressway (freeway to you Americans) right next to the university.

At this point, I was some distance away, watching, and I saw her climb up onto the railing as if she was going to jump. I was actually scared to walk closer in case she got scared and decided to jump, so I just got my phone out ready to call 999 straight away if she did jump. Fortunately, after a tense moment, she decided to climb back to safety and carry on walking, still crying and in obvious distress. At this point, another guy walking nearby had seen her, and we effectively joined up - I phoned the police anyway to come and pick her up and look after her, and a couple in a car nearby had also noticed her and called the police. They were quick to arrive, we managed to keep track of the girl and when we were in a safer place (i.e. no bridge of death nearby) on campus we approached her, me and this other guy, and tried to keep her calm (a tough job, but the operator had asked us to while the police were on their way). Two officers came, along with a university security guard who'd spotted us, and they took over. I had to give a statement on all the events of the night leading up to then, and as far as I'm aware they got her home safely, but I honestly don't know. Never found out anything more about what happened since then, I just went home and expected a phone call within a few days asking for another statement which never actually came :p.

Still, I just reckon that I had to do something, since if I'd been watching the news the next day and seen something about this girl (in an alternate reality where I didn't follow her, creepy as following her may sound) dying in an accident or being a rape victim or worse, I would have never forgiven myself :(.
 

Vegosiux

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May 18, 2011
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Dragged a friend of mine out of drug addiction about....huh, 7, 8 years ago? Basically made it clear to her that if she can't keep it together I'm going to grab her by the collar and drag her into rehab because as a friend I really don't want her to waste her life that way (there are many so much less crippling and more fun things to waste a life on). She hated my guts, we didn't talk for a while but a few months later, she called, telling me she's got some professional help, she's clean now and thanked me for being so firm on not letting her sink deeper back then. Lost contact since then due to other things, but I believe she's managed to lead a decent life since.

As far as "saving lives" goes, I like to think I helped save one back there.
 

Shoggoth2588

New member
Aug 31, 2009
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Apparently I've talked a couple of people out of suicide: my cousin and a friend I met on the internet. I haven't talked to either in a long, long while but I know one of them is definitely still kickin'.
 

The Funslinger

Corporate Splooge
Sep 12, 2010
6,150
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My family was on holiday in Turkey with some friends, and I was effectively on kid duty that week. We were finishing up at the beach as it started going dark, and a couple of my mates were scavenging in the jagged rocks at the foot of the dock. The four year old kid keeps nagging me that he wants to go and see them. I'll admit I was quite short with him, it was the end of the day and I was tired.

A few minutes later, my friend noticed him walking along to the foot of the dock, and we run. We sprinted along the pavement, and up onto the dock, only to be confronted by an obstacle. Two local fishermen had played out fishing line between them in a tangled web which they were trying to fix. In the dark, we couldn't really see it and my friend comes to a halt to go round them. I don't stop, and instinctively jump, going through a gap in the web without snagging, and grab the kid's scruff just as he slips and is about to go over the edge.
 

Xan Krieger

Completely insane
Feb 11, 2009
2,918
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My dad was in the pool at the condos where my uncle lives. He slipped under the water and I saw he couldn't get back up so I jumped in (fully dressed) and lifted him back up to the surface. I prolonged his life by a few years.