
Originally Posted by
gaijin
Rolled my '72 K5 Blazer (removable fiberglass top) down a hill in 1997. Then I rebuilt it.
Then in 2002 on a January morning I was driving to Kirkwood. I worked resort marketing and ski school sales so I and my roommate (also ski school) had to be at the resort at 8am, and usually arrived before other mountain staff.
I put it in 2WD as the road was icy, not snowy. Climbing Carson Pass is a right-hand curve. Accelerating up the hill, my rear end slipped out. My right front wheel caught the snowbank, then my left front, then we flipped and slid upside down for about 100ft.
The fiberglass top ripped off the truck, except where my buddy and I were surfing on it, upside down. The truck was completely flattened to the doors. I felt & heard the gravel/pavement sliding by my head on the other side of the fiberglass. It was peaceful. I accepted that I was going to die and it was peaceful.
Then everything stopped and it was pitch black. My head was up my buddy's ass, his head was at his feet in the passenger seat. My wrist was stuck between the steering wheel and the road. My shoulder dislocated. My collar bone broken. I yelled to my bro: "Are you okay?!" He replied: "I can't breathe."
Considering how I had just accepted losing my head a moment prior, my first thought was that he couldn't breathe because he was in half and simply didn't know it yet. But it was just his seatbelt. We were fine.
Some dude with a crowbar pried my tailgate open and we slid out between the front seats, along the pavement (and glass, and transmission oil, and fiberglass shavings) to the tailgate and stood up. Our jackets were all cut up.
Some girl kept poking me trying to find injuries while we waited for authorities to arrive. When the two ambulances did arrive, the paramedics started laughing because the wreckage was so gnarly but there we both were, standing and obviously not severely injured. Anyway, they put each of us in our own ambulance for an exam. No sirens, as there was no emergency. The cop directed traffic by.
Then resort staff drove by while we were both in the ambulances. Pretty much all resort staff knew my truck. I was also the poster boy on the brochure for the resort, so they knew me. And my buddy was more famous than myself. (I'm building this story up on purpose.)
The police officer couldn't drive us to the resort, because that was in a different county. So he drove us back to the intersection so we could hitchhike to the resort. We didn't want to go home. That didn't make sense. Riding chairs and smoking a joint made sense.
The guy in the pickup who picked us up knew something was wrong. No gear, ripped jackets, hitchhiking in the middle of nowhere. He drove us back by the scene and it was disgusting. A snowplow had pushed all the debris aside, and my truck had been towed by now, but the path of transmission oil & glass on the road looked like roadkill. It was silence from all three of us.
When we got to the resort, it was like 10:00 and all the parking lots were full. So we parked far and walked across the village. No staff bumping chairs. No parking staff directing the public. Weird.
We then got to the ski school office, opened the doors and saw the office lobby full of staff, all crying. Billy ran up and gave me a hug, sobbing: "We thought you both were dead!"
We walked into our own memorial service.
My buddy didn't really talk to me much after that. Can't blame him. I don't take it personally. But I think a kind of animosity develops when you almost kill someone.
A year later after climbing Machu Picchu, in a bar in Aguas Calientes, I walk in and hear a song playing. It was muffled by the sound of 50 partiers having a good time. I screamed at everyone in the bar to shut up so I could hear the music. They did. They all stopped talking and stared at me. I asked the bar tender what was playing. "All that we perceive, by Thievery corporation." I broke down in tears: "That's the song that was playing when I accepted my own death and then thought I had killed my best friend!"
I never even realized there was music playing during the wreck until I heard it a year later.
Every time I hear those horns, I get goosebumps. Should probably go to therapy for that. Oh well, TGR helps.
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