Sometimes scary things happen to good people.
Yesterday my husband Gary and I were in Amish Indiana,
getting quotes from several local aluminum fabricators on an aluminum box that
Gary wants to have custom-made for his hot rod trailer. Our Amish friend Glenn had recommended three
local Amish-run places, and after we made the rounds, we went out for supper
with Glenn and his wife Ruth at an Italian place in the next town (Rulli’s in
Middlebury). Ruth mentioned a recent
event that nearly ended in tragedy.
It seems that their sixteen-year-old son was out in the
gravel driveway a few days earlier.
Several of their buggy horses were hitched there, and the young man
reached over to pet one of them.
To digress for a moment:
Buggy horses are not all the same in temperament. I know this from reading the “horse for sale”
ads in a local Amish publication I like to read, called “The People’s
Exchange.” Some are very good-natured
and laid back. They are described in the
ads with phrases like “broke safe for women to drive” and “completely traffic
safe and sound.”
But others are more high strung and unpredictable. They are often described with words like “a
little uneasy at corners” and “does shy at things beside the road.”
Back to my story: The
horse our young man was petting was of the first type. But standing near that horse was another
horse—one they had just acquired from one of their married daughters. She had told them to be careful with that
one, as it could be skittish. When he
petted the first horse, it jumped a little, startling the second horse—who
lashed out with both back legs. (And
this horse was shod with steel horseshoes, being a buggy horse.) Our young man was right in the path of those
legs, and he took a hard kick to the gut and fell to the ground.
Fortunately, Glenn was nearby and saw his son crumpled on
the ground. When Glenn turned him over, the
boy had a deathly pallor and looked as if he was dead—but after what probably
seemed like an eternity to his dad, the young man started choking and gasping
and caught a breath. But then he
immediately started vomiting and couldn’t stop.
One of his parents rushed to the phone shanty and called for
a hired driver, and soon they were on their way to the local trauma
center. Not long after that, the three
of them were en route to South Bend in an ambulance. That must have been the longest 53 miles they
could remember!
Once in South Bend, the young man was given a CAT scan,
which showed internal bleeding, and then put in the Intensive Care Unit. His blood count for a certain enzyme which
should have been about 40 was at 1200 and rising. The doctors said if it didn’t come down
during the night, it might be fatal.
By the next morning our young man was rallying, and later
that day he was sent home and told to rest.
I talked to him briefly yesterday, and he seemed none the worse for wear
and had a smile on his face. But I would
imagine that every time his parents look at him, they breathe a silent prayer
of thanks for their youngest child and the doctors who took care of him.
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