“I thought I had lost everything. I didn’t know he was listening.”
Everyone who saw the video saw a paramedic calming me down. But what the camera didn’t capture clearly at first was why I was shaking so violently. It wasn’t just the cold, and it wasn’t just the crash.
I was trying to scream, but no sound was coming out. I was pointing at the car.
In the backseat of my crushed sedan was Cooper, my 4-year-old Golden Retriever. We were driving home for the holidays. When the car spun and hit the rail, everything went silent. I was pulled out, but Cooper was trapped in his crate in the back, and the smell of gasoline was getting stronger by the second.
The “Part 2” Moment:
The paramedic in the video, Mark, noticed my eyes kept darting back to the wreck. He didn’t just dismiss it as shock. He leaned in close and heard me whisper, “Cooper.”
Without hesitation, and despite the warnings from the police about the fuel leak, Mark ran back toward the smoking vehicle.
The dashcam footage (which I’ll share soon) shows him crawling into the backseat through shattered glass. For 20 terrifying seconds, he disappeared inside. I held my breath. I thought the car was going to blow.
Then, he emerged.
He wasn’t just carrying a medical bag. He was carrying Cooper.
My dog was terrified but completely unharmed. Mark didn’t just save a “driver” that night; he saved my whole family. He sat there in the rain, holding my dog until I could stand up, telling me, “He’s okay. You’re both going home.”
Heroes don’t wear capes. They wear high-vis jackets and work the night shift.
Please share this to help me find Mark so I can thank him properly!