So, no crap, there I was....I was up next on the rotation to fly with the Army Burn Flight Team. We get alerted that there was a burn victim waiting for us in Landstuhl. So we kit up, and hit the airport. 10 hours later, we were in Frankfurt, catching our cab to the hospital. When we arrived, we found a soldier that had been blown up, was the only survivor from his vehicle, and was severly burned.
We went to work doing what we do - dressing changes, inspecting the inside of his lungs, optimizing all his numbers and values for the trip home - all under the ever vigilant eyes of his wife, that had been flown out to Germany to be with her husband.
The next day, we load up on a C-17 Globemaster III and begin the trek home. This individual didn't tolerate the flight well, though, and began crashing almost as soon as we took off. Me, being the respiratory therapist, took over manual ventilations, as he wasn't tolerating the breathing machine well. For about 7 1/2 hours of our 11 hour flight, through an in-flight refeuling and landing, there I was, strapped in to the litter, breathing for this soldier manually, as his wife watched from about 8 feet away.
He survived, and made as much of a full recovery as possible. With teary eyes, he asked if I would speak at his medical retirement. That speech was one of my proudest moments - knowing that I had saved this soldier's life in one of the most austere environments: with limited supplies and equipment, 40,000 feet above an ocean with nowhere to go for help.
I feel I am my most successful when the Soldiers I work for, with, teach, mentor, or assist reach back and let me know they're ok and tell me what's going on with them and what goals they've reached and tie that into something they learned from me. Best feeling ever........ I feel like a Mom whose kid graduated college or something!!
I love reaching my own goals and obtaining more knowledge daily, but ^^ that is like a slice of Heaven!

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