On Nov 29, 5:56 pm, Mike Vandeman <
mike.vande...@gmail.com> wrote:
> As usual, there is no investigation into just how dangerous mountain
> biking is. Shallow journalism is the order of the day....
>
> Mike
>
>
http://www.tribtoday.com/page/content.detail/id/530255.html?nav=5021>
> His son, his hero
>
> Teen carries father to safety after bicycle accident
>
> By BURTON COLE Tribune Chronicle
> POSTED: November 29, 2009
>
> Article Photos
>
> Jeff Mostoller, left, and his son Aaron stand with their mountain
> bicycles.
>
> Jeff Mostoller never saw the tree root nudging out of the dirt trail.
>
> The knobbed tire of his Mongoose mountain bike slammed into the root.
> Mostoller and bike both went flying, he slamming facedown into puddle
> of mud, the bicycle crashing across his back.
>
> ''I couldn't move anything'' from the neck down, he recalled.
>
> It was May 15, and he was riding the winding, off-road trail in
> Greenville, Pa., with his youngest son, Aaron, 15.
>
> ''When he first hit, I thought it was just another crash,'' Aaron said
> as they talked about it five months later. ''And then he started
> screaming my name, screaming for help. I didn't know what to do.
>
> ''I threw the bike off him,'' Aaron said. ''I rolled him over, not
> knowing what to do next.''
>
> Jeff's back remained in a rigid arch, his stomach stuck up in the air.
> Trying to calm his son, he asked, ''Do I look fat?''
>
> It was the next questions that further scared an already terrified
> Aaron: ''Did my left hand move? Did my right hand move? Did my leg
> move?'' No, no and no.
>
> Aaron wanted to run for help. Jeff told him to stay by his side. Aaron
> stayed, fighting tears, fighting the feeling that everything was his
> fault. After all, wasn't he the reason his Dad hit the root?
>
> He had been pedalling in the lead but was getting smacked in the face
> by dew-misted cobwebs still clinging to overhanging tree branches. So
> he called back to his dad to pass him. Ha! Let him get the cobwebs.
>
> ''I don't know how you got in front of me anyhow,'' Jeff said said.
> ''I'm usually in the lead.''
>
> ''You were going too slow,'' Aaron said with a grin.
>
> Jeff passed, hit the root, and here they sat, Dad unable to move and
> fading in and out of consciousness, son not able to leave him, no
> other cyclists passing through and without a phone to make a call.
>
> ''I remember this so plainly,'' Jeff said. ''(Before we started to
> ride,) he said, 'Should we take our cell phones?' I said, 'Naw,' and
> we both left them in the car.''
>
> After about 20 minutes, an excruciating pain started to overwhelm
> Jeff. Feeling pain. That had to be better than feeling nothing, right?
>
> Jeff finally allowed Aaron to get the phones from the van. The
> Lakeview High School soccer player flew more than a mile back to the
> car, saying it was the fastest he ran in his life. But when he got
> back, his dad still would not permit him call 911. Nor did he want to
> bother his two oldest children, Adam and Angela, both emergency room
> nurses. A son-in-law also is a nurse. Jeff himself is an ultrasound
> technician at Forum Health Northside Hospital.
>
> Jeff simply called his wife, Lonnie.
>
> ''He called me and said, 'Something bad has happened,' and the phone
> went dead,'' Lonnie said. ''He called again and said, 'Don't get
> scared. Something bad happened. I think I'm paralyzed,'' and the phone
> went dead. This happened three times.
>
> ''I was too far away, and I didn't know exactly where they were at,''
> she said.
>
> Jeff directed Aaron to get the bikes back to the car. Aaron propped
> his dad against a tree and made the two-mile round trip twice more,
> throwing up on the way back the last time.
>
> Then the thin boy, who is about 3 inches shorter than his 6-foot-tall,
> 200-pound dad, lugged him down the trail.
>
> ''He carried me like an old drunken sailor out of the woods,'' Jeff
> said.
>
> ''In retrospect, we should have left the bikes,'' Jeff mused.
>
> ''You think?'' Lonnie shot back. ''And you think you should have
> called 911?''
>
> ''Had it been him,'' Jeff said, ''I would have left the bikes and
> called 911. But when it's you, you're trying to reason it out. I'll
> need the bike. I'm going to ride again.''
>
> The truth of the matter is he was in shock and not thinking, he said.
> And Aaron, in shock himself, was setting aside instincts and listening
> to his dad, who, he knew, should know what he's talking about.
>
> So, again at his dad's request, Aaron, a licensed driver for less than
> three months, bypassed the hospital in Greenville to drive to
> Northside.
>
> Son Alex, then a Lakeview senior, met his family there. Alex was
> heading out for lunch at school when he checked messages on his cell
> phone. He heard his little brother's voice: He said, ''I think Dad's
> dead,'' and he hung up.'' Sister-in-law Natalie also was on the
> messages, and he found out more from her. Alex left school and met the
> family at Northside.
>
> ''My dad was strapped down to a hospital bed, connected to five
> different machines. He was just as scared as us,'' Alex said. ''His
> face is still fresh in my mind. He had mud caked in his teeth and
> hair, he was shivering, and he was all wet and bloody from his fall. I
> just kept praying to God, 'I just wanted my dad to be OK.' ''
>
> Jeff was flown by helicopter to Cleveland Clinic, where a bone from
> his hip was fused into his neck, and two metal rods were placed along
> his spinal cord.
>
> ''If he would have injured one vertebrae higher, he would have been
> permanently paralyzed and on a tracheotomy.''
>
> He returned home on a Tuesday.
>
> ''My dad was walking,'' Alex said. ''Just four days ago, he was
> paralyzed. It amazed me.''
>
> Jeff was off work 12 weeks. Most days still are pain-filled, and that
> may continue for at least another year, Lonnie said.
>
> ''I'm doing pretty good compared to what I was, what I could be,'' he
> said.
>
> He's back to walking a mile and biking up to five miles at a time. He
> used to pedal 20 to 50 miles an outing, but he figures he'll get
> there.
>
> Aaron doesn't care if he ever gets on a bike again. He knows he will
> get back on the bicycle and ride. Some day. He won't hide behind his
> fears forever. But it doesn't have to be today.
>
> Jeff has his own goal: ''On May 15 of next year, we're going to go
> back and examine the trail.''
>
> Looking back, Jeff said, ''It really turned out to be a blessing that
> it happened,'' Jeff said, ''just to realize how much love we have for
> each other. And God's help. Our faith in God helped.
>
> ''Aaron saved me but it was my whole family that healed me. None of it
> would have been possible without God.
>
> ''I never want to go through it again but it was such an eye-opening
> experience and a heart-opening experience to see such an outpouring of
> love.''
>
> Friends, family, strangers... the family pets were tended to while the
> family was at the hospital, donations were given and Lonnie said she
> didn't have to cook for two weeks.
>
> ''Oh, this community ...,'' Jeff started before the rest of the
> sentence was choked away by emotion.
>
> Lonnie said she marveled at her own children. It's the goal of parents
> to raise their children to grow into responsible adults who will do
> the right thing. But to witness it in action, to see one's ''babies''
> in their own profession and to watch them taking care of their dad and
> the rest of the family in times of crisis - ''Wow,'' she said.
>
> Aaron still struggles.
>
> ''I don't feel that I saved his life,'' he said. ''Without me, it
> could have been worse, but I have it in my mind that it was my
> fault.''
>
> His family disagrees.
>
> Jeff, an avid cyclist who often rides alone, countered, ''If I had
> been by myself, the same thing would have happened.''
>
> ''He is not the reason Dad got in the accident; he is the reason my
> dad is alive,'' Alex said.
>
> ''If it wasn't for Aaron,'' Lonnie said, ''Jeff may have not made it
> out of those woods alive. Aaron, you are our hero! Thank you.''
>
>
bc...@tribtoday.com