Man cut off his arm to survive...

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tumbletom
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Man cut off his arm to survive...

Post by tumbletom »

Ralston still living life to the fullest after accident
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Associated Press
Posted: 3 days ago



ASPEN, Colo. (AP) - As he sawed through the final strands of his own tissue and skin with a dull blade, Aron Ralston was overcome with emotion, awash in a wave of euphoria unlike anything he'd felt before.

Malnutrition and dehydration, delirium, searing pain - none of it registered anymore. Held captive by a half-ton boulder at the bottom of a narrow canyon for five days, Ralston freed himself by severing his own arm, gaining an unexpected second chance at life.

Two years after being trapped in a canyon and having to saw off his own arm to escape, Aron Ralston is happy to be alive. (E Pablo Kosmicki / Associated Press)

Resigned to death the night before, Ralston felt more alive than ever, glowing from what he believed to be the close of one life and birth of another.

And he hasn't stopped living in the two years since.

"At this point, I've got the confidence to know that I'll get through anything in my life given I have the motivation to do it," Ralston said. "If it's an act of survival, we've all got a reason to keep living. It may not be pretty, but surviving is grit and determination in its highest form. I learned that I've got the capacity to do a hell of a lot more than I thought I could if I have the proper motivation."

Heading out on a relatively benign - at least to an experienced mountaineer such as Ralston - hike through a slot canyon in the Utah desert in April 2003, Ralston became trapped when a chockstone dislodged and trapped his right arm. With little food, less water and virtually no chance of being rescued, Ralston used drastic means to extend his life, from drinking his own urine to rigging ropes and webbing to support his weight.

Unable to budge the boulder with a makeshift pulley system or break it with a multi-tool, Ralston escaped by torquing his arm against the rock to break his bones, then ripping through his decaying flesh with a small, dull knife.

His bloody stump wrapped in a makeshift sling, Ralston rappelled down a 60-foot drop, then hiked six miles through the desert before an improbable sequence of events, including stumbling across a family of hikers and getting to a helicopter just in time, helped save his life.

It was a staggering display of human will and survival, and the tale spread inspiration across the world.

"It really was a miracle that things just worked and fell into place," said Donna Ralston, who spent two frantic days coordinating rescue efforts for her son from her Denver-area home. "I feel like there was a reason why things happened in the way they did. It wasn't just happenstance."

She's not the only who sees it that way.

During his darkest moments in the bottom of the canyon, Ralston had a vision of a young boy. Unlike his previous visions that final night, Ralston said he was able to touch this one, lifting the boy upon his shoulder with an arm missing its right hand. Ralston had come to terms with his death the night before and now this boy, which he believed to be his future son, had given him a reason to live.

And Ralston has done just that.

Though the first few months after the accident were filled with surgeries, a kaleidoscope of painkillers and frustrating inactivity, it didn't take Ralston long to return to what he loves. It started with hiking and running with friends, and pretty soon he was back scaling 14,000-foot peaks, skiing summits and climbing ice walls.

Using prosthetics he helped develop, Ralston completed a nine-year project of scaling the highest point in all 50 states, then became the first person to solo climb all 59 of Colorado's fourteeners (14,000-foot peaks) in winter, crossing the last 14 off his list after the accident. In January, he summited Argentina's 22,840-foot Mt. Aconcagua, the world's highest mountain outside Asia, then climbed and skied 10 peaks of at least 13,000 feet in the spring.

Ralston also got into ultrarunning, first taking on the Leadville 100 high in the central Rockies, then testing his willpower and fitness in the diabolical Hardrock, a 100-mile race featuring 66,000 feet of elevation change. In case that wasn't enough, Ralston tried surfing, spent more time mountain biking and did all kinds of hiking and climbing.


Aron Ralston, the climber who cut off his own arm to survive a harrowing ordeal in a Utah canyon two years ago, is able to still climb with the aid of a specially designed artificial arm. (Reno Gazette-Journal, Marilyn Newton / Associated Press)

That Ralston's love for the wilderness didn't diminish with his accident isn't a surprise; he's had a spiritual connection with the outdoors since he was a teenager.

What did change was Ralston's appreciation for those closest to him. Content with isolating himself and doing things on his own before, Ralston now makes sure family and friends are included in his life more and understands how much they mean to him.

"I think my spirituality is very similar to what it was before. It wasn't as if I went through some kind of enlightenment and figured out all the answers," said Ralston, who'll turn 30 in October. "I figured out what was important to me, but I knew that before. I just didn't express it as much to the people I appreciate, to my family and friends, and I've tried to be more practiced in that."

And it goes beyond his inner circle.

As his astonishing story of survival spread, Ralston was inundated with thousands of letters and e-mails from people thanking him for giving them inspiration. The correspondences continued and spiked again when his best-selling book, "Between a Rock and Hard Place," hit the shelves last fall.

Realizing his story meant so much to so many people, Ralston lifted the spirits of thousands more by reliving his ordeal in person. Sure, some of it is for profit, but most of his speaking engagements are for nonprofit organizations and fund-raisers, with plans to hit a few colleges later this year.

And while he's fulfilled all his current speaking contracts, Ralston keeps telling his story, the weight of obligation still too heavy for him to escape.

"We're proud of him because of the person he is and because he feels so strongly that he has a story that is inspirational, and he's willing to tell it over and over and share with other people and give people hope," Donna Ralston said. "I think that says a lot about his character."

As for the future, Ralston doesn't want to look too far ahead. His immediate plans include a tour for the paperback release of his book on Sept. 1, and more writing for magazines such as Men's Journal and Outside.

Ralston also plans to do more speaking, is in talks for a motion picture about his life and will continue running Ralstar Enterprises, the company he created to handle the opportunities that have come with his newfound fame.

Of course, there'll be plenty of time in the outdoors, too.

Ralston has been invited to climb in New Zealand this winter and will head to the Himalayas next year to ski a pair of 8,000-meter peaks. He's also planning to high-point all 50 states again, this time in 50 consecutive days, and would eventually like to climb K2, the world's second-highest mountain.

Beyond that, Ralston has no specific plans other than to meet the boy in his vision - when the time is right.

"I think it's out there and it's not something that I treat lightly," Ralston said. "At the same time, I realized there's a lot that's going to have to change in my life before I become a father as far as how I live, my priorities, where I might live. When the time comes, that's something I want to be just as passionate about as how passionate I am in how I live now."

http://msn.foxsports.com/other/story/4239492?GT1=6773

Wow, that is just amazing...I dont know if I would ever be able to saw off my arm like that....
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Post by DPDarkPrimus »

I seem to recall reading about this back when it happened.
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Post by Noble Ire »

Yes, it was the news story when he first got back.

Quite a struggle though. I'm not sure I could bring myself to do such a thing, even to survive. Guess you really don't know unless your actually put in a position like that.
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Post by Chardok »

I saw a thing on this on discovery. gruesome stuff. He said when he got to the nerve and cut it it was like spaghetti, and fire shot up his arm...ugh..he was very descriptive. Even made the reporter wince.
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Post by The Grim Squeaker »

Poor guy, guess humans really can gnaw their hands off to survive.

Do you think you could have actually gnawed your hand off (without a knife)?
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Post by Ford Prefect »

In his situation, definetly no. In any other situation? No. I would find monumentally hard to get through the bone, most probably.
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Post by Darth Fanboy »

He was on the Man Show as I recall also. Man amongst men.
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Post by Davis 51 »

Holy shit, that takes balls. I don't know if I could part with my own arm. *Grabs right arm and shudders*
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Post by Elheru Aran »

Ford Prefect wrote:In his situation, definetly no. In any other situation? No. I would find monumentally hard to get through the bone, most probably.
I believe in an interview, he described how he used a rock to smash through.

Now, just think about that. His. Own. Arm. Bone. And he's holding a rock in his other hand. Brings it down. *crunch* And he has to rinse and repeat till it's done...
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Post by Knife »

On top of all that, iirc, he then hiked his ass out of there for quite a few miles, now missing an arm. Yeah, the guy wanted to live.
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Post by Duckie »

God damn that's a lot of pain tolerance. I can barely get my blood drawn, let alone break my arm off under a rock.

This is, in a hearlessly analytic sort of way, a good show of survival instincts, sort of like a fox biting its leg off to escape a trap.
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Post by Chardok »

he didn't smash his arm with a rock, he used leverage to snap the radius and ulna, then sawed through the sinew and muscle with a leatherman. and not only did he hike for miles, he rappelles 75 feet down a sheer cliff face, bleeding, dehydrated, and with ONE ARM. That guy has balls of solid fucking rock. and they're big, too. Like, REAL big. Gigantic, even.
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Post by Mrs Kendall »

Guys, I know from experience (not anything this severe though) that if you've got enough adrenalin pumping through your body you can do anything. I've had experiences where I had to get the fuck out and I didn't feel pain even though the next day when it was all over I felt tremendous pain. It's just how we survive such huge ordeals.
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Post by Ravengrim »

I mean, I admire the guy's drive to live but he was a dumbass for rock-climbing on his own. Thats about a brilliant as scuba diving alone. The buddy system only works if there is a buddy. He should of at least brought a flare gun or something.....
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Post by Chardok »

Ravengrim wrote:I mean, I admire the guy's drive to live but he was a dumbass for rock-climbing on his own. Thats about a brilliant as scuba diving alone. The buddy system only works if there is a buddy. He should of at least brought a flare gun or something.....
He mentions that in the documentary. too. He crusades against stupid moves like that now, IIRC.
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Post by wolveraptor »

How'd he survive the blood loss? Having a wound that huge doesn't make it easy to scab over really quick. What a hardass.

Maybe, if technology improves, he can get a super-powerful right hand that could've lifted off the boulder that formerly would've trapped him. The world's first cyborg. :wanker:
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Post by Praxis »

I saw the entire documentary on TV ages ago. I would have passed out in that situation :shock:
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Post by Lancer »

wolveraptor wrote:How'd he survive the blood loss? Having a wound that huge doesn't make it easy to scab over really quick. What a hardass.
between a tourniquet and massive amounts of adrenaline constricting the blood vessels throughout your body, you wouldn't be spouting out rivers of blood monty-python style.
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Post by Zero »

I met that guy... he went to my middle school and high school, back in the day, so he gave an odd little speach. Seemed like a nice guy... although that is pretty kickass, so saw your arm off and actually walk somewhere afterwards.
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Post by HyperionX »

He's not a man among men, he's an idiot. Why didn't he have a cellphone? A climbing partner? Why did he apparently not inform anyone of what he was doing?
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Post by Colonel Olrik »

Yes, I remember this happening. A potential Darwin award. Gone rockclimbing in the wilderness alone, without telling anybody where he was going, with no radio or sat phone. Then waited a few days for a miraculous rescue that he pratically made sure wouldn't happen, before gnawing his arm off (the survival instinct is indeed very strong).

People who want to live don't act this way - there's a reason I always want a friend with me when doing sports in the mountains.
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Post by Kuja »

As Yoshimitsu would say, 'Overconfidence is the greatest enemy!'

This guy was lucky he had a chance to recover from such an error.
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Post by YT300000 »

wolveraptor wrote:How'd he survive the blood loss? Having a wound that huge doesn't make it easy to scab over really quick. What a hardass.

Maybe, if technology improves, he can get a super-powerful right hand that could've lifted off the boulder that formerly would've trapped him. The world's first cyborg. :wanker:
Actually, cyborgs already exist. Theres Kevin Warwick, who got a tiny chip implanted in his arm in 1998, which allowed him to open doors, turn on lights, and so on. In 2002, they stuck a more advanced one in him which made a robot arm copy every movement his real arm made. They also stuck another chip in his wife, and they apparently got some really low level of telepathy out of it.

There are also the rats who have directional control implants in their brains. And then, there is Steve Mann. He basically had a computer plugged directly into him, along with a wireless Internet connection. There was a pretty famous short video of him walking to the grocery store, and his wife sending him a shopping list, which appeared, overlayed, on his glasses. In 2002, he got detained at an airport, and they ripped all the stuff out of him, which caused enough damage that he was relegated to a wheelchair.
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Post by Praxis »

Colonel Olrik wrote:Yes, I remember this happening. A potential Darwin award. Gone rockclimbing in the wilderness alone, without telling anybody where he was going, with no radio or sat phone. Then waited a few days for a miraculous rescue that he pratically made sure wouldn't happen, before gnawing his arm off (the survival instinct is indeed very strong).

People who want to live don't act this way - there's a reason I always want a friend with me when doing sports in the mountains.
AND he told everyone he wouldn't be back for like a week...
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Post by Praxis »

YT300000 wrote:
wolveraptor wrote:How'd he survive the blood loss? Having a wound that huge doesn't make it easy to scab over really quick. What a hardass.

Maybe, if technology improves, he can get a super-powerful right hand that could've lifted off the boulder that formerly would've trapped him. The world's first cyborg. :wanker:
Actually, cyborgs already exist. Theres Kevin Warwick, who got a tiny chip implanted in his arm in 1998, which allowed him to open doors, turn on lights, and so on. In 2002, they stuck a more advanced one in him which made a robot arm copy every movement his real arm made. They also stuck another chip in his wife, and they apparently got some really low level of telepathy out of it.

There are also the rats who have directional control implants in their brains. And then, there is Steve Mann. He basically had a computer plugged directly into him, along with a wireless Internet connection. There was a pretty famous short video of him walking to the grocery store, and his wife sending him a shopping list, which appeared, overlayed, on his glasses. In 2002, he got detained at an airport, and they ripped all the stuff out of him, which caused enough damage that he was relegated to a wheelchair.

OW.
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