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Lights flashed. Sirens screamed. The ambulance sped down the dark highway. Traffic parted to let it through. For the first time, I wasn’t in one of those cars pulled off to the side of the road. I was inside the ambulance, racing to help.
Soon I saw the car we were looking for. Its driver had pulled over and called 911 after having a seizure.
Stepping onto the surface of the highway as cars sped past me felt surreal. It almost felt wrong, like I wasn’t supposed to be there. A fire truck arrived and blocked traffic as we rushed to help the driver.
As I was asking the driver for her name, she had another seizure.
My heart was pounding as I helped move her onto a stretcher. But I took a deep breath and remembered: This was what I had been trained to do.
Lights flashed. Sirens screamed. The ambulance sped down the dark highway. Traffic parted to let it through. For the first time, I wasn’t in a car pulled off to the side of the road. I was in the ambulance, racing to help.
Soon I saw the car we were looking for. Its driver had pulled over and called 911 after having a seizure.
onto the highway felt surreal. It almost felt wrong, like I didn’t belong there. A fire truck came. It blocked traffic as we helped the driver.
As I was asking the driver for her name, she had another seizure.
I helped move her onto a stretcher. My heart was pounding. But I took a deep breath and remembered: I had been trained to do this.
Lights flashed. Sirens screamed. The ambulance sped down the dark highway as traffic parted to let it through. For the first time, I wasn’t in one of those cars pulled off to the side of the road. I was inside the ambulance, racing to help.
Before long, I spotted the car we were looking for. Its driver had pulled over and called 911 after having a seizure.
Stepping onto the surface of the highway as cars sped past me felt surreal. It almost felt wrong, like I wasn’t supposed to be there. A fire truck arrived and blocked traffic as we rushed to assist the driver.
As I was asking the driver for her name, she had another seizure.
My heart was pounding as I helped move her onto a stretcher, but I took a deep breath and remembered: This was what I had been trained to do.