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Video: Man recalls dark days of recovery

  1. Closed captioning of: Man recalls dark days of recovery

    i thought that when you left me i'd be broken and my confidence gone, so gone. hey, boy, i would have thought that when you said that you don't want me i'd feel ugly as if something was wrong *

    >>> we're back on this wednesday with more "today." the story of a miraculous recovery reko recove recovery.

    >> one month after high school graduation he was droving home when he got into a tor rifk accident with a dump truck sending him to near death. now a competitive athlete and college student he wrote a book called "iron heart." he's here today with his parents. school back so i can see their names please. joann and garth. unbelievable story. so inspirational.

    >> thank you very much.

    >> it's incredible. first of all, when i was reading about the accident, the way that you were t-boned by this truck, i mean, just tell us a little bit about that crash.

    >> look at that camaro.

    >> it was july 6th , 2004 . a regular summer day. coming home from practice. a dump truck collided in my driver's side door at a local intersection. knocked my heart across my chest. shattered my rids. shattered my pelvis. spleen. pretty much every organ was dama damage.

    >> what did the doctor tell you guys about your son?

    >> there wasn't much hope.

    >> started with the first 24. then it went into 48.

    >> were they preparing you?

    >> oh, yeah. for the worst.

    >> even if you would live, perhaps you were terrified of horrendous brain damage .

    >> nursing homes. extended care.

    >> at what point did it go from -- it was obviously so dire for many days. at what point did it turn and you guys realized there was hope for your son.

    >> about halfway through the two-month ordeal. i remember just laying there and wanting to give up. it's really selfish to say that. i was so sad and tired of fighting. the suffering was excruciating. the suffering i saw my parents going through was far worse than what i was experiencing. i wanted to help them out and get back into life again.

    >> how did you guys get strength? what sustained you during those dark days ?

    >> think it was from each other. from each other. we kept ourselves going. just to go and see him every day and knowing he was still alive inside that comatose body.

    >> were you talking to him?

    >> oh, yeah.

    >> what did you say to him. what kind of things?

    >> wow. guys, that's hard to repeat.

    >> i remember that.

    >> what did they say.

    >> pretty much told me to keep fighting. to stay strong. i'm their son. i'll be okay.

    >> his dad got mad at one point.

    >> yeah. last resort. desperation. he kind of yelled at me.

    >> hey, fathers have to do what they have to do.

    >> you got to do what you got to do.

    >> it worked, though.

    >> once you got through the darkest days and you knew that you had survived, i think people would have been happy just to see you just sitting up right.

    >> walking.

    >> and walking.

    >> that was good.

    >> much less doing what you ultimately did.

    >> you went to kona and did well in the iron man. hoda did all right in long branch, but come on.

    >> did you ever think you would see yourself in an iron man?

    >> no.

    >> just so people know an iron man involves a marathon, right? that's part of it.

    >> 26 miles .

    >> how long did you bike ride.

    >> 112.

    >> how long was the swim.

    >> 2.4 miles.

    >> astonishing.

    >> all in the same day, people.

    >> 17 hours. i need a training partner, though, if you're ready.

    >> i'm sorry. i can't help you with that.

    >> how did you work yourself up from that to the iron man?

    >> it was just the inspiration i got from my parents and support. my family, my friends, everybody who was a big part of my journey back to life. i used that as my motivation.

    >> there is a quote. i couldn't find it. i don't have to. because brian knows it. that touched me in this book. say that again. an anonymous quote from a man who came back from war, a veteran.

    >> i think it was a vietnam veteran . a person has not lived until they've almost died. for those that have experienced that, there's a play vflavor the protected will never know.

    >> at the finish line , you guys were waiting at the finish line . describe that moment when you crossed the finish line and your folks were there. look at this.

    >> come on, hoda, we can't take this.

    >> that's unbelievable. tell us about that.

    >> extreme rejoouf nation.

    >> i think we were reborn.

    >> of the body, mind, everybody.

    >> it was two yeahree years to the day we brought him home from rehab. three years to the day, october 13th .

    >> what did the doctors say? sort of miraculous?

    >> we have wonderful doctors.

    >> you thank them profusely. the prince georges medical --

    >> every chance we get.

    >> we wish you such luck with the book. you are terrific parents. look at the kid you raised.

    >> makes me cry.

    >> you're running the marathon, right?

    >> yes.

    >> we have a little gift for you. we want you to have good luck when you run that marathon. i can't believe you're running a marathon in addition. you're unbelievable.

    >> hoda will be right behind you. way behind you.

    >> thank you.

    >>> how to find happiness when you're going through a bad break-up. that's right after this.

    >> and a musical way, too.

TODAY books
updated 10/7/2009 11:53:04 AM ET 2009-10-07T15:53:04

Just one month after graduating from J. McDonough High School in Maryland, Brian Boyle became the victim of a horrific car crash that would change his life forever. With his Camaro demolished, Brian was pried from the wreckage and air-lifted to a shock-trauma hospital clinging to life. In his memoir, “Iron Heart,”Brian tells the story of his miraculous revival and how he overcame seemingly insurmountable odds to compete in the Ironman World Championship in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii. An excerpt.

Chapter one: Waking up
I awake to regular beeping sounds. I’m alone in a white room and looking straight up at the ceiling. Bright lights shine all around me. My heart is beating fast. I try to raise my arms, then legs, but I can’t move them. My head won’t budge either. I can’t blink or wiggle my fingers.

So what’s making those pings and blips? It sounds like a machine, perhaps several. But what are they doing? One machine creates a small burst of air that gently caresses my face. Its slight breeze does not cool my hot skin. I feel beads of sweat pooling on my forehead. When the perspiration rolls down my cheeks and reaches my chapped lips, it soothes them because they are unbelievably dry. My throat is sore and irritated.

A figure dressed in all black appears. Could this be Death? I then notice a small white collar around his neck. Death looks like a priest. Do I know this man? Even so, I can’t recognize him because his face remains a blur. Suddenly, my mind swells with a screaming sound. It’s a loud, almost deafening noise, as if the priest is yelling in my ear. The sound vibrations are pounding inside my skull, like I’m standing in front of giant speakers at a rock concert. Then the noise somehow turns into actual words spoken in a slow, distorted tone. I strain to make sense of his words: “In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit ... ” Why is he giving me the last rites? I try to shut down my brain so his words won’t affect me. I want him to stop or go away. The room goes dark.

I’m awake. The priest is gone. Everything in my body feels numb. I want to close my eyes, but they won’t move or shut. I feel tears welling up. It’s like I’m underwater looking up at the surface. With this sensation, a vivid memory arises. I’m suddenly back at the outdoor pool where I used to swim with my younger cousins Matt and Hayley.

“Hey, Matt, watch this!” It has just started to rain and I dive into the water. Through my swim goggles I peer upward at the gray sky, trying to see anything above the water past the reflection and through the many raindrops colliding with the surface. I feel weightless and at peace underwater.

But I’m not in a pool right now. My attention returns to my burning eyes. They feel like they’ve been open for hours, maybe even days. Is that even possible? Wouldn’t they dry out at some point? This thought makes me nauseous; I want to vomit, but that urge is overwhelmed by something even more powerful. My left arm feels like it’s on fire. The pain is excruciating. Somebody throw water on me. Please! I’m begging you!

No one comes because I can’t speak. So I suffer in isolation and maddening silence. My mind goes blank. I can’t remember anything, not even my name. Somehow, without urgent prompting, I remember: Yes, my name is Brian. Brian Boyle. Am I dead? But if I were dead, I wouldn’t be able to have these thoughts because dead people can’t think, right? But I don’t feel normal or alive either. Something is terribly wrong.

Maybe this is just a bad dream. So let’s try something to wake up. I can bite my tongue. Bite. Bite and wake up. But I can’t bite my tongue because I can’t even feel it. Where is it? It has to be in my mouth somewhere. I try again. If I had a tongue in this nightmare it would probably have been bitten off by now. I bite harder. Nothing.

My heart starts beating faster. Its thumping rhythm rises above the eerie silence that’s filled my mind. But why is it beating in the center of my chest, which isn’t where the heart is located? And something heavy must be sitting on my chest because it’s crushing me. The pressure increases. I want to shout, “Get this thing off me, I can’t breathe,” but I can’t make a sound. My heart feels like it’s going to explode.

An alarm starts beeping loudly. I see red lights flashing. This is real; it’s not happening in a dream.

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I hear footsteps. Several. Now I feel many hands on me. Grabbing my feet, arms, head. The hands pick me up, and I’m placed on a table with wheels. Why? What are you doing? And where are you taking me? Blurry shadows of people cluster around me. Voices are talking loud and fast: something about my heart and emergency surgery. Does this mean that I’m in a hospital? And what’s wrong with my heart? Oh man, this can’t be good. Mom, Dad, where are you? I need you.

I’m being pushed down all these different hallways. The ceiling looks the same everywhere — large white rectangular sheets of tile broken up by fluorescent lights with clear plastic covers.

The gurney is moving quickly, with several people running alongside. They’re also dragging the beeping machines. A large man looms over me. Underneath his white lab coat, he’s wearing a light blue button-up shirt. There’s a ballpoint pen and two red markers in his front pocket. He’s wearing an identification card connected to a lanyard. I struggle to read the name: Dr. James Catevenis, ICU Director, Prince George’s Hospital Center.

ICU. That’s ... Intensive Care Unit! This has gone from bad to worse. Only people who are critically injured or near death find themselves in Intensive Care.

The moving bed slams into a set of folding doors that swing open. I’m being wheeled into a partially lit room. It’s quiet here. Voices echo off the aqua-green tile walls. The bed comes to a complete stop and many hands surround me again, lifting my body onto a cold, hard surface.

People huddle near me. Everyone is wearing light blue surgical wardrobes and white latex gloves. A wide overhead light flicks on; it’s bright as the sun. Someone squirts brownish liquid on my chest and rubs it in, and another person places a clear plastic mask over my nose and mouth. A cool, scentless breeze fills the mask.

I stare up at one of the doctors who stands to my left. He must be the head surgeon because he’s directing everyone. He says something about fluid building up around my heart. I watch his hands hover near my chest. He’s holding a shiny object, which looks sharp, like a scalpel. The overhead light grows brighter. Within seconds, it swallows me in an even brighter flash. The last thing I hear before losing consciousness is the surgeon: “Let’s hope the third time is the charm.”

Excerpted from "Iron Heart" by Brian Boyle. Copyright (c) 2009, reprinted with permission from Skyhorse Publishing.

© 2012 MSNBC Interactive

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