Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Avery Keeps Me Going:' Survivor Recalls 10 Freezing Hours With Young Daughter

The Canadian Press, 18 Dec, 2017 11:43 AM
    BOISSEVAIN, Man. — Kristen Hiebert has a tattoo on her arm, written in Arabic, that sums up her outlook since the night she and her young daughter almost froze to death on the side of a rural Manitoba highway.
     
    "I lived. I suffered. I changed," she says, reading it to a visitor.
     
    Almost two years after her car crashed, Hiebert is still adapting to life without her lower legs — amputated due to frostbite — and continues to work to build a better life for herself and her daughter Avery, now 6.
     
    "Avery keeps me going," Hiebert says.
     
    "I look at my life now and think about when I first got out of the hospital — when I was at my mom's still. In my mind at that time, there was no possible way I could be living by myself, doing everything I can (now.)"
     
    Hiebert, 28, still has a gap in her memory about the night of Jan. 17, 2016. On her way home from checking on her mother's house in Glenboro, Man., her car went off the highway and down an embankment near a river.
     
    It was -20 C and dark. Hiebert doesn't remember the crash, but clearly recalls coming to at the bottom of the embankment. She had several broken bones, a fracture in her neck and bruised ribs. Every movement brought sharp, deep pain. Waiting to be rescued, she held Avery close to keep her warm.
     
    Hours went by. Vehicles passed above. No one came.
     
    "I remember cars going by and me thinking, 'Why can't they see?'" she says.
     
    "I had broken limbs and my feet were frozen ... it was so frustrating."
     
    As morning drew close, Hiebert decided to take a chance. She left Avery and tried to crawl up the snowy slope to the guardrail in the hope of being seen by a passing driver. She had doubts she could make it with her broken arms.
     
    "Avery is the only reason I fought to get up the hill," she says. "Without her, I'm sure I would have died down there."
     
    She reached the guardrail, heard her daughter talking below — an encouraging sign — and hoped someone would stop.
     
    "I couldn't raise my arms. I just figured someone might just see me by chance."
     
    It was 10 hours after the crash when Tina Dubyts saw Hiebert and stopped. An ambulance was called. Remarkably, Avery was largely unhurt except for some treatable frostbite on one foot.
     
    Hiebert was severely injured. She was airlifted to a Winnipeg hospital, where her legs were removed below the knees and she underwent surgery for her broken bones.
     
    She spent two months in hospital and, even now, her recovery is ongoing. She goes to a physiotherapist once a week and travels to Winnipeg for work on her prosthetics about every three weeks. She has gone through six pairs so far and is expecting she may soon need more surgery to her legs.
     
    Hiebert is also working with a psychologist who might help revive her memory about the crash.
     
    "Truthfully, there are parts of me that want to know but there are bigger parts of me that don't want to know. I think the hardest part for me is thinking about what my daughter went through."
     
    The community rallied around Hiebert and her daughter. An online fundraising effort raised $90,000. Boissevain residents threw a social that raised $20,000. Service clubs and the RCMP organized other fundraising events.
     
    Hiebert, a single mother, worked as a cleaner before the crash. She is looking at going back to college and finding a career that can accommodate her level of mobility.
     
    She says she cannot thank people enough for the help she has received. It has allowed her to raise Avery in a bungalow in a nice neighbourhood. Avery is now in Grade 1. Hiebert also has a truck that lets her get around.
     
    "Just being able to say thank you to everyone as many times as possible — I'll take every opportunity to do that," she says.
     
    "Words can't even express how I feel about what everyone has done for me. Because of them, I have my house ... and we've been able to live good."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP say they called off pursuit before crash that killed three women

    RCMP say they called off pursuit before crash that killed three women
    Mounties say they were chasing a stolen truck that crashed into a minivan and killed three Edmonton women, but add they called off the pursuit long before the deadly collision.

    RCMP say they called off pursuit before crash that killed three women

    New model confirms endangered right whales are declining

    New model confirms endangered right whales are declining
    Researchers with the U.S. government and the New England Aquarium have developed a new model they said will provide better estimates about the North Atlantic right whale population, and the news isn't good.

    New model confirms endangered right whales are declining

    B.C. man acquitted of four terrorism charges related to Facebook posts

    B.C. man acquitted of four terrorism charges related to Facebook posts
    A British Columbia man accused of using his Facebook account to express support of "lone wolf" terrorist attacks has been acquitted of all charges.

    B.C. man acquitted of four terrorism charges related to Facebook posts

    B.C. government invites public to share views on marijuana rules

    B.C. government invites public to share views on marijuana rules
    A Vancouver councillor says it may take years, but he can see the day a craft cannabis industry emerges in British Columbia, with smoking lounges in the city allowing people to responsibly sample strains of specially cultivated marijuana.

    B.C. government invites public to share views on marijuana rules

    Legal cannabis tops packed agenda at annual meeting of B.C.'s municipal leaders

    Legal cannabis tops packed agenda at annual meeting of B.C.'s municipal leaders
    Municipalities in British Columbia are clamouring to have a say in the marijuana policies they believe will fall largely on their shoulders to enforce when pot becomes legal next summer.

    Legal cannabis tops packed agenda at annual meeting of B.C.'s municipal leaders

    Former B.C. finance minister Mike de Jong enters Liberal leadership race

    Former B.C. finance minister Mike de Jong enters Liberal leadership race
    British Columbia's former finance minister Mike de Jong has announced his bid for the provincial Liberal leadership, joining a race that already includes two other past cabinet ministers and the former mayors of B.C.'s two largest cities.

    Former B.C. finance minister Mike de Jong enters Liberal leadership race