Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
2 minutes ago, DasNootz said:

As a human, I'm hoping that they have counselors available to help players process. 
As a fan, I'm fearful that this impacts players beyond this game and this season.  I go back to Tre White talking about how his injury gave him a chance for the first time to see that he's more than a football player, and that there's more to life than the game he's played since he was a kid.  I can see an event like this triggering someone, that already has thoughts about the greater meaning, to walk away early.

 

And if they did, how could you blame them?

Posted (edited)
6 minutes ago, atlbillsfan1975 said:

I don’t think the team bounces back that quick. Anytime you are exposed to what they watched happen last night it takes time to recover. Witnessing someone being administered life saving measures isn’t easy to watch. This isn’t like anything anyone has seen before. They have seen players immobilized before, but seeing some receiving CPR and have a defibrillator used is a visual they won’t soon forget. I am as big a Bills fan as anyone else. If this team, or some players, didn’t want to play another down this season I wouldn’t blame them a bit.

Go Bills! 

I think, mentally, it’s a stretch for them to play Sunday vs the pats let alone try to get this cincy game in. They are supposed to start practicing tomorrow for the pats game. Don’t see that happening quite yet. Yes, they will obviously need to play the pats game. Just not sure what that schedule will look like this week in preparation.

Edited by YoloinOhio
  • Like (+1) 2
  • Agree 2
Posted
3 minutes ago, Steptide said:

I agree, and I've been through some of that with my dad and his heart attacks. Having said that though, if the team and fans get good news regarding hamlin, the team could potentially rally around that. I'm just thinking out loud here, but I'd imagine if a family member was in hamlins condition, and then my family gets great news that that family member is going to be ok, that completely changes the mood. I dunno. Just putting thoughts out there 

100% from anxiety to JOY. That is the news we want!

  • Like (+1) 2
Posted (edited)
49 minutes ago, Ed_Formerly_of_Roch said:

Just curious you mention these two people who were young and healthy, but the one had severely blocked coronary arteries.  How old was this person as to me untrained medically those two things don't usually go together, young and blocked arteries.  I'm hoping you consider old much older than I would as that would be good health news for me!

 

Yeah, they don't.  He was the youngest of 8 brothers, and I believe at this point 6 of them have died of heart disease, all at relatively young ages.  There's the unfortunate intersection between a likely genetic condition and a familial lack of regular, good quality preventive medical care.   For all the gaps and snafus we hear about, Modern Medicine Works, fellas.  If you're in your 30s and haven't had a checkup, find a doctor and go.

 

49 minutes ago, TonyBeets said:

100% agree with this statement.  What a great leader, but moreso a great human being.  I cannot fathom being put into McDermott's position last night.  

There is only so much adversity and a community can take.  Personally, my wind was let out of me last night.  I could not care less about the outcome of the remainder of the season.  

 

I'm pretty much there too.  Just Live, Fellas.

Edited by Beck Water
  • Like (+1) 1
  • Agree 2
Posted
29 minutes ago, Beck Water said:

 

I'm trying to shut up here because on the modern emergency medicine Dunning-Kruger curve I'm standing at the bottom of the "slope of enlightenment" looking up and we all gotta know our limitations.

 

But I can point out here, emergency medicine stresses the importance of lay people getting trained in CPR and about staff at large venues and businesses getting trained in the use of modern, easy to use AED devices BECAUSE they make such a huge difference to outcomes.   When I worked, I did annual training on both BECAUSE I know the data are out there: they make a difference.  When I'm in a large venue, I reflexively note the location of the AEDs and how they're stowed.

 

There are not a lot of data about the outcomes of what happened - a young, peak physical condition man having what is called a "witnessed arrest" where not only paramedics, but trained emergency physicians, responded within seconds.  But it's the best possible emergency medicine response, probably better than actually walking into the ER of a major medical center and collapsing (because they tend to be chaotic and the physicians/nurses there are often already working full-bore).  On the field, he had a team of doctors and paramedics with nothing to do but care for him, and probably 95% of the initial equipment that would be used in an ER at hand.

 

I can tell you from my own experience that a neighbor, as a young mother in her mid-30s, had her husband performing CPR on her alone for 11 minutes, before paramedics arrived with an AED and were able to restore a pulse (which took a further 8 minutes, and multiple shocks).  She was a math professor prior to her cardiac arrest.  She is still a math professor.  She played competitive ultimate frisbee prior to her cardiac arrest; she still plays competitive ultimate frisbee.

 

The speed and quality of emergency response make a huge difference.  I don't think framing it as "dead for 9 minutes" is terribly productive (or accurate).

 

If y'all want to do something productive with your ass today, call the local red cross and enroll in a CPR class; ask about getting one taught in your workplace; ask if there's a workplace "emergency squad" and join it to get trained in CPR and AED use.  CPR has been made way simpler since I certified as an instructor 4+ decades ago.  Both are straightforward to learn, will only take a couple hours of your time, and could literally save the life of a colleague or family member (or even a random stranger) some day.

Honestly except for him having pads on it is about the best scenario for a recovery. Oddly the others are at casinos. They have cameras everywhere and response times are better.

Sadly there is an unpredictable nature to neurologic recovery.  I've seen it multiple times. There are people who you expect to wake up and be fine and there are others that you think won't recover that do. Only time will tell.

  • Awesome! (+1) 1
  • Thank you (+1) 1
Posted
40 minutes ago, BuffaloRebound said:

This was definitely McDermott’s finest moment.  I criticize the guy sometimes, but he’s a good human being.  No way he was putting his team back on the field.  

He's a great leader of men, and an even better person.

 

  • Like (+1) 7
  • Agree 1
Posted
4 minutes ago, YoloinOhio said:

I think, mentally, it’s a stretch for them to play Sunday vs the pats let alone try to get this cincy game in. They are supposed to start practicing tomorrow for the pats game. Don’t see that happening quite yet. Yes, they will obviously need to play the pats game. Just not sure what that schedule will look like this week in preparation.

the post I quoted regarding the Mood instantly changes based off of a positive prognosis/news regarding Hamlins' condition: Might the Bills indeed rally by playing the pasts* meh I dunno yolo.  But we read no real prognosis until it would then be too late.....

 

bugger

Posted
56 minutes ago, Mrbojanglezs said:

 

Workplaces often will sponsor and pay for it, ask your HR department 

 

mine use to. I use to get trained yearly but they stopped.

 

well trained but I like my refreshers

Posted

Like many others, I'm sure, I'm still at a loss this morning.

I was at the Kevin Everett game. At least that time around, we knew by the time we got home that evening that Everett was going to LIVE. This time, we don't even have that assurance.

I don't know that I have anything new to add that hasn't already been said. I'm sick, I'm heartbroken, and I don't care about football right now. 

We'll probably never know exactly what happened last night, as far as the league wanting the game to continue. There are reports that that is indeed what the NFL wanted, but the players and coaches essentially stepped in and said "we're not going back on the field". If so, good for them. At the very least, good for coach Taylor for going over to coach McDermott and offering to do whatever McDermott felt was best. I echo others' gratitude to the Bengals coaches, players, and fans for their class in this awful situation.

 

I don't know how the final two weeks of the season will play out for the Bills. It's a giant scheduling mess, not to mention the obvious mental health and trauma components that would currently make it almost impossible to ask those players to get back on the field and play football today or tomorrow. All of it, of course, is totally secondary to health of Damar Hamlin.

I wouldn't blame any of the players one bit if this was the "straw that broke the camel's back" this year. A person can only take so much grief and hardship.

It all seems like a bad dream. It still doesn't seem real. 

  • Like (+1) 3
  • Agree 2
Posted
2 hours ago, Buffalo_Stampede said:

Its amazing how we just have to move forward with life after a traumatic experience


As humans, we tend to highlight the positive touchstones and leave the negative ones behind.

 

in the end, it’s ALL life.

Posted

Man, Damar is such a good dude. Before this I really treated him like a back up player that I wouldn't follow, "since he was just a backup." This really just puts it all in perspective.....these guys are people, not just football players.

  • Like (+1) 3
  • Agree 1
Posted
12 minutes ago, YoloinOhio said:

I think, mentally, it’s a stretch for them to play Sunday vs the pats let alone try to get this cincy game in. They are supposed to start practicing tomorrow for the pats game. Don’t see that happening quite yet. Yes, they will obviously need to play the pats game. Just not sure what that schedule will look like this week in preparation.

 

This is where the leadership of the coaches matter.  In a lot of ways, it will be mentally healthy and mentally helpful for the team to keep their normal routine, with some obvious additions like a prayer session for Damar and the chance to speak to counselors and mental health professionals. 

 

I would hope that the Bills have a little bit more information than is available to the general public at this point.  If the speculation about commotio cordis is true, it would be helpful to have physicians speak to the team and explain - it really is a very fluky rare thing.  If there is a piece of protective equipment that can be added to the pads, that would help too.

 

But it would probably help everyone to have as normal of a week as they can.

  • Like (+1) 3
Posted

Busy with work today - but I just had to post something.  Anything - just wanted to be part of this community today.

 

So prayers for Damar.  Have always liked his story since he was drafted.  Don't know if you saw the video where he said a couple weeks ago, he squeezes childhood friend Dane Jackson's hand sometimes to let him feel the love and because they don't know how long their time playing together will last.  Praying for a repeat of the Pronger experience - if you watch the video, Pronger went down in a very similar way to Damar.  Worried about how long he was out, but I am assuming that he was treated for 9 minutes does not mean he necessarily mean he had no heartbeat for that long.  Who knows how long until the defibrillator?  I don't think anyone except those who treated him (if anyone has anything please let us know).  

 

Also prayers for Damar's family and friends, for his teammates, and for Tee Higgins and the Bengals.  All must be in shock.  Bills to the end. 

  • Like (+1) 2
Posted
24 minutes ago, Steptide said:

I agree, and I've been through some of that with my dad and his heart attacks. Having said that though, if the team and fans get good news regarding hamlin, the team could potentially rally around that. I'm just thinking out loud here, but I'd imagine if a family member was in hamlins condition, and then my family gets great news that that family member is going to be ok, that completely changes the mood. I dunno. Just putting thoughts out there 

A few years ago my mom found out she had MAJOR blockages across 3 arteries (she felt a bit of chest pain and went in for a check up), and needed major, almost immediate heart surgery. They waited i think 48 hours to get her ready.

 

Entire family plus much extended family flew in for the hospital, and then waited an agonizing 8 hours. And then the Doctor said she came through the surgery well.

 

and then we all went out for Thai and EVERYONE was in great mood.

 

Just desperately hoping that Damar’s family and his teammates get this kind of uplifting update, which allow them a much easier time to process all the trauma of witnessing this.

  • Like (+1) 2
This topic is OLD. A NEW topic should be started unless there is a very specific reason to revive this one.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...