The crushed girl wakes up from a coma with a vivid description of Heaven

The Minnesota girl crushed by the tractor tire wakes up from a coma with a vivid description of Heaven

“He said, 'Mom, I got up from my body and saw Dad hug me. He took the tire off me, ”Kordiak recalled. “She said she saw hundreds of beams of light praying from everyone around the world praying for her to live. He was happy in paradise. "" He says he could see us and reflect on our pain and regret ... and chose to return to this world. "

After an accident and near-fatal experience, 10-year-old Amber-Rose Kordiak smiles again.

 "I went to heaven," says a 10-year-old girl after returning from "death" - Life before death caused a bad surprise for Amber Rose Kordiak. When she was only seven years old, a 600-pound tire fell on her in July 2013. It was terrible, as it crushed the delicate bones of her face.

Her parents feared the worst. Amber Rose's injuries were so terrible that even paramedics were shocked. "They were standing there with their mouths open, they were frozen, they were not moving," her mother, Jen Kodiak, recalled that Amber was taken to a Twin Cities hospital, where she seemed to have lost so much blood that her body was under shock. Fortunately, the organs remained intact and did not close. She was immediately sent for surgery and fell into a coma.

Was he going to live or die? It turned out to be both! She was alive because she had obviously woken up. But after opening her eyes, she told her mother, Jen Kordiak, that she had been "in heaven". Later, Jen said, “I think she probably died; I don't know how she did it. " Amber said, "When I went to heaven, I saw rays of light of prayers going up to heaven." Jen said her daughter had followed "lights and bundles of prayers".

The dead girl was staring at herself after the accident and actually watched her father remove the gum from his body. Jen said to KSTP: “He said, 'Mom, I got up from my body and saw dad holding me. He took the tire off me. '”He added:“ He was happy in paradise. He says he could see us and could reflect on our pain and regret and chose to return to this world. " After three years, Amber narrated everything that happened. He confessed to his parents that "he had decided to return to Earth" because "he didn't want his family to be sad". It was his choice, therefore, to live.

A number of surgeries have helped to restore her face, although many bones have crushed her facial bones beyond repair. In order to get back her vision, her orbital bone needs to be restored, while her nose too has to be rebuilt so that she can breathe again. Her jaw, teeth and nerves also have to be repaired and she suffered a traumatic brain injury. Amber has gone through a battery of surgeries bravely and is getting back some order into her face from Mayo Clinic. Jen said: "I just love what she teaches us about love and people and mercy and beauty and she doesn't even know she does it. … When it first happened they told us our baby girl would never smile again, and her smile was amazing from day one. She defied odds, and said, 'I can't frown, but I can smile' and that's what happened. "

November 15, 2016 Reported [here]. After a bizarre accident and a near-fatal experience, a 10-year-old girl smiles again: ten-year-old Amber-Rose Kordiak smiles again, a feat that seemed impossible after an accident that left her face split to half. In 2013, she and her family were relaxing on their Minnesota farm on a summer night when her father went out to work on a tractor. Amber-Rose, then 7, went to join him and greet his cats.

A 600-pound tractor tire in need of repair was leaned against the barn wall. Amber-Rose's father warned her not to get close, but the girl thought it would be fun to cross it. "All I could hear was my husband's scream," said Jen Kordiak, Amber-Rose's mom today. “I ran out there and he was just holding her back. His face was completely in the middle. Basically, the upper part under the eyes hung down. You could only see his eyes and this huge hole.

When the huge tire overturned and fell over the Amber-Rose, the metal rim cut her face, cutting bones, muscles and nerves. There was nothing that held the upper jaw in the eye sockets: imagine the shape of Pac-Man, said Kordiak. After trying to stop the bleeding, Kordiak picked up his daughter and ran to the family van. As she ran down a rural road to meet the ambulance, her husband held Amber-Rose's face together. “I just said, we'll do it, we'll save it. I can't lose my baby, ”recalls Kordiak. A helicopter took the 7-year-old boy by plane to a hospital. He lost so much blood that his body was shocked. "The thing I have heard is that nobody has ever experienced such an extensive injury," said Kordiak.

The orbit of Amber-Rose's right eye was completely shattered, leaving only a void. The bones that formed her nose were gone. The upper jaw, the jaw, was completely severed. He had a dislocated dislocated jaw and a broken left lower jaw. Part of the right cheekbone was gone. He suffered a head injury in the violent fall.

The doctors weren't sure if she would survive, but the girl managed to survive. When Amber-Rose woke up from an induced coma, her family didn't think she would remember anything. But he told them he was aware of what was going on. “He said, 'Mom, I got up from my body and saw Dad hug me. He took the tire off me, ”Kordiak recalled. “She said she saw hundreds of beams of prayer light from all over the world pray for her to live. He was happy in paradise. "" He says he could see us and reflect on our pain and regret ... and chose to return to this world. "

A long recovery awaits us. Amber-Rose needed a tracheostomy tube to breathe. Various doctors tried to use metal plates to repair the face, but some got infected and caused serious problems, his mother said. People stared at the little girl whose right eye was two inches lower than the left eye. In December 2015, the family began treatment at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. The surgeons used a 3D model of her skull to plan for Amber-Rose's facial reconstruction, which included 18-hour surgery in July. "It's a complicated injury," said Dr. Uldis Bite, a plastic and reconstructive surgeon who is leading the team helping Amber-Rose. "He had several operations before he came here, some of which did not work as people making them hoped."