
“Trauma is not what happens to us, but what we hold inside in the absence of an empathetic witness.” — Dr. Bessel van der Kolk
On the day of the accident, I had paid the deposit on a rental home in Vancouver, and the deposit for an amazing little preschool for our eldest child in an area of the city we loved. We had recently moved away from the Okanagan to focus on our future, as prior to this we had been struggling a bit to find our footing as a family. We were learning what it meant to build a life together. To raise children. To be adults. To be parents. To love one another not only as husband and wife, but also as a mother and as a father.
Leading up to the accident, there was a shift in our lives. I just didn’t know where the shift was going to take us, and that only hours after committing to this new chapter, everything would explode and our world would fall apart completely.
In the first year after the accident, I thought our story could still be planned and controlled. Sure, Chris had been in a helicopter crash, but we just needed to keep our shoulders back, our eyes forward and work on healing. Getting Chris back to work, and moving back into our normal lives seemed completely doable, believing with just enough willpower we could get back to the place we had been on that day. With focus, we could go back to being the family we were meant to be.
When Chris finally got cleared and headed to work just over a year after the accident, we celebrated our success as a family that had overcome the hardships and the challenges put before us. Then, just a couple of weeks after Chris returned home from his first job, I had my first panic attack.
In retrospect, moving away from the city I loved to be closer to the support of friends and family was a mistake. I found myself isolated and alone in a place I thought would shelter me. That was hard to accept. It had been a tough year, with our focus on Chris’ healing as we raised a baby and toddler. I thought being somewhere familiar would help. I also failed to realize that Chris heading back into the skies would trigger a reaction in me that I didn’t see coming. A reaction I wouldn’t understand for a very long time.
I had put all of my plans to the side as well, as I actively ignored the signs my body might be starting to falter. I did not study the effects of trauma on my body. Why would I? The accident hadn’t happened to me. Chris was the inspirational one. He was the one who had miraculously survived. I was there to help him heal. I had no idea that the panic attack was just the beginning for me, and that the years that followed would be about my healing, too.
It has been twelve years since the accident, and I am truly starting to understand the importance of story. I have been rereading my early blogs, reminding myself of just how far we have come. When our world fell apart again, and panic and anxiety invaded my days, I searched for someone with a similar story, but I struggled finding them. I knew I needed support, but I didn’t know where to turn or who to turn to. Finding a counsellor felt like an impossible feat, and admitting I needed one wasn’t really in the cards at that point.
I was busy shaming myself for being, what I perceived, as weak. I worked to suppress the panic attacks and the anxiety that suddenly, without warning or invitation, took over my life. I was so scared, and I felt so alone, but I tasked myself with managing it on my own. It was my job to make sure my babies were being raised as they should be, with a strong mother who didn’t falter. So, I suppressed and suppressed and suppressed, but everyday still feeling panicked and so very alone.
Much of that second year, I spent my days surviving my own battles alongside a man who was surviving the aftermath of the accident. Thankfully, Krista Haugen graciously welcomed me into her world though we are not part of the Air Medical Community. In many ways, finding her fundamentally changed my life.
The relationships with people who have gone through something similar helped me to realize I am, in fact, normal. I was not weak for feeling the way I was feeling. I wasn’t selfish and I wasn’t broken. I was simply reacting to the world I had been thrust into. I was normal. I had finally found others who understood my story. I don’t know what would have become of me had I not found Krista when I did.
Being able to talk to someone without explanation can save a life. When someone just ‘gets it,’ it creates a shift in our bodies from survival to healing. It makes us feel seen and heard. We feel understood and accepted, and in the days when we are barely surviving, this can be what pulls us through. My story is very different from Chris’ story, though we have lived them side by side.
My story is not one of overcoming something unsurvivable through perseverance and willpower. It is not a story of obvious strength or tenacity. My story is much quieter. It is a story that often carries shame — though it shouldn’t. A story that can make one feel weak and alone. A story that is rarely asked about. A story that is rarely told.
It is a story nonetheless, and I know there are many out there just like me. I cherish these survivors, and in their stories of strength, I get to see my own. I do not see weakness in them. I do not think they are broken. I believe they are some of the strongest people I have ever known. I look up to them, and I recognize their grace and quiet perseverance for what it truly is.
These are the women and men who hold everything together as it all falls apart. The ones who ignore their own bodies and needs because they’ve convinced themselves it isn’t about them. The ones who pretend everything is fine, even as the quiet voices of their bodies speak of a different kind of survival.
They are strong, courageous and magnificent beings who continue to live and strive even when everything is difficult. Even when they are holding up a world that is too heavy to carry.
I wish more of these stories were told, because like so many others, I needed them after Chris’ accident. My body tried to warn me of the damage prolonged stress does, but I didn’t understand the language. I didn’t realize the road I had happened on to. I didn’t know the direction I was headed in or the heartbreak that would follow.
I wish I had known so many things earlier, because much of the pain we endured could have been avoided or at the very least lessened. In the early days, I searched for those who had come before me. Though few, the ones I found helped pull me through and out of the darkness.
Twelve years later, though we have mostly moved on from the accident, it still touches me. I am still healing. We are still healing. Not just from the initial trauma of Chris’ accident, but from the traumas that have been added to the pile since.
Trauma builds upon trauma, and if one is not able to off load or process what needs to be processed, the damage that began in the beginning continues to build. Our bodies begin to buckle under the pressure, and we must heal again and again. This is where I am now. Healing once again. Knowing the road ahead of me requires patience and being kind to myself is of the utmost importance. I hope this is the last time, but as I am a human living life, I know this is unlikely.
So, as I sit in the energy of this anniversary, I allow myself some grace as I move into the understanding that stories like mine do matter. Our journey has been imperfect as we have learned to navigate a world where we are forever changed. We do not feel inspirational. We do not feel like role models. We are simply humans who have survived. We are still here.
We get up every morning, and we look for the silver lining, knowing that life is not about being perfect or living in the expectations of others. We all have our stories, and sometimes sharing them is one of the greatest gifts we have to offer. I will forever be thankful to those who were willing to share their stories with me, as we struggled to survive in the early days when we weren’t sure we would.









