Please email us your Underwater Hypoxic Blackout survivor stories!
Your survivor stories can be very impactful in the prevention of these deadly occurrences by emphasizing the lack of warning. Underwater blackouts can happen to anybody, even the most physically fit!
Because of all of her time in the pool, she is a really strong swimmer and can swim lap after lap. As her Mom, I never had any reason to worry…or so I thought.
I hyperventilated, then began swimming laps in the pool. I completed two laps and was on my third. I felt the urge to breathe but pushed myself to go a little longer and make it to the side of the pool one more time.
On July 3rd, 2020, we were on a family vacation on an island in North Carolina. Myself, my Dad and Chandler were all swimming in the resort pool, playing the familiar game of seeing how far we could swim from one end of the pool to the other without taking a breath.
On July 2, 2014, my then 14 year old son, Bailey almost drowned to shallow water blackout. He is an excellent swimmer and athlete and we have always been so cautious with water safety, but we were unaware of the danger of breath holding. Many times, I have timed my kids with my iPhone to see how long they could hold their breath underwater. I did this as a child.
On March 11th 2014, I stepped onto the pool deck ready for another grueling swim practice. My closest friend, Shannan Maher, got into a swim lane across the pool from me and we both started our warmup. We were just starting the main set of the evening when my friend decided to hide from the coaches’ view, and skip out on the set.
While visiting her aunt and uncle in League City, Texas; Katie, a 24 year old excellent swimmer, drowned in their backyard pool. Her uncle performed CPR until an ambulance arrived. When the paramedics arrived she still had no pulse. The paramedics were eventually able to get a pulse, but she did not regain consciousness.
It was a hot August day in Key West, Florida. We were in the pool swimming around, enjoying the live band. We decided to take one last trip that summer and Key West seemed to be the perfect spot. It was a super hot weekend. We had been swimming all summer.
Sea Island, Georgia Cason Milner and his brother, Whitner, were competing with each other by swimming the length of the pool while holding their breath. Whitner could hold his breath for over 3 minutes, but his little brother did not want his older brother to beat him.
Along with a normal swim workout at FAU’s Olympic sized swimming pool, I had planned eight 50 meter under water laps with no breath, then 60 seconds treading water between laps for rest. I woke up in the hospital 5 days later. I had experienced a shallow water blackout on one of my 50 meters underwater no breath.
San Diego, California Brian’s story is a successful case, albeit a close call. So close, that Brian hit the brink between life and death and luckily his friend was able to revive him to life. In line with the typical profile of a Shallow Water Blackout victim, Brian is a strong, advanced swimmer and was a member of the NAVY.
Julian Ottley blacked out while swimming with friends in the lake in the summer of 1986. Luckily, his friends Sarah and Jim were there to save him and prevent a needless death.
Summer 1981- Grand Cayman Island (as told by Joe Dean Lewis) My survivor story takes place in the warm, clear waters of the Caribbean. My best friend Lance and I were working on a dive boat off of Grand Cayman Island, when the accident occurred. For two years prior we had trained extensively to become the best freedivers/ spearfishermen that we could be.
In 1960 I was a sixteen-year-old high school junior living in Maplewood, Louisiana. My friend Tom Davis and I met at the municipal swimming pool on a hot summer day. I had ‘discovered’ long distance underwater swimming. With the accumulated intelligence of a teenager I found that I could swim underwater to the other end of the pool and back by hyperventilating.
On July 24, 2021 I blacked out while swimming underwater at the Ventura Aquatic Center, California.
Holding my breath and hyperventilating before each underwater lap I have done much of life without knowing the risk of shallow water blackout (SWB). My dear friend Lorraine McPherson was in a nearby lane. She and a lifeguard saw I was in trouble; lack of movement and my head underwater. Fortunately, there was little time lost.