Thanks for the words, Timothy.
I should also mention that as much a role as my family played in me staying around a while longer, my faith played the bigger role.
I remember praying in my head not to be taken away from my family because I needed more time with them.
I'm not a preacher and I'm not going to get on a Bible thumping roll here, but I thought I needed to add that point to my earlier post.
There are a dozen people in Tifton, Georgia that are still scratching their heads as to how I survived. I should have bled to death before getting to the hospital. A GSP Trooper even had my wedding ring and a speech prepared to break the news to my wife (who ironically was already at the hospital, where I was headed because my uncle was having cancer surgery). The trooper was amazed when the ambulance pulled in and I was still holding on by a thread. He even came to visit me in the hospital and again after I went home, calling me the 'miracle man'.
I understand now what makes depression such a powerful enemy to many people. Because as much as I wanted to stay alive at one point, months later when the depression set in all I could think of was how much better off it would have been if I had just bled out in the ambulance. The doctor's put me on some mild medication for a while and it helped, but it was my family and beliefs that brought me out of my mental snake pit.
I have a small sticker on the back of my 'skid-lid' that reads, "Never ride faster than your Angel can fly".
I found out one morning that Angels can fly faster than 45 miles per hour.
P.S.
Thanks for letting me ramble on like this. It helps with the stress. My youngest son had an appendicitis attack late Tuesday night and had surgery to remove his appendix Wednesday. He's OK and home now, but it has been a stressful few days.
Thanks,
CG