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'A miracle': Man learning to walk again after surviving skydiving accident

Phoenix McWilliams, now learning to walk again, is desperate to find the family he says helped save his life.

'A miracle': Man learning to walk again after surviving skydiving accident

Phoenix McWilliams, now learning to walk again, is desperate to find the family he says helped save his life.

YOU TO THOSE THAT WERE FIRST TO HELP. FROM THE MOMENT HE ENTERS THE ROOM, IT’S CLEAR PHOENIX MCWILLIAMS IS A FIGHTER WITH HIS SISTER BEHIND HIM AND HIS NURSE ALONGSIDE HIM. HE IS DETERMINED TO LEARN TO WALK AGAIN. YOU GOT IT. ALMOST THERE. IT’S DAY THREE OF PHYSICAL THERAPY AT U OF L HEALTH’S FRAZIER REHAB. JUST 11 DAYS AFTER A SKYDIVING ACCIDENT. HE TRIED STAYING CALM WHEN HIS PARACHUTE BECAME TANGLED. A LOT OF STUFF GOES THROUGH YOUR HEAD WHEN YOU’RE UP THERE TRYING TO SURVIVE, BUT MOMENTS LATER, HE WAS CRASHING INTO A HARDIN COUNTY FIELD. A LITTLE GIRL HEARD HIS CRIES FOR HELP AND RUSHED TO GET HER PARENTS. HE REMEMBERS HER MOTHER RUNNING TO HIM AND HER WORDS. WERE YOU GOING TO SIT HERE AND PRAY OR MY HUSBAND IS GOING TO GET HELP? NOW WE’RE GOING TO SIT HERE AND PRAY UNTIL SOMEBODY SHOW UP. NOW, MCWILLIAMS INITIAL JUMP WAS AT 4200FT. IT WASN’T UNTIL 1000FT THAT HE REALIZED HIS BACKUP PARACHUTE WASN’T AN OPTION. 1000FT. THAT’S ABOUT RIGHT. 100 STORIES TO PUT THAT IN PERSPECTIVE, FRAZIER REHAB IS 15 STORIES. IT’S ABSOLUTELY A MIRACLE. BEYOND SURPRISE THAT HE DOES NOT HAVE WORSE INJURIES THAN HE HONESTLY DOES. DOCTOR JOSHUA HEATH CREDITS MCWILLIAMS SURVIVAL IN PART TO THE SHAPE HE WAS IN. I THINK YOU’LL DO REALLY WELL AND I THINK YOU’LL BOUNCE BACK FROM THIS AND DO EVERYTHING YOU WERE DOING BEFORE AND HIS PROGRESS. HOW FAR DO YOU THINK YOU WALKED PHOENIX TO HIS ATTITUDE? 40, 60, 30 CEILING TILES. MICAH MCWILLIAMS IS GRATEFUL FOR HER BROTHER’S TEAM AND THAT HARDIN COUNTY FAMILY SHE’S HOPING TO TRACK THEM DOWN. AND I WANT TO THANK THEM, NOT JUST FOR ME, BUT FOR MY ENTIRE FAMILY BECAUSE HAD THEY NOT FOUND HIM, THERE’S NO TELLING WHERE WE WOULD ALL BE. BUT NOW, JUST OVER A WEEK LATER, HE’S ON THE ROAD TO RECOVERY. I THINK IT’S JUST IMPORTANT TO WALK, PERIOD. I’M JUST HAPPY TO WALK, PERIOD. THAT’S WHY HE PLANS ON WALKING OUT OF THE HOSPITAL, AND DOCTORS SAY THAT COULD BE IN A MATT
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'A miracle': Man learning to walk again after surviving skydiving accident

Phoenix McWilliams, now learning to walk again, is desperate to find the family he says helped save his life.

A man dropped thousands of feet into a Kentucky field after his parachute got tangled this month while skydiving.Doctors say his survival is nothing short of incredible.From the moment he enters the room, it's clear Phoenix McWilliams is a fighter. With his sister behind him and his nurse alongside him, McWilliams is determined to learn to walk again.Thursday was his third day of physical therapy at UofL Health's Frazier Rehab, just 11 days after his accident.McWilliams said he tried staying calm when his parachute became tangled."A lot of stuff goes through your head when you're up there trying to survive," McWilliams said. Moments later, he was crashing into a field. A little girl heard his cries for help and rushed to get her parents. McWilliams remembers her mother running to him and telling me, "We're going to sit here and pray, and my husband is going to get help, and we're going to pray until somebody shows up."His initial jump was at 4,200 feet, and it was not until around 1,000 feet that he realized his backup parachute was not an option."It's absolutely a miracle. I'm beyond surprised he doesn't have worse injuries than he honestly does," said Dr. Joshua Heath with Frazier Rehab.Heath credits his patient's survival in part to the shape he was in and the progress he's made due to his positive attitude.Meeka McWilliams is grateful for her brother's team and the Hardin County, Kentucky family that rushed to help. She is hoping to track them down."For him to fall out of the sky in the middle of nowhere and to have people instantly come to his rescue, I think that's amazing, and I want to thank them not just for me but for my entire family. Had they not found him, there's no telling where we would all be," McWilliams said.But now, less than two weeks later, her brother is on the road to recovery and determined not to leave the hospital in a wheelchair."I think it's just important to walk – period. I'm just happy to walk," Phoenix McWilliams said.Doctors say if his progress continues, he could be released from Frazier as soon as July 10.

A man dropped thousands of feet into a Kentucky field after his parachute got tangled this month while skydiving.

Doctors say his survival is nothing short of incredible.

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From the moment he enters the room, it's clear Phoenix McWilliams is a fighter. With his sister behind him and his nurse alongside him, McWilliams is determined to learn to walk again.

Thursday was his third day of physical therapy at UofL Health's Frazier Rehab, just 11 days after his accident.

McWilliams said he tried staying calm when his parachute became tangled.

"A lot of stuff goes through your head when you're up there trying to survive," McWilliams said.

Moments later, he was crashing into a field. A little girl heard his cries for help and rushed to get her parents.

McWilliams remembers her mother running to him and telling me, "We're going to sit here and pray, and my husband is going to get help, and we're going to pray until somebody shows up."

His initial jump was at 4,200 feet, and it was not until around 1,000 feet that he realized his backup parachute was not an option.

"It's absolutely a miracle. I'm beyond surprised he doesn't have worse injuries than he honestly does," said Dr. Joshua Heath with Frazier Rehab.

Heath credits his patient's survival in part to the shape he was in and the progress he's made due to his positive attitude.

Meeka McWilliams is grateful for her brother's team and the Hardin County, Kentucky family that rushed to help. She is hoping to track them down.

"For him to fall out of the sky in the middle of nowhere and to have people instantly come to his rescue, I think that's amazing, and I want to thank them not just for me but for my entire family. Had they not found him, there's no telling where we would all be," McWilliams said.

But now, less than two weeks later, her brother is on the road to recovery and determined not to leave the hospital in a wheelchair.

"I think it's just important to walk – period. I'm just happy to walk," Phoenix McWilliams said.

Doctors say if his progress continues, he could be released from Frazier as soon as July 10.