Warren's Story
"Jesus." The last word out of my mouth before impact in a head-on
collision on Interstate 20 near Canton, Texas.
"Jesus." The first word out of my mouth when I woke up after a
48-day coma following that accident.
Thanksgiving Day 2000, I was on my way to visit my Mom in Fort
Worth. A light drizzle was bathing the surface of the highway and as
best as I can remember, I had my cruise set at around 50.
Just as I went under an overpass my little pickup truck began to
hydroplane, turning my truck at a 45 degree angle. When my tires
came in contact with the dry pavement under the overpass, the cruise
took over, sending me in the direction I was now aimed……across the
median strip.
I missed the overpass supports and I missed the guard rails, but my
path took me across the slick, grassy median (which is only about 50
feet across at that point) into the oncoming traffic. At 50 miles
per hour, it doesn't take long to cross 50 feet of grass. I know; I
did it and by the grace of God, I lived.
There was no way to miss the van coming from the opposite direction.
I looked at the van, at the driver, back at the van, and I spoke His
name, Jesus. Not a scream. Not in panic. Just His name as a one word
prayer….. then impact!
The pickup was on its side; my driver door was against the highway.
The impact had split the gas tank open, the fumes ignited, and
immediately flames billowed like clouds from beneath the dashboard.
Flames engulfed my seatbelt and I could not reach down to release
the lock. I was awake, trapped, and on fire!
Seemingly from nowhere, three men appeared - one kicked in the front
windshield for an escape route; another one used his knife to cut
the seat belt and free me; and the third one used his handheld fire
extinguisher to try to put out the flames that were burning my
clothes from the lower part of my body.
The men pulled me out over the top of the steering wheel and when
they had carried me about 15-20 feet, one of them asked me, "Is
there anyone else in the vehicle?" The second I told them no, the
truck exploded. Ten seconds longer and my rescuers and I would have
all blown up in the fiery explosion, but that was not God's plan…..
for them or for me either.
Nightmares filled almost all of the next 48 days and nights of my
life in the coma. There was one time, however, that I vaguely recall
two of my sons, Warren II and Crash, standing beside my bed. As best
I could, I tried desperately to tell them about the nurses and
others who I thought were part of the groups trying to kill me, or
at least I thought I told them.
The massive medicines did wonders for me, but apparently did not
help my thinking or my speech a lot. Even though I remember being
very serious about what I was trying to tell them, neither son could
make heads or tails from what I said.
Forty-eight days after the accident, January 9th of 2001, I opened
my eyes and looked around. I remembered that I had been in the
accident, but I thought it was the day before.
I was alive!
I did not know where I was (LSU Burn Unit in Shreveport, thank you,
Lord!), but I knew the first thing I had to do was to praise God for
saving my life. I didn't have any idea how badly I was hurt and I
couldn't move any part of my body, but I knew my life was spared
only by the grace and love of our Lord Jesus Christ. I needed
somehow to praise God.
I tried to remember the 23rd Psalm, but could only think of the
first line or two. Next I tried to think through the Lord's Prayer,
but again, could not remember much. Then I began to think about the
name Jesus. Only Jesus. Not some formal, complicated, preachy
prayer……simply the name above all names….. the only one worthy to be
praised: Jesus.
As I mentioned, I couldn't move any part of my body, so the hot
tears just rolled down my cheeks….. tears of happiness and joy that
partner with giving praise to Almighty God. Then I stopped for a
moment. I recalled that during a weekly Bible study group about six
months earlier, we had discussed the difference between thinking
things to God and speaking to Him out loud.
Especially in the New Testament, I believe we are taught that we
should speak our praise to God aloud, not just think it in our
minds. Since Satan cannot read our minds, and I wanted Satan to know
that I was lifting praise to God for what had happened, I began to
speak the name of Jesus out loud.
One of my nurses then noticed I was awake. It may have been the
tears or maybe the noise I was making in my praise. (I didn't know
it at the time, but I had tubes running into my lungs and my tongue
was severely swollen from the coma.)
Whatever I was saying probably was not understandable to the human
ear. Even if my nurse couldn't understand my praise, my Father in
Heaven surely could. He understands all languages….. known and
unknown….. nothing misses His ears.
The doctors estimated that I would be hospitalized for about a year
and in rehab for 2 years. Through God's healing power, I was
released from the hospital in about 2 months and was in rehab for
only 6 months. What a miracle worker He still is!
I discovered later that the doctors had told my family and friends
that I would probably die in the coma---that I would most likely
never wake up. They told me that if they had thought I would
survive, they would have amputated my left leg at the knee and my
right foot because both were so damaged I would never walk again.
God had different plans, though. Praise His name!
The "big wreck" as Mary Beth and I call it, was the second of three
accidents that I was in during a five year period. The first had
occurred in March of 1997, three years previous. I was walking
across the loop in Tyler when a car hit me. My broken pelvis
required many months of recovery and a change of profession, from
customer rep (salesman) to being a college student in order to learn
a new career: computers.
I began attending Tyler Junior College in the fall of 1997, learning
how to work with computers. After a couple of years of classes,
however, I began to teach some computer lab classes part time for
the college. By the fall of 2000, I was on full time faculty, and
then came the big wreck. But teaching at TJC fit nicely into God's
plans for my future as you will soon see.
The third wreck happened about 6 months after being released from
rehab from the big wreck. I got hit by another vehicle. My car had
stalled on the way home one Saturday night about 11:30. I was only
about a mile from home, so I decided to walk, but stayed way over in
the grass, about 10 feet off the pavement.
It was a good idea, but the wrong distance. Not quite far enough off
the road. Probably 10 feet, 7 inches would have been far enough, but
that was not to be.
I was still recovering from the big wreck, but had graduated to
living at home and walking with a cane. My left leg was still in a
cast. As I walked in the grass alongside the two lane road in Chapel
Hill, the driver of a truck from behind me was blinded by oncoming
headlights and came off the road, hitting my left side with the
truck's passenger mirror and sending me flying about 10 feet in the
air into a grassy ditch.
As I watched the driver drive off into the night, once again I
talked quickly to God. To the best of my knowledge, my side of the
conversation went something like this: Lord, I know I'm hit really
badly again. I'm ready to go, but I really want to stay. Please let
me stay.
I saw the rear lights of the car suddenly brighten as the brakes
were applied. The driver turned left into a driveway and turned
around to come back. As the car approached, the only thing I could
move was my left leg, the one still in the cast from the big wreck.
Since the grass was higher than my body, the driver didn't see me. I
prayed more as the car went up to the top of the hill and I heard it
turn around. I used my leg to move the grass around me and somehow
the driver saw the movement, and pulled over to where I lay. A
couple more cars followed the driver into the grass. I then prayed
no one would run over me since they could not see me because of the
grass.
The people who stopped didn't know our location, so I borrowed one
of their cell phones and, as I lay in the ditch, I called 911. I
knew exactly where we were. It was quite a shock to find out that I
was connected to a 911 operator 300 miles away, near San Antonio. In
fact, she did not even know where I was, even after I gave her the
name of the town. She said I was 'out of her area', asked me to
write down the 911 local number, and began to give me the number.
I firmly expressed my horrible condition and explained that I had
been hit by a truck, that I was in a ditch, in the dark, had no pen
or paper, and I needed an ambulance immediately. I asked her to
please connect me to the Smith County 911. At this point, she
thanked me for calling 911 and she hung up on me. I was not a really
happy camper at that point.
I borrowed another cell phone, called 911, and got our Smith County
office operator. The ambulance driver got lost on his way to pick me
up. The highway patrolman did not, though, and he told the ambulance
driver how to find us.
When asked why he came back, the driver of the truck that hit me
told the highway patrolman that he thought he hit a deer and wanted
to see what it looked like. Just between you and me, I know that God
put that thought in his mind so he would come back to me.
You see, later I found out that the impact had exploded my spleen,
broken my left ribs, and that I was in the process of bleeding to
death internally……I just didn't know it at the time. 18 mg of
Coumadin will make blood run like mercury, and it was doing it to
mine.
If the driver of the truck had not come back, I would have bled to
death in the grass, over in the dark, on a Saturday night, out in
the country. But that was not in God's plans.
I was taken to ETMC Tyler in critical condition, again! The doctors
helped save my life. They released me in 11 days, and I was walking
again in about 2 weeks. God is still in the miracle working
business……even though we certainly don't deserve it!
Another year later, and another miracle was waiting to happen in my
life: I was about to meet Mary Beth!
The miracles were not because God considered me a moral, righteous
person, for I was not. The amazing things that God pulled me through
were not some kind of reward for doing the right things. Along with
really hearing and obeying God, I made a number of wrong choices,
too. And of course He knew all of this.
The Bible tells us that His ways are not our ways. For reasons I do
not understand, He once again spared my life.
I did not deserve it then; I still don't. That's why God calls it
grace.
A little more information: In between the 1st accident and the
crash-and-burn I-20 accident, Jean, my loving wife of 27 years was
found to have cancer; the following year she passed away. She was a
beautiful person who gave our family many years of love, devotion,
and kindness. She is missed.
And one last thing: IF God were to take me back to Thanksgiving
2000, to the split second before impact on I-20, and offer me the
choice of missing the van or crashing into it and burning, then I'd
go through it all again…….. the coma, the nightmares, all the
extended pain and getting hit the next year…….just to be able to
know Him more and to experience His intense faithfulness, His
overwhelming love, and His awesome grace all over again.
…………warren powell

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