moving vehicle is extremely dangerous in all situations. at this point in the ride. option a is out. what about keeping a door open? the door is open because he won t stop. keeping the doors open, probably not the safest thing to have the doors wide open. he could go around a turn and you could fall out. not even in the right direction of where we re supposed to be going. this door is still open because i m trying to get out and he won t stop. there s only one safest bet here. if you have a friend you could text, a lot of the smartphones, could you drop a pin saying help me, i m being abducted, it s going to show you on the corner of third and broadway, wherever you may be. after calling 911, option c is the correct answer. there s another critical action you can take. keeping the window down so you have an avenue of escape is really important in that situation. i need to get home. panic begins to set in as
there s nowhere to pull over because there s a guardrail and to my left there s a ton of cars. option c is off the table for jay. it might work for you if there s room, but you can t count on it. so that leaves the brakes, but which approach is best? for jay the car jumping into his lane is a wild card. at that point i was slowing down and i put my other foot on the brake and i m standing up with everything i have pushing on the brakes. he still hits the vehicle, but acts fast enough to minimize the damage making the best answer a, slam on your brakes. you might have been told to pump your brakes in driver s ed, but that information is somewhat outdated. the national traffic safety administration mandated that cars come with anti-brake
oh, my goodness. it s a boy. it s a boy. the baby has arrived. but there are still miles to go before the family is out of the woods. after deciding to keep driving to the medical facility, would you know what to do next? a, cut the baby s umbilical cord. b, pat the baby on the buttocks to stimulate the nervous system. or c, stroke the baby s back to clear the lungs. do not cut the umbilical cord. let the umbilical cord continue to pulsate. and what that does is continues to improve circulation to the baby, it brings oxygenated blood to the baby. if you cut the umbilical cord in a setting where it s not clean or sterile, it can lead to infection in the baby. if you want to deliver safely, option c is your best bet. one of the first things when
input was a sound, which was a thunking sound. i still remember very clearly after hearing that sound the escalator started to speed up along with a realization of horror that it was suddenly accelerating. you re a father with young kids on a runaway escalator. what split second decision should you make? a, grab your kids and jump over the side railing. b, grab hold of the handrail and your kids and run back up the escalator to the top. in this case, going against the flow is a no-go as runaway escalators follow gravity down. the speed is great enough in a runaway situation that you really can t run up the stairs. you might grab a child and hold the child to reduce the impact or the affect on them when you land at the bottom. option c is out.
you might grab a child and hold the child to reduce the impact or the affect on them when you hit the bottom. option c is out. standing near the top of the escalator with no time to think, peyton picks option a. it was pretty much a bolt in terms of holding the handrail and jumping feet up on the space between the escalator units and my son came after that. but experts say you shouldn t pick peyton s path. though they both flake it out alive, peyton s son injuries his knee and it could have been much worse. of all options, b is the safest. the best option is to hold on to the handrails and ride it to the bottom because for most people all but maybe an olympic athlete they cannot begin to get off this equipment while it s moving. it s simply moving too fast. peyton s wife and daughter do ride the escalator to the bottom but his wife doesn t let go of the handrail in time.