like that she was unconscious. she was definitely gone. as far as onlookers could tell, laura garrity was dead. flat on her back, right there, not 50 feet from the doors of the school. garrity says, in fact, she was somewhere else. i floated right out of my body. my body was here and i floated away. what did you see? what did i see? it was very peaceful. when you looked at your body, were people working on you? i seen people but i kept going. i went to see my mom and my ex-husband and they both came and it was very peaceful. it was so peaceful and it was bright and it was beautiful. i remember trying to reach out to my ex-husband and he would not take my hand and then they floated away and then i was just
in treating accidental hypothermia. is too much cold bad? too much cold is a double-edged sword. it can kill you, and it can save you. it s amazing. it will kill you if your heart stops from cold before your brain is cold. to put it very simply. it will protect you if you get cold enough before you have cardiac arrest so that your organs do not need oxygen. we can do more for a cold patient before we lose him than in a warm patient. that its why the helicopter teams here don t warm people whose hearts have stopped in the cold. instead, they wait. it was a lesson they finally mastered with anna baggenhold. she nearly froze in an icy stream. she had no heartbeat for more than three hours. her body temperature, 56 degrees fahrenheit. no one has ever been that cold and then survived. is it something you take pride in, the fact that you no. no.
that i kind of hit a hole in the ice so that the head went under. what happened was she landed upside down with her head stuck underwater between a rock and a thick shelf of ice. in fact, this is the exact spot where the accident happened. two of the men involved in anna s rescue showed us. she is where the water was most eager, over the cliff here. you can only imagine the desperation her friends must have felt as the moments started to tick by. she struggled for a while, and then she stopped. it took more than an hour, and a shovel, to free anna from the ice. they immediately started cpr. as the clock was ticking, a helicopter flew anna to the university hospital of north norway. it s an hour away. but she was taken straight to the operating room. she has completely dilated
defibrillator. the next 30 seconds went fast. she felt weak and couldn t catch her breath. like that she was unconscious. she was definitely gone. as far as onlookers could tell, laura garrity was dead. flat on her back, right there, not 50 feet from the doors of the school. garrity says, in fact, she was somewhere else. i floated right out of my body. my body was here and i floated away. what did you see? what did i see? it was very peaceful. when you looked at your body, were people working on you? i seen people but i kept going. i went to see my mom and my ex-husband and they both came and it was very peaceful. it was so peaceful and it was bright and it was beautiful. i remember trying to reach out to my ex-husband and he would not take my hand and then they floated away and then i was just
lifestyle and the women you ve entertained over the years, what are a couple of things you ve done that you re most proud of? i think the major thing that i take the greatest pride in is playing some real part in changing the social sexual values of my time. and i think my place is secure in that. was that a conscious crusade on your part, or did it just kind of develop once you started publishing this magazine? it evolved over a period of time. certainly the commitment in terms of my life was there earlier. i actually wrote a paper while i was in college comparing the kinsey report on sexual behavior in the male to the laws in the then 48 states and made the point that if the laws were effectively applied most adult men would be serving some prison time. we helped to change those laws. back in the 1950s nice middle-class moral kids could not live together before they got married. to have a baby out of wedlock