BigDestiny
Sex God
I know First Aid (and my certification is actually caught up on, for once
), so I would stop. But obviously not to gawk.
I've only stopped at one accident: a semi went through an intersection, plowed into a car, then hit the ditch (and yet, the intersection is TO THIS DAY, not controlled
). I helped out where I could, with the woman other passerbys had helped out of the vehicle, but the man was trapped. After I surrendered my car blanket (which, of course, I never saw again - thank god, because it was probably covered in blood), there wasn't much I could do for them. We were all waiting for the ambulance.
So I decided to check out the semi, it was carrying a load of cows, and I could hear them mooing in the ditch (to this day, I have no idea what ultimately happened to them). The driver was unhurt, and quite broken up by what happened (I felt really bad for him when I read later that charges had been filed). He asked what was going on with the car he hit, and the other passerbys didn't want him to head over there. So I lied and told him that the people in the car were both fine, just shaken up. I'm still not sure if that was the right thing to do, but I can't think of anything else I could have done.
On a lighter note, right after I got my First Aid certification, I came across a man who'd decided to pull over to the side of the road for a quick nap before he carried on, on his way. But all I could see was a man unconscious at the wheel of his car. So I stopped and all the way to his window I'm thinking "please don't be dead, please don't be dead."
That was one of the longest walks of my life. 
I've only stopped at one accident: a semi went through an intersection, plowed into a car, then hit the ditch (and yet, the intersection is TO THIS DAY, not controlled
). I helped out where I could, with the woman other passerbys had helped out of the vehicle, but the man was trapped. After I surrendered my car blanket (which, of course, I never saw again - thank god, because it was probably covered in blood), there wasn't much I could do for them. We were all waiting for the ambulance.So I decided to check out the semi, it was carrying a load of cows, and I could hear them mooing in the ditch (to this day, I have no idea what ultimately happened to them). The driver was unhurt, and quite broken up by what happened (I felt really bad for him when I read later that charges had been filed). He asked what was going on with the car he hit, and the other passerbys didn't want him to head over there. So I lied and told him that the people in the car were both fine, just shaken up. I'm still not sure if that was the right thing to do, but I can't think of anything else I could have done.
On a lighter note, right after I got my First Aid certification, I came across a man who'd decided to pull over to the side of the road for a quick nap before he carried on, on his way. But all I could see was a man unconscious at the wheel of his car. So I stopped and all the way to his window I'm thinking "please don't be dead, please don't be dead."

