VibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibesVibes get well Sarah!!!!!
Sarah and her family might need our prayers for a long time. Head injuries are challenging because at the time of coma you don´t know whether the recovery will be short or long and demanding - whether you´ll get good or bad news. My son Pekka, Finland´s champion in slopestyle (pekkahyysalo.com) had an accident pretty similar to Sarah´s on 28yh April 2010, though in higher speed and with a day long ambulance transport to the intensive care unit. The doctors´ statements were very same as in Sarah´s case, Pekka was in coma for 3 weeks, had 2 pneumonias during the coma time and fought for his life in critical condition for more than 5 days. It took over 3 weeks before any kind of prognosis about his possible recovery were said. After the critical days many of us thought whether he could continue his rising freeskiing career but in the end being alive was more important than the missed victories in freeskiing competitions. Fortunately now, 20 months after the injury, he is skiing again, though not as a freeskiing professional but as a happy skier anyway. In the end it is life that counts. My warmest wishes for Sarah´s recovery and a lot of strenght to her family!