Denise Lockie of Charlotte, North Carolina, has felt all of the above in recent weeks, as a string of major aviation accidents brought back memories of crash-landing in an icy river in New York. Sixteen years after the 鈥淢iracle on the Hudson,鈥 she and other aviation disaster survivors stand ready to support those who are just emerging from their ordeal in Toronto on Monday.
鈥淩ight now, they haven鈥檛 even processed what has happened,鈥 Lockie said of the 80 passengers and crew members who survived when Delta Air Lines flight 4819 crashed and flipped over at Pearson International Airport.
There were no survivors when a commercial jetliner and an Army helicopter collided in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 29, a medical transportation plane crashed in Philadelphia on Jan. 31 and a plane carrying 10 people crashed in Alaska on Feb. 6. But in Toronto, not only did no one die, the last of the injured were released from the hospital Thursday.
鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing,鈥 said passenger Peter Carlson, who spoke at a conference less than 48 hours after the crash. Though he managed to crack a joke 鈥 鈥淣othing beats a good road trip besides an airplane crash鈥 鈥 he later admitted struggling to leave his hotel room.
鈥淚 was quite emotional about this whole thing and just really want to be home,鈥 said Carlson, the newest member of what retired flight attendant Sandy Purl calls a 鈥渟ad sorority and fraternity.鈥
A history of survival
Monday鈥檚 crash in Toronto wasn鈥檛 the first time lives were spared during a major aviation disaster there: In 2005, all 309 people on board Air France Flight 358 survived after it overran the runway and burst into flames.
In 1989, 184 of the 296 people aboard United Airlines Flight 232 survived a crash in Sioux City, Iowa. And in 1977, Purl was one of 22 survivors when Southern Airways Flight 242 lost both engines in a hailstorm and crashed in New Hope, Georgia. Sixty-three people aboard the plane died, along with nine on the ground.
鈥淚mmediately you have a euphoria because you survived,鈥 said Purl, now 72. 鈥淏ut then you go into what鈥檚 known as psychic numbing, which protects you from everything that鈥檚 in your brain that you can鈥檛 bring to the surface for a long time down the road, if ever.鈥
For more than a year after the crash, Purl鈥檚 strategy was to flee whenever anyone mentioned the disaster. Eventually she was admitted to a psychiatric hospital where she told the staff, 鈥淚 can鈥檛 stop crying.鈥
A kindly doctor took her hand and reassured her what she was feeling was real.
鈥淔or the first time, a year and a half later, people weren鈥檛 saying, 鈥榊ou look so good! Get on with your life, you鈥檙e so lucky to be alive,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淔or the first time, someone gave me permission to feel and to cry and to feel safe.鈥
Survivors stick together
Both Purl and Lockie are members of the National Air Disaster Alliance, which was created in 1995 to support survivors and victims鈥 families and advocate for safety improvements.
In 2009, the group published an open letter to the 155 passengers and crew members of US Airways flight 1549 after Captain Chesley 鈥淪ully鈥 Sullenberger famously landed the plane in the Hudson River after a bird strike disabled both engines.
鈥淲e are grateful and thankful that all survived, but survivors need time to process and comprehend what it means to be an air crash survivor,鈥 the group wrote, encouraging survivors to rest, retreat, rely on others and reserve their rights to privacy.
Paying it forward, Lockie is offering similar advice to those aboard the Toronto flight. She described being in a fog for about eight weeks after her crash, struggling to keep up with her corporate job as her injuries healed and being beset by nightmares and panic attacks.
鈥淎bsolutely number one as far as I鈥檓 concerned is taking to somebody who can understand,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think Delta is a fantastic airline and I鈥檓 sure their care team is fantastic, but then again, how many people on those care teams have actually been involved in an aviation incident?鈥
Friends and family might urge survivors to move on with their lives, she said, but 鈥渋t just doesn鈥檛 work that way.鈥
鈥淵ou might have fears that come out later on, and you really have to be able to deal with those,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o my recommendation is to take all the help you can possibly take.鈥
It doesn鈥檛 take much to trigger memories
While Lockie said her experience hasn鈥檛 deterred her from flying often, it has shaped her behavior in other ways. When she enters a store or restaurant, for example, she always checks for the fastest way out.
鈥淵ou have to be able to calm yourself if there鈥檚 something that triggers your emotional aptitude,鈥 she said.
Purl, who returned to work as a flight attendant four years after the crash, said she can be triggered by the smell of gasoline or seeing news footage of other crashes.
鈥淚 look at the TV and I see my crash,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 smell it. I taste it. I see the black smoke and I can鈥檛 get through it. I feel the heat of the fire.鈥
The Toronto survivors may find their experience exacerbates underlying traumas, she said.
鈥淟ike the layers of an onion, you pull one back and there鈥檚 another layer underneath,鈥 she said.
Her advice: Live one day at a time, seek out people who offer unconditional love and talk, talk, talk.
鈥淎nd then find a way to make a difference as a result,鈥 she said.
Holly Ramer, The Associated Press