Post-Tribune

‘Seat belts save lives’ is not just some catchy slogan

- LAURA HINDERMAN Citizen Journalist/ Laura.hinderman@gmail.com

Please take a look at the photo accompanyi­ng my column today. It was taken Jan. 8 of a single-vehicle accident about 11 a.m. on eastbound Interstate 80 near Michigan City.

As you view the photo of the Honda Civic, some questions come to mind — who was involved in the accident? What happened? And, of course, was the driver injured?

The driver, Paul Bogusz, of Joliet, Ill., is fine.

“Physically, I am OK, and mentally I turned into some type of idiosyncra­tic safety advocate,” Bogusz said. “I think it looks more frightenin­g than the actual experience. In a weird way, it felt “uncontroll­ed,” for lack of a better word. To me, not scary.”

He miraculous­ly walked away from the wreck, and a few days later contacted me (we’ve been friends since grade school) to request that I help him spread the word of the importance of wearing a seat belt.

Bogusz was headed eastbound on I-80 on a vacation to visit three friends in three different states — Delaware, New Jersey and upstate in New York.

“I was in the middle lane of traffic on a Wednesday morning, and the weather conditions were sunny and clear,” he said. “The road condition was more slippery than I anticipate­d. I was in the middle lane of traffic, going just below the recommende­d speed limit. I saw that the left lane was wide open, so I signaled with my left directiona­l and I attempted to gain the left lane.

“As soon as I did so, the back end of my car lost traction with the road surface, most likely due to ‘black ice.’ I was suddenly realizing that I was driving too fast for conditions, but it was too late. My car spun in a counter-clockwise fashion, and everything began to shift to my left — the weight of my car, the force of the spin of my car and my position physically in the car.

“When this red Honda Civic DX (1999) finally came to a rest, I was upside down hanging from my waist. I was hanging from my seat belt, for lack of a better word, comfortabl­y.

“I was not bruised. I did not feel beaten as I watched in amazement the windshield break before my eyes. But the windshield did not fall into pieces, it held together. Neither of the air bags deployed. So, hanging upside down, I was then able to unbuckle my seat belt and land on my feet.

“I saw that I had opportunit­y to open my passenger side door, so I made sure it was open and then I kicked that door as hard as I could. It opened, I was able to crawl out safely, and then I started to pace the shoulder of the highway until help finally came in multiple ways.”

Bogusz told me about his harrowing experience to deliver a strong message about the importance of wearing a seat belt while driving and making sure that all your passengers do likewise.

“Please, wear your seat belt because I sincerely know that it saved my life,” he said.

While coping with the mental aspects of such a serious accident, and the realizatio­n that he easily could’ve been killed, Bogusz is using this time of reflection to put his energies into cherishing, reconnecti­ng with and educating his long list of friends to “click it” before driving.

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| SUPPLIED ?? Paul Bogusz’s 1999 Honda Civic overturned Jan. 8 as he traveled eastbound on Interstate 80-94 near Michigan City, Ind.
PHOTO | SUPPLIED Paul Bogusz’s 1999 Honda Civic overturned Jan. 8 as he traveled eastbound on Interstate 80-94 near Michigan City, Ind.
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