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Georgia Mom, 29, Disfigured in Campfire Accident: 'My Burns Don't Define Who I Am'
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It’s been almost three years since Courtney Waldon suffered third- and fourth-degree burns over her entire body from a campfire accident at her Georgia home. Now, she says, life couldn’t be better. “I am so blessed,” Waldon tells PEOPLE. “God has done so many good things for me.” On Sept. 30, 2016, Waldon was living the dream. She put her then-5-year-old daughter, Caroline, to bed in their Tallapoosa home before joining her husband around a backyard campfire to celebrate their two-month wedding anniversary. The couple sat by the fire cooking tuna steak and asparagus. But when her husband attempted to relight the fire with a can of gas, some of the oil fell onto Waldon. The next thing she knew, she was engulfed in flames. “I stopped, dropped and rolled while screaming bloody murder. It was horrible…. I honestly thought I was dying that night,” she told PEOPLE in 2017. “It was the most painful feeling in the world.” When paramedics responded to her husband’s 911 call, Waldon was unrecognizable: Fourth-degree burns had ravaged her face and third-degree burns left her hands, legs and feet mangled. She would spend the next 51 days in the hospital — most of them in a medically induced coma in intensive care. To make matters worse, Waldon’s husband left her and Caroline — who is Waldon’s daughter from a previous marriage — and never returned. Karen Cosper, Courtney Waldon and her daughter Caroline | Courtney Waldon “I was devastated,” she says. “I begged for him to come back but … then I finally realized, after about three weeks of him putting me off, that he wasn’t coming back. I lost my dignity, my looks, and the person who I thought was the love of my life.” Since that almost-fatal day, Waldon has undergone 40 surgeries to help her regain the ability to drive, swim, and cook. After briefly living with her parents during her recovery, Waldon and Caroline, now 7, have since moved into their own home on the same 100-acre property. “It’s our own place and we have been able to restart our lives,” says Waldon, now 29. “Caroline is everything to me. I do everything for her.” Waldon has worked hard to regain the confidence she had before the accident, all while managing her frequent pain, as she says it feels like “my hands are on fire” almost daily. article... |
"fell on"
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No one deserves the unimaginable suffering she's been through, on so many levels. My heart goes out to her. Wishing her all the best.
Fire is no joke. Be safe around it. https://youtu.be/L6rsnf4Sh2M |
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reminds me of the time my dad gave me a fire safety talk and poured gasoline over some wood to show me how dangerous gasoline vapor was...he was smart enough to hide us behind the house and throw a zippo from around the corner...holy shit did that shit explode LOL....
gasoline <------------------- as far away as possible ----------------------------- >open fire :thumbsup |
She married a winner
To make matters worse, Waldon’s husband left her and Caroline — who is Waldon’s daughter from a previous marriage — and never returned. |
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"To celebrate their two-month wedding anniversary" - what the fuck is this nonsense?
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How do you deal with that? Suicide, and cause her more pain and suffering? Maybe try sucking it up and find yourself dreading going home, so you start working late and hitting the bars - any excuse not to go home - how long will that work? In the end, if he couldn't hack it, then his leaving is probably better than if he stayed. |
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