Description from original poster:

Happened a year ago so we’re almost finished with construction.

My car was parked on the right side on the break in the concrete. He was going 45-50 mph and pushed it over 5-10ft of concrete, through a windstorm certified garage door, and into a filled garage.

If my car hadn’t been there he would’ve driven right into one of the front bedrooms.

Had the pictures pop up in my memories and decided to share the crazy experience!

  • @Etterra
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    327 months ago

    What did he pass out from? Exhaustion, illness, some substance? It’s important to differentiate between genuine accidents, recklessness, and malice.

    • Cethin
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      7 months ago

      Unless it’s from some issue they weren’t aware of, that’s not really an excuse. Exhaustion is something you are aware of when getting behind the wheel. It’s essentially the same as choosing to drive dunk or high or whatever else. You’re in an impaired state. If it’s a medical issue they didn’t know about, then it’s an accident. Almost anything else was a choice.

      Edit: OP said in the original it may have been related to diabetes. There’s a potential it was an accident, but they seem to have been aware of their medical condition and something caused them to pass out.

      • @[email protected]
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        147 months ago

        Former EMT here: I ran more diabetic / hypoglycemia car crash calls than drunk driving calls. Really confused me

          • @[email protected]
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            27 months ago

            Huh? That’s one possible way to become hypoglycemic, but certainly not the most common, in my limited professional experience.

              • @[email protected]
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                57 months ago

                I’m not diabetic, so I am relation my perspective as a former EMT:

                The most common I experienced was folks not managing their daily diet perfectly. It can happen that they miss a meal or whatever, and “forget”. Then, while driving, the impacts of becoming hypoglycemic hit. Since they “forgot”, the onset of symptoms is unexpected. If it hits fast enough they don’t have time to realize what’s happening, and go from a competent driver to a “drunk”, with reduced mentation, focus, dexterity, etc. They can even pass out.

      • @[email protected]
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        107 months ago

        People often try to get to the hospital when they know they’re crashing.

        I will say that, anecdotes what they are, a friend got a concussion in 1992 in a mild soccer collision but seemed fine; but they think it contributed to his later accident with his car, as the stress and constant awareness required for driving caused a near blackout where he wasn’t able to stop the car in time before he lost focus. And, on the highway, it can be a few seconds to stop properly, and he just didn’t have enough time. He saved for years to buy a beautiful car, too, and it was all gone. Thankfully he survived and lived until covid.

        • @Alexstarfire
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          17 months ago

          Can’t tell if he was lucky or unlucky.

          • @toasteecup
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            17 months ago

            Unlucky.

            Dying from covid has to suck. It was shitty enough when. I managed to fight it off post vaccine I don’t want to imagine how painful it would be to have a lethal case of it.

            That plus life post covid is pretty nice. There’s a lot of bad but feels like there’s more good than bad when we go out and seize the day a bit

  • @[email protected]
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    237 months ago

    I love those “brick walls” built like a movie set, if it was the last house in the 3 piglets story, the wolf would have won

    • @athairmor
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      97 months ago

      Most brick house exteriors are non-structural. It shouldn’t be a surprise that they crumble from a car hitting them.

    • Wugmeister
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      77 months ago

      I think most things will break if you throw a car at them. The important thing is that even though one of the walls has been forcibly removed, the roof is still on top instead of being in the basement

  • @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    Why was the culdesac house even drinking? Perhaps a medical construction emergency due to termites?

  • @[email protected]
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    107 months ago

    remind me to decorate my front yard with totally-not-anti-tank-obstacle Czech hedgehog planters

    • @[email protected]OPM
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      17 months ago

      Should’ve asked. If you took the front of the SUV and the back of the truck, you would have one good-as-new car!