Calgary triathlete risked her life in daring rescue of drowning couple during Mexican vacation [View all]

CALGARY As Tamara Loiselle stood on a Cancun beach looking out into the surging ocean where two stranded swimmers gasped for air, she glanced around at the nervous faces of a dozen or so security guards next to her. They had all been drawn to the shoreline by screams echoing from the swimmers, who were so distant they looked like nothing more than two specks bobbing on the heaving water.
Ms. Loiselle is no stranger to the dangers of deep waters. She almost drowned about six years ago after she fell off a boat and didnt have the strength to pull herself up. She vowed to get back into shape. The strength she earned over time would save two people. Armed with a life preserver and a rope secured to a reel on the beach, the woman swam beneath the waves, which were coming fast and furious. A big wave knocked the wind out of her. At one point, I was like, Oh my God, what did I get myself into? I hope this works out because I have two children at home. As she continued to close in on the stranded swimmers, another tense moment came as the rope connecting her to the beach became stuck. For a minute or so, she couldnt move. I was really getting pummelled by the waves, she recalled. Once the jam was cleared, she pressed on and soon came upon a man. He pleaded with her to rescue a woman who was farther out. Go to her, go to her, he said.
Ms. Loiselle let him grab onto the life preserver and they both swam out to the woman. Just her face was sticking out of the water. She was gasping for air; she was totally exhausted, unable to swim anymore. About a minute into the rescue, the men on the beach began towing them back to shore, where they were greeted by paramedics. They grabbed the woman, who couldnt walk. I looked over and the man was totally traumatized. He was in a fetal position on the beach with his hands on his head, his eyes fixed on the ground. I asked him if he was OK. He said he was.
The next day, she received a Facebook message from the man she saved. The message said: words cannot describe my gratitude but Ill try. The man wrote that before Ms. Loiselle arrived, his girlfriend was about to let go and had said, Im sorry, I cant do this anymore. Ever since this incident, were feeling as this is added time, overtime
A gift to be able to live more, to be here some more time.
http://news.nationalpost.com/2015/01/05/calgary-triathlete-risked-her-life-in-daring-rescue-of-drowning-couple-during-mexican-vacation/
