20-year-old upbeat, optimistic in wake of paralyzing accident

'He is still Brian'

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Brian DeArmitt, 20, formerly of Dixon, is greeted by his dog, Jack, as he arrives at his new home in Amboy. His mom, Julia, looks on. Brian, who was paralyzed in a June 24 diving accident, also was greeted by a police and fire escort and by dozens of friends and family who lined the streets to welcome him home Monday. (Alex T. Paschal/apaschal@saukvalley.com)
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“I think I was trying to do a flip, and just not thinking about the water being shallow.” It was 3 feet deep.

“All I remember is hitting the back of my head – then everything went white. I remember not feeling any pain or fear. The white light I saw was peaceful. I knew I couldn’t fight it.”

He regained consciousness and tried to scream for help, but he was submerged.

“I tried to move, and swim to get out of the water. That was when I realized how serious it was. I just remember wanting to move so bad, and I couldn’t. I yelled for help and inhaled water.”

On the dock, his friends worried when he didn’t resurface but thought, typical of Brian, he was playing a practical joke.

“When I didn’t come up for a while, they came in after me. They found me about 15 feet from where I jumped in.”

Colin Brinkmeier and Ben Emmole pulled him onto the pier. His neck was broken and his spinal cord crushed.

“When I came up, I guess I gained consciousness. I saw them huddled around me, and I said, ‘Don’t tell my mom.’”

Laughing now, he said he worried she would be upset because she always warned him of the dangers of diving into water head first.

With reason.

“My first words to him in the emergency room were, ‘How many times have I told you ...’” she said. “When you’re out having a good time, you don’t think about that stuff you were taught, I guess.

“It was kind of always a fear I had in me. My husband [Paul] had an employee years ago who dove into the hotel room pool on his honeymoon and broke his neck. I used to tell my kids that story all of the time, and Brian knew better.”

Brian is accident prone, and “we were in the hospital yearly with broken bones and stuff,” he said.

This time, though, it was different. “I got the call that they were putting him on a board and that he dove – I knew deep down in my heart,” Julia said. “I kept saying on the way, ‘Please don’t be paralyzed,’ I just knew it wasn’t the typical annual Brian accident.”

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