A Washington man is rightfully being hailed a hero after charging into a burning home to save his eight-year-old niece.
Reports detail how 20-year-old Derrick Byrd suffered second and third-degree burns on his face, back, and arms, having rushed into the building when he became aware his niece was trapped.
Speaking to KOMO-TV, he said: “Even though I got burnt, I really didn’t care, though. I’d rather get burnt than her. She’s young. She’s still got a lot of stuff going for her. She’s a good kid.”
The fire, at a home in Aberdeen, Washington is believed to have started while Byrd and six other family members were inside, including his sister, Kayla, and her three children.
Byrd caught his nephews, Junior and Royce, when they jumped from a window on the second floor. His eight-year-old niece Mercedes, however, was too afraid to jump after having watched Kayla fall from the roof.
Without thinking, Byrd dashed back into the house to rescue her. Within moments, he could feel the flames on him.
“I could feel it burning me,” he explained.
“I got her and took my shirt off and put it around her face so she wouldn’t breathe in any smoke and I just carried her out as fast as I could.”
True hero
What’s more, despite suffering injuries, Byrd said he would do it again if he had to.
“I’d run back in there and do it again even if I got burnt worse or died.”
Commenting on all those dubbing him a hero, he simply replied: “I can’t say a hero. I’d just say for my niece and nephews, I wasn’t going to let them die.”
What a genuine hero Derrick Byrd truly is. In moments like that, people’s true colours are shown, and Derrick can certainly be proud of his.
Are You Old Enough To Remember This Object? – Viral Story
It’s incredible to consider how sophisticated and technologically advanced children’s toys have become over the years, considering how content we once were with much basic toys. Consider an old-fashioned pair of roller skates. Kids used to get together and go roller skating long before scooters and trick bikes gained popularity. Additionally, if you grew up in the 1950s or 1960s, your conception of roller skates is probably very different from what they look like now.
Roller skating was first popularized by the baby boomers, however it dates back to the mid-1700s. A popular design of roller skates that had a wooden or metal base and leather straps first appeared in the 1950s.
You just stepped onto the skate base while wearing your shoes, if you can still remember using these roller skates. Except for a little toe clamp, the straps went around your ankle, which was virtually the only thing holding your foot in place.
These skates were so much fun and created so many memories. Roller skating was not only a hobby; it was a rite of passage, complete with learning to balance, the thrill of speeding down the pavement with pals, and the occasional injured knee.
Even if today’s youth are accustomed to electric scooters and high-tech devices, there is something unique and endearing about the classic design and simplicity of roller skates. They take us back to a simpler time when we could walk two feet to have fun and life moved more slowly.
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