Markk,

I'm thinking about you and Amy and the dogs.  Will continue to pray for a full 
recovery!  I like your choice of words!  

Katey 

Sent from my iPad

> On Oct 27, 2013, at 10:29 AM, Mark BurningHawk Baxter 
> <markbaxte...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Amy 2.0 will be better, stronger, faster…
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
> Messengers and Skype: BurningHawk1969
> My home page: http://MarkBurningHawk.net
> Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/markburninghawk.baxter
> 
> 
>> On Oct 27, 2013, at 12:14 AM, Joanne Chua <shuang.an...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>> Hi Mark,
>> 
>> Just want to say that thinking of you and Amy and the two dogs. 
>> Hanging there mate, it will be a long recovery for Amy, but she'll make it.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Joanne Chua
>> The flip side of Inclusion is Exclusion.
>> Leaders For Tomorrow 2013 Candidate
>> Send from my iPad
>> 
>>> On 27 Oct 2013, at 17:21, Mark BurningHawk Baxter <markbaxte...@gmail.com> 
>>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> If the "him, "in question is me, HOK, we are already friends, and I believe 
>>> I am also friends with almost everyone here. If I am not online, I am away, 
>>> and will get back to you as soon as I can.
>>> 
>>> The good news, however small, is that Amy did move a very little of both 
>>> her arms and legs today.
>>> 
>>> Thanks again for everyone who showing their support. It is a long road 
>>> ahead for Amy, she needs all the encouraging she can to get her back to 
>>> walking and driving again.
>>> 
>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>> 
>>> Messengers and Skype: BurningHawk1969
>>> My home page: http://MarkBurningHawk.net
>>> Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/markburninghawk.baxter
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> On Oct 26, 2013, at 6:46 PM, eric oyen <eric.o...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> have him get on Skype. some of us are faster with speech than keyboard 
>>>> skills. Also, its good to hear a voice on the far end of things offering 
>>>> support.
>>>> 
>>>> my Skype: technomage-hawke
>>>> 
>>>> -eric
>>>> 
>>>>> On Oct 26, 2013, at 5:26 PM, Cara Quinn wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Hello again All,
>>>>> 
>>>>> I just wanted to give you an update on Mark and Amy's story.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Firstly though, please let me offer my sincere and deepest thanks to you 
>>>>> all who have shown your support and well-wishes. This not only means a 
>>>>> tremendous amount to Mark and Amy, but also means the world to me that we 
>>>>> can come together as a community to support each other when we are in 
>>>>> need.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Some of you have asked where the donations will go. Any donations will be 
>>>>> used for expenses associated with this incident and the medical care from 
>>>>> this. Mark has said that he will keep a record of everything associated 
>>>>> with this. Already it cost hundreds of dollars for Mark to simply tow 
>>>>> Amy's car back home. This cost has now been taken care of for them, 
>>>>> fortunately. So thank you all! :)
>>>>> 
>>>>> You all are making a real difference here so I'm truly grateful to you!…
>>>>> 
>>>>> Now, I'd like to share Mark's email address here so that you may send 
>>>>> your support to him. If you cannot offer financial support then please do 
>>>>> consider offering Amy and him your most valuable emotional support. It is 
>>>>> truly welcome…
>>>>> 
>>>>> Below I'll first share Mark's email address and then a copy of the recent 
>>>>> article in a local Oregon paper about this incident which also offers an 
>>>>> update on Amy's condition. If you would like to know more, please do 
>>>>> write directly to Mark if you would?
>>>>> 
>>>>> Now that this is known here, please let me suggest that we now move this 
>>>>> to a more personal level off the lists. Feel free to write me or Mark and 
>>>>> do be assured that any developments, I will share. Otherwise, I'm happy 
>>>>> (and will now encourage us) to continue this off the lists.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Thanks so very, very much to you all for your support! I cannot express 
>>>>> enough how much this means to them and to me.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Y'all are AWESOME!!!
>>>>> 
>>>>> Have a wonderful weekend! Info and article follow…
>>>>> 
>>>>> Sincerely,
>>>>> 
>>>>> Cara
>>>>> ---
>>>>> Email Mark Baxter markbaxte...@gmail.com
>>>>> 
>>>>> The Article
>>>>> 
>>>>> The Curry Coastal Pilot - Couple survives hiking ordeal
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> Mark Baxter and his girlfriend Amy Regan with their dogs, who were 
>>>>> instrumental in efforts to rescue Amy after a hiking accident. Submitted 
>>>>> photo
>>>>> Brookings resident Mark Baxter still isn’t sure what to make of what he 
>>>>> calls his misadventure along Damnation Creek near Klamath last weekend — 
>>>>> an afternoon jaunt that landed his girlfriend, Amy Regan, in ICU in 
>>>>> Portland with a broken back and no feeling in her arms and legs.
>>>>> “There was a bunch of stupid decisions all down the line,” Baxter said 
>>>>> Wednesday of what was supposed to have been an easy afternoon hike. “I 
>>>>> got lucky. I got damn lucky.”
>>>>> The two didn’t bring a survival kit, and were wearing sweatpants and 
>>>>> T-shirts. A friend has since reassured them that their clothing sounded 
>>>>> appropriate for a two-hour hike along a popular trail.
>>>>> The 3.4-mile trek threads through a redwood forest down 1,000 vertical 
>>>>> feet into a rocky, secluded beach. It’s rated “easy,” and the couple are 
>>>>> experienced hikers.
>>>>> “At first, the trail was great, so we continued,” Baxter said. “By the 
>>>>> time it got narrow and steep again, and Amy could see the ocean through 
>>>>> the trees ahead, we needed to turn back; it was getting dark.”
>>>>> When they did, Regan and her dog, Luke, slipped and fell from the steep 
>>>>> embankment. Baxter later learned she likely slipped on rotting timbers 
>>>>> left from an old footbridge.
>>>>> “I heard her fall, cry out, then a crash, then nothing,” Baxter said. “I 
>>>>> called out, ‘Amy! Can you answer me!’ And I heard nothing … for minutes.”
>>>>> When he did hear something, he didn’t think it was human. But it was, and 
>>>>> it was Amy.
>>>>> “I do not think I have ever in my life witnessed that much suffering and 
>>>>> agony,” he said. “It is a sound I hope never to hear again.”
>>>>> Baxter and his dog, Ezra, scrambled down the hill to rescue her.
>>>>> “She’d landed on her back, on the rocks at the bottom of an old creek 
>>>>> bed,” Baxter said. “And she kept saying, ‘No! No! No!’ over and over ... 
>>>>> and told me she couldn’t feel her legs.”
>>>>> Baxter struggled back up the incline and worked his way about a 
>>>>> quarter-mile down the dark path until his iPhone finally got one bar. It 
>>>>> took at least four 911 calls — and disconnects due to poor reception in 
>>>>> the valley — before he was able to relay their situation to Del Norte’s 
>>>>> Search and Rescue team.
>>>>> He gave them the name of the trail; he told them about the footbridge.
>>>>> But, no, he didn’t think he could get back to his vehicle. No, he 
>>>>> couldn’t describe where he was.
>>>>> They ascertained his GPS coordinates, and Baxter’s phone died.
>>>>> A few hours later, he was getting cold. He had the dogs with him, but 
>>>>> he’d left his sweatshirt with Regan.
>>>>> And he couldn’t tell if rescue crews were approaching through the thick 
>>>>> trees and the dark night.
>>>>> Baxter is blind.
>>>>> Mark and Amy
>>>>> 
>>>>> The 44-year-old Brookings man met his girlfriend on Facebook — he the 
>>>>> disillusioned musician and she looking for a new life away from the 
>>>>> strip-mine town of Butte, Mont. She joined him here six months ago.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Amy has her own challenges, Baxter said, with psychiatric issues and a 
>>>>> condition that leaves her in constant pain. Hence her service dog, a 
>>>>> lanky German shepherd with steely copper eyes.
>>>>> 
>>>>> “But we instinctively knew we were real (emotionally) close,” Baxter 
>>>>> said. “She is the most loving, caring, intense person I know. She is the 
>>>>> bravest person I’ve ever known.”
>>>>> 
>>>>> Saturday, Baxter wasn’t feeling so brave, he said. He periodically 
>>>>> shouted out for the rescue team. He huddled with the dogs. He listened.
>>>>> 
>>>>> “I’d done all I could do,” he said.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Four hours later, he heard someone calling his name.
>>>>> 
>>>>> In many ways, it was just the beginning of their travails. It took hours 
>>>>> to get Regan backboarded, up the cliff and back down to the trailhead, 3 
>>>>> miles away. It was 3:30 a.m., about 12 hours since they’d set out on the 
>>>>> hike.
>>>>> 
>>>>> As they walked, a search and rescue volunteer quickly learned Baxter and 
>>>>> Ezra could navigate the dark path far better than he and his flashlight, 
>>>>> and let the two take the lead. They talked about the dogs, the school 
>>>>> that had trained Ezra, dogs in general.
>>>>> 
>>>>> “I think he was mostly just trying to take my mind off what had just 
>>>>> happened,” Baxter said. “And as beat-up and tired as I was, I cannot 
>>>>> imagine what it was like for Amy to be stretcher-borne out of there.”
>>>>> 
>>>>> Baxter said the dogs were the heroes that night. Luke led the rescue team 
>>>>> to Regan; Ezra, limping from his flight down the hill, led Baxter and the 
>>>>> search team carrying Amy out of the woods.
>>>>> 
>>>>> He got a ride home from a park ranger; Amy remains in intensive care at 
>>>>> Oregon Health Sciences in Portland with a broken thoracic spine, three 
>>>>> broken ribs and a collapsed lung. Ezra is sore and tired; Luke is 
>>>>> confused and sad.
>>>>> 
>>>>> “It’s very possible Amy could recover from this,” Baxter said. “It’s too 
>>>>> early to tell. They’re just caring for her day to day. I don’t know 
>>>>> anything about her prognosis. And I have not yet stopped sending my 
>>>>> gratitude to ‘Dog’ for walking with me, for saving our lives.”
>>>>> 
>>>>> Deep in the dark
>>>>> 
>>>>> Numerous elements resulted in their survival that night.
>>>>> 
>>>>> “The reason we got through that was my martial arts skills, keeping a 
>>>>> level head, and doing what you have to do,” Baxter said. “It’s been a 
>>>>> theme of mine throughout my life.”
>>>>> 
>>>>> “It is horrifying, and also amazing,” said Dawn Nelson, a friend of the 
>>>>> couple who lives in Nevada. “It’s a testament to the power of love, the 
>>>>> abilities of guide dogs, the service of others, and the ability to do 
>>>>> what needs to be done, despite nearly insurmountable obstacles.”
>>>>> 
>>>>> Baxter, born blind into a sighted world, has always refused to think that 
>>>>> way.
>>>>> 
>>>>> “When it came to anything at all — from high school and passing an exam, 
>>>>> from riding a bike to going camping — I had to blaze the trail,” he said. 
>>>>> “I had to tell everybody that, ‘Yes, I can do this; don’t put me in that 
>>>>> box.’”
>>>>> 
>>>>> He sought out experiences, began “collecting skills,” overcompensating to 
>>>>> prove to the sighted people that he had no weaknesses, no disabilities, 
>>>>> that he was no different than them.
>>>>> 
>>>>> “If I had been sighted, I would have been immobilized,” he said of the 
>>>>> couple’s ordeal last weekend. “How a species can evolve with a dominant 
>>>>> sense that is useless 12 hours a day ... I just don’t get it. My skills 
>>>>> don’t involve sight at all.
>>>>> 
>>>>> “Hearing,” he said, “is a more beautiful and useful sense.”
>>>>> 
>>>>> That comment, from a man who is also profoundly deaf.
>>>>> 
>>>>> He is a tactile human, feeling the world around him through his feet as 
>>>>> he walks, through pressure changes in the air as surroundings change.
>>>>> 
>>>>> “Ask the land where to go,” he said. “It’s getting in nature, sitting 
>>>>> with Earth. Am I getting too New-Agey here?”
>>>>> 
>>>>> He attributes that to Sensei Toda Yoshi, Baxter’s martial arts 
>>>>> instructor. With the attitude of ‘just do it,” the then-26-year-old 
>>>>> learned the ancient Japanese tradition of Shaolin Kempo Karate.
>>>>> 
>>>>> There are a lot of fist, foot and body moves in karate, but there are 
>>>>> also the soft skills of the warrior: focusing the heart, power and energy 
>>>>> through the mind and into the body, Baxter explained.
>>>>> 
>>>>> “I credit him with helping me save Amy because without his teaching, I 
>>>>> would not have been able to channel the panic in my heart, through my 
>>>>> mind, into my body, into actions, that got us out,” Baxter said. “Without 
>>>>> what I know about balance, and the strength that I have through keeping 
>>>>> up my exercises, I would not have had the physical ability to get out.”
>>>>> 
>>>>> Other skills he learned through Tom Brown Jr.’s “tracker school,” a 
>>>>> nature and wilderness survival school based in New Jersey, where 
>>>>> participants gain a “closer attachment to the Earth and the skills and 
>>>>> philosophy to live in harmony and balance with creation.”
>>>>> 
>>>>> “That’s what helped me stay on the trail, stay safe, and be calm enough 
>>>>> in the dark, in the night, in the woods, to use the skills I had to get 
>>>>> us out,” Baxter said.
>>>>> 
>>>>> Amy
>>>>> 
>>>>> Even though Regan’s out of the California woods, she isn’t out of the 
>>>>> medical woods.
>>>>> 
>>>>> The most recent report Baxter has on Amy is that she has a shattered 
>>>>> thoracic vertebrae near her neck — surgeons put a permanent metal rod in 
>>>>> her spine for stability — and while she cannot move her arms or legs, she 
>>>>> can wiggle her hands and toes. She has five broken ribs and a ruptured 
>>>>> lung.
>>>>> 
>>>>> “With rehab, we hope this will get a lot better,” he said. “I constantly 
>>>>> send my gratitude to the great spirit for the intervention I know I 
>>>>> received, information from the land and my dogs and the night itself, 
>>>>> which allowed me to stay oriented, sane, and on the path to rescuing her. 
>>>>> This will all get better; it’s the waiting for Amy to come back that’s 
>>>>> the hardest part for me.
>>>>> 
>>>>> “It’s far from over,” he added. “I frankly have no idea what comes next. 
>>>>> I will not consider her rescued until she is back with me.”
>>>>> ---
>>>>> View my Online Portfolio at:
>>>>> 
>>>>> http://www.onemodelplace.com/CaraQuinn
>>>>> 
>>>>> Follow me on Twitter!
>>>>> 
>>>>> https://twitter.com/ModelCara
>>>>> 
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