00:00Did it sort of dawn on you, how much of an important role you played in his survival?
00:05For me, at first, my mum had rang me, and then I was at work, so I went into the bathroom for a minute.
00:15And it was just overwhelming, the fact he was alive, I was very happy, grateful that he was alive.
00:24And then it sort of dawned on us that, on me, that what kind of vital role we actually sort of, put me into perspective of if we hadn't been there, it'd have just been another story on the news of all, you know, a lad's been stabbed.
00:37A young lad's tired.
00:38And it sort of dawned on me that we actually did very important work, a very important role on that night.
00:47I don't think we sort of contemplated our role in it for a good bit afterwards.
00:53Yeah, until we got that news, and we didn't want to get into that hero mentality or anything like that, and then it was sort of like, oh, he's alive.
01:02And I remember, I walked into the kitchen, and it was like, the tears were in my eyes, because right away, we did that.
01:08And then we saw the night, like, two days after, and it was like, once again, the doctors were asking how we made the hospital.
01:13I think that solidified it.
01:14Yeah, yeah.
01:15And that was...
01:16We were just, it was just a situation.
01:18We were there, we did it, and it was quite lucky that we knew what we were doing.
01:23If it was somebody who didn't, it might not have survived.
01:26But it is important, everybody, as many people learn it as they can.