Floyd Medical Center issued the following announcement on Dec. 15
Floyd EMS Assistant Director Robby Hill is not a coffee connoisseur. In fact, he's never really had a taste for the stuff. But, one recent cold morning, Robby decided to start his day early with a cup of joe, a decision that resulted in an encouraging, if humbling, encounter that powerfully illustrates the value of our presence and our words.
After a sleepless night, Robby stopped at a convenience store on his way into work. It was cold, about 4:45 in the morning. Robby was getting his coffee when a woman, also getting coffee, asked him if he was Robby. First responders are sometimes hesitant to acknowledge their identity, especially to strangers. Their encounters with people often come at times of tragedy when outcomes are unpredictable or already devastating. Robby cautiously acknowledged his name.
“You probably don't remember," the woman began, “but you were in a call at my house several years ago."
Over the next few minutes, she shared her story. Her teenaged son was deeply depressed. A few months earlier his father had ended his own life. The family's life had been turned upside down. She feared that her son was considering the same. She didn't know what to do, so she called an ambulance. Robby was one of the responders.
Robby rode in the back of the ambulance with the young man to the hospital, she explained, talking with her son the whole time. That ambulance ride was a life-changer and likely a lifesaver for her son, the woman told him. At the hospital, the young man told his mother that he wanted to be like Robby. Today, her son is married father of two, who works as a paramedic in another state.
“You saved my son's life," she told Robby, both in tears. She bought Robby's coffee that morning and hugged his neck before heading out of the door.
Robby said he doesn't remember the encounter, which happened nearly two decades ago, but he is certain God gave him the words to say at the time, just as he's certain his sudden desire for an early-morning cup of coffee was for a reason.
“If I hadn't taken to drinking coffee, I may have never known this story," Robby said. “The only thing I can say is keep compassion and empathy for everyone. You never know when a kind word may save a life."
Original source can be found here.