SURVIVORS: Part of a Colorado Sun series on close calls in the outdoors and life after a crisis
Eight years after Gore Otteson was pinned for 25 minutes under icy water in a mountain ditch, his parents share their story of faith and living without fear.
Amy Otteson cries every so often as she reads her now 10-year-old son the book she wrote, โGiving Up Gore: When Our Worst Fear Became Our Greatest Gift.โ
โAnd heโs like, โItโs OK mom,โ and he takes the book and starts reading,โ she says.
โWell, I donโt really remember it like you do,โ Gore says.
Amy and Dave Otteson used to jokingly refer to some experiences as pre-K — a line delineating their life before kids.
โNow itโs pre-accident,โ Amy says.
They donโt want to talk about it. But they do. Itโs important to them.
The day Gore died is a day they leaned hardest on their faith. And God delivered a miracle.
Itโs a message they will never stop sharing: There is hope. Even without a miracle, God is listening and in control.
โI really do have people contact me from all over โฆ telling me how it has made an impact on them and their lives,โ Amy says. โThat is not to our glory. Itโs to say that this story gives people hope.โ


In July 2010, Gore was a rowdy 21-month-old who had just figured out how to flip the latch on the screen door of his familyโs cabin outside Gunnison.
Amy turned around for a second and he bolted.
Almost a half hour later, a battery of desperate aunts, uncles and cousins found him. He was pinned on a log at the bottom of a swollen irrigation ditch. Heโd been underwater at least 25 minutes. On shore, they started CPR.
Medic Erik Forsythe arrived and immediately scooped Gore up. Defying traditional protocol, Forsythe raced the child to Gunnison Valley Health doing compressions on his lifeless body in the back of the ambulance.
He had been on the scene for less than a minute.
Amy and her dad, a retired orthopedic surgeon, followed. She called Dave back in Golden. He launched a prayer chain with friends from Bear Valley Church.
At the Gunnison hospital, they didnโt warm Gore. As doctors fought for a heartbeart, they called Childrenโs Colorado Hospital and asked for a helicopter.
The medical flight team in Denver saw Goreโs status and balked at firing up the airship.

โThey would not send the helicopter,โ Amy says. โThey said โNo, heโs been down too long. Heโs gone.โ The nurses and doctors in Gunnison, they were basically told to stop.โ
A year later Amy and Dave asked those same doctors and nurses why they didnโt end CPR efforts after Gore had been without a heartbeat for 55 minutes.
โThey said โYou were screaming in the other room and your dad was standing there watching the whole thing,โ โ she says. โThey said, โBetween the two of you, we just couldnโt stop.โ โ
Doctors in Gunnison recovered Goreโs heartbeat and the helicopter came.
Other stories from our “survivors” series:
—ย โIf I can prevent at least one kid from going through what my kid goes through every day, I will do whatever it takes. I have to.โ
— โIt was like he was an angelโ: How a well-prepared ER doctor on skis saved a boyโs life after a mountain crash
— โI had to reinvent myself. Iโm back but Iโm different:โ A southwest Colorado man recovers from a devastating mountain climbing fall
Amy and Dave spent 48 agonizing hours at his bedside in Denver. The team at Childrenโs Hospital kept Gore cold, locked in a hypothermic coma. His heart was beating, but his brain showed no activity, with a flat, blip-less line running across a sad monitoring screen.
Oh, did they stare at that screen, praying for a blip.
โDoctors would come in when he was being cooled and say, โI really wish there was more activity on this.โ We didnโt know if he had any brain function,โ Dave says. โThey told us there was a less than 1 percent chance that, even if he lived, he would ever walk or talk again.โ

After two days, doctors slowly began raising Goreโs body temperature back to normal. And that machine, the one that measures brain activity, the one Amy and Dave never stopped watching, it started beeping.
Gore woke up.
He seemed perfectly normal. His rambunctious self. He grabbed for the breathing tube shoved down his throat, an indication that his brain was telling his arms to get that thing out of there.
He had an MRI scan of his brain. The amazed doctors called Amy and Dave with the results.
โTo get that phone call, that there were no abnormalities,โ Dave says, choking back emotions a bit on the memory, “it just shocked everybody.”
Amy wrote a book over the next couple years. She called it โGiving Up Gore,โ with a focus not just on Goreโs miraculous recovery, but her and Daveโs struggle to trust God in their deepest pain, even if it meant letting go of their son.

โGod could have chosen not to save Gore,โ Dave says. โWe have to give the outcome up to whatever the Lord decides and try to find whatever peace you can grasp in that depth of sorrow. Thatโs an important piece for us.โ
Gore is reading it now. He asks a lot of questions. Itโs really his first introduction to his familyโs most pivotal moment.
Amy travels the country, speaking at churches and womenโs groups, telling her story. Itโs a faith-based talk that details a series of events that defy circumstances.
The miraculous sequence begins with Gore being swept through one of three possible culverts in the ditch. Two others were clogged with debris.
There was Forsytheโs decision to rush Gore from the scene immediately and to keep him cold. The doctors and nurses at Gunnison who kept working on Gore, ignoring the apparent hopelessness. The helicopter coming for Gore despite the grim prognosis. The Childrenโs Hospital teamโs non-traditional decision to keep Gore cold for two long days, giving his brain time to heal.
โThere are a lot of details where you can see Godโs hand in a lot of the nuances,โ Dave says.
He points to an array of conflicting studies that weigh the merits of therapeutic hypothermia, which has not been conclusively proven to help patients with brain injuries or who have suffered cardiac arrest.
โThe story for us is that this was a modern-day miracle,โ Dave says. โThat term gets thrown around pretty loosely, but thereโs no doctor that can explain the science around how Gore can walk and talk. Even people who donโt believe, they donโt have a clear medical explanation for how this happened.โ


Goreโs rescue and recovery marks โa bright spot in my career,โ said Forsythe, a former Crested Butte ski patroller who teaches wilderness emergency medicine and now works as a helicopter flight medic for St. Maryโs Hospital in Grand Junction.
Forsythe keeps a photo of Gore next to his desk. In the photo, Gore is sitting next to the irrigation ditch, holding a small cross.
โItโs very much an inspiration to me. Especially after Iโve had a bad day,โ he says. โIโve been involved in a lot of happy stories, but so many donโt work out so well. And really that one gives me hope and helps me keep a good attitude when things are getting hard.โ
Itโs also helped Forsythe do his job better. When heโs teaching wilderness first aid, he uses Goreโs story as an example of how improvisation and instinct can work in critical situations.
โThere are definitely times when the patient will be served best by some creative thinking rather than following the playbook,โ he says. โGore proved that.โ
For Amy, her tireless message is to pray boldly and find peace with Godโs decisions.
โMy mantra is to let my faith be bigger than my fear,โ she says. โI really struggled with fear prior to this accident and, certainly, I still do. Gore, he is a very, very daring and fearless child.โ


A couple years after the accident Gore swallowed a quarter in the car as the family drove to church. He started turning blue.
Amy was giving him the Heimlich maneuver in the backseat as Dave signaled to nurses they were following. On the side of the highway, they dislodged the coin and Gore gasped.
Dave remembers one of the nurses, a longtime friend, saying โAre you kidding me? This family!โ
Last winter Gore told his mom he needed to go faster in the Crested Butte terrain park. He wasnโt catching enough air. The next run, they saw ski patrollers racing to him after he caught too much air.
This summer, Amy relented and let Gore ride the four-wheeler at the familyโs property. He was going very slowly, puttering around the cabins when they heard a crash and heard Gore screaming.
โI go running and I see him in the middle of the irrigation ditch. Itโs July and itโs full-force and heโs screaming and crying and he doesnโt ever cry,โ she says.
Heโd rolled the four-wheeler into the ditch. It was upside down, smoking in the rushing water. Heโs downstream, perched in the middle of the flow.
โI just lost it,โ Amy says.
โHe should have been pinned underneath that thing. We donโt really understand how he didnโt get pinned,โ Dave says.

โTell him about the time he jumped off the bed,โ Goreโs 14-year-old sister, Ryan, says.
Gore asks Ryan and his older brother, Kirk, about something their friends at school once called him.
โWhat did they say? Gore is a savage?โ Gore says, laughing.โIโve only been to the emergency room three times, though. So thatโs good.โ
Gore enjoys this chatter. With a big grin, he seems to relish his rep as a thrillseeker. His brother and sister are much more laid back.
Amy says Gore skis โMach 90 with his hair on fire,โ while Kirk and Ryan โmake controlled turns.โ
Gore likes to ride his mountain bike down the hill in his neighborhood with his hands in the air. For a few weeks this summer, he wore his new bike helmet all day, every day. On a recent walk to the park with his family, he sprinted ahead, and back again, then ran to his house to get his bike.
โAnd another thing I think is really interesting,โ Kirk says, โhe loves to swim. He loves the cold. We still play in that ditch. We get on our boogie boards and go down the river.โ
This is the ball of energy God has given the Ottesons, Amy says.
โI could be living my life in complete and utter fear,โ she says. โThose things can rule your life. But you can take our story and say hey, we are not really in control of all this.โ
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