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Former paramedic finds hope, healing, raising awareness of post-traumatic stress

Terrance Kosikar flips a tire to raise awareness for PTSD in Whistler, B.C., Saturday, March 19, 2016. Six years after the death of a Georgian luge athlete on the opening day of the 2010 Olympics, Kosikar, the paramedic who tried to save him, is still trying to shed the chains of post-traumatic stress disorder.
Image Credit: THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Joern Rohde

WHISTLER, B.C. - Six years after the death of a Georgian luge athlete on the opening day of the 2010 Olympics, the first responder who tried to save him is still wrapped in the chains of post-traumatic stress disorder.

On Sunday, Terrance Kosikar, 45, finished Breaking the Chains B.C., a gruelling physical test of flipping a nearly 200 kilogram tractor tire through the back roads east of Whistler, B.C., while wearing nearly 25 kilograms of steel chain.

Kosikar said the tire and chain are symbols of the burden he has had to endure with a long, lonely battle with suicide attempts and addiction after the death of Nodar Kumaritashvili triggered his mental disorder.

The former paramedic wants the problem of PTSD pushed out of the shadows. He said first responders are trained to save lives, but are never taught about the dangers to their own mental health.

"(WorkSafeBC) needs to make this in our book, our training manual, our 400-page book," he said.

"It needs to be talked about, post-traumatic stress, what to pick up on, the signs and symptoms to pick up in your co-workers and yourself after you deal with these sort of accidents."

Kosikar also said more should be done to remember Kumaritashvili, the young single-luge sledder who was travelling at nearly 144 kilometres per hour when he rocketed off the challenging track during an Olympic practice run and slammed into a pole. He died on the opening day of the 2010 Olympic Games.

"The plaque says 'Whistler always remembers,'" said Kosikar, describing the memorial erected in Whistler to the luger's memory.

"But meanwhile the plaque and the memorial is back in the bushes, 2,000 feet away from any public eye. They don't want to remember. No one wants to remember."

Kosikar said he talks to Kumaritashvili's family every week in Georgia.

"They are so happy somebody is doing something to remember that kid. It's all they ask."

Just a handful of friends and supporters looked on as Kosikar concluded his journey Sunday in Whistler.

He said he's already heard his actions have encouraged a northern B.C. law firm to offer free legal assistance to those who suffer from post-traumatic stress.

"I'll flip a tire from here to Alaska, if that could happen again," he said. "That ripple effect is so amazing."

News from © The Canadian Press, 2016
The Canadian Press

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