Two year old miraculously saves twin brother from fallen dresser

  • 7 years ago
The incredible moment boy, two, shows fantastic strength and saves his twin brother from being crushed by a falling dresser
Video shows Bowdy Shoff saving his twin Brock from beneath the fallen item
Their mom had stepped out for just minutes when the accident happened
The couple put the video online to promote awareness of bolting down furniture
Around 25,400 children are injured every year in the US by falling furniture
Of those injured, one child dies every two weeks as a result of their injuries

Heroes come in all shapes and sizes - including extra small, as a two-year-old Utah boy discovered when his twin brother rescued him from a fallen dresser.
Toddler Brock Shoff was playing in his bedroom when a dresser tipped over onto him as his brother Bowdy - and the home's surveillance cameras - looked on.
What followed was an impressive feat of cool-headed action - and impressive strength - from the pint-sized superhero.
But the incident highlights concerns over the safety of children and the dangers of tall furniture.

The video, posted on Facebook Sunday by the kids' parents as a warning of the dangers of tipping dressers, starts with Brock already trapped and crying under the corner of the heavy dresser.
As the boy shifts around, the pressure on his ribcage is terrifyingly obvious.
And with mom Kayli upstairs for just a moment, there are no adults around to help.
But Bowdy doesn't need adults. He calmly walks around the dresser, trying to figure out how to help his trapped twin, before coming up with a plan.
At first, he tries to lift it up with his bare hands - but it's just too heavy.
Then he tries pushing it - and it slowly but surely begins to move.

Brock, meanwhile, is able to roll out from underneath, revealing that the jammed-open drawers of the dresser have taken some of the weight off his body.
The fallen boy cries as his brother turns to him and the video ends, but according to Kayli both boys were recovered and playing together when she came back to the room.
She didn't hear the dresser falling or her son crying, she told the station.
Dad Ricky posted the video to Facebook with a message.
'I've been a little hesitant to post this. But I feel it's not only to bring awareness, but it is also incredible,' he wrote.
'We are so grateful for the bond that these twin brothers share. We know Bowdy was not alone in moving the dresser off of Brock. And feel blessed that he is ok.
'Please make sure all your dressers are bolted and secured to the wall. Please share.'

Falling furniture is highly dangerous to children.
On December 21, Ikea paid out $50 million to the parents of three toddlers who were killed after dressers from their now-discontinued Malm range fell on them in separate incidents.
In 2004, Kimberly Amato's daughter Meghan, three, was killed by a falling dresser in the middle of the night.
The heartbroken mother decided to set up a charity aimed at preventing the startlingly high number of children who die in the same way.
Reacting to the video, she told MailOnline: 'My initial thought was it's a miracle that Brock survived and was not seriously injured.
'He was one of the lucky ones and that should in NO way give parents a false sense of security thinking a child can always survive a dresser tip-over.
'Although it was an amazing demonstration of twinship and resourceful brotherly love, it could have ended up being much more tragic, especially if that child had been alone.
'The brother attempting to move the dresser also could have moved it the wrong way and caused the one under the dresser to become more injured, or, he could have become a victim, too.

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