Local man tells of tsunami terror
Jeff Benson
A local man was in the right place at the wrong time Sunday.
Steve Abrams, 37, of Costa Mesa, saved at least one life and
possibly a dozen others, with the help of a friend, as a tsunami
pounded Thailand’s shores.
Abrams, who was vacationing in Phuket with five friends, said via
phone in Thailand that he and a friend grabbed as many people as they
could and put them on top of cars, above the water line.
Two were 4- or 5-year-old Thai girls. He put one on top of a car,
but when he went back for the other one, she wasn’t there, he said.
“It was complete chaos when the first one hit,” he said, referring
to the first of three waves that hit within a two-hour span.
The second came 30 minutes later, and then another an hour after
that.
“Everyone who spoke English was saying, ‘Run for the hills,
another one is coming!’ It was mayhem.”
So many people were trying to hold on to him, he had to brush
people off to help those that he could.
“All of a sudden the water pulled back, fish started flopping
down, and large sailboats dropped from the ground,” he said.
“It’s like a rug being pulled from underneath you.”
The tsunami that swept through Thailand, Indonesia, Sri Lanka and
India was caused by a 9.0 earthquake in the Indian Ocean.
As of Thursday evening, 117,000 people reportedly had died in the
devastation.
Abrams survived the catastrophe with some bumps and scrapes --
especially to his feet -- and some Power Bars his mother, Marilyn
Abrams of Tustin, packed for him.
He was at Thana Patong Resort in Phuket on Thursday, with plans to
fly to Pattaya, Thailand, and then back to the United States.
But it could have been a whole different story.
Abrams was on the second floor of his hotel when the tsunami hit,
he said.
He had planned to go jet-skiing near what’s known as James Bond
Island with some acquaintances he’d met on the trip who had traveled
to Thailand from Europe.
But Abrams decided not to go immediately, opting instead to eat
breakfast and then change into some swim trunks, he said.
He was changing in his room when the first wave hit. By the third
wave, he was underwater.
He wondered Thursday what happened to the group of Europeans going
jet-skiing.
“I haven’t seen them anywhere,” he said. “I have a feeling they
perished.”
The four friends that he went on the vacation with survived, he
said.
“He said he left for paradise, but he ended up in hell,” Marilyn
Abrams said.
In early communications with her son after the disaster, it didn’t
sound to Marilyn Abrams that he could, or even wanted to return just
yet, choosing instead to help other victims.
“I have never seen devastation, death, decay and thousands of
injured people in need of medical attention like this before,” Steve
Abrams wrote in an e-mail to his mother on Wednesday.
“I have helped where I could, but it has put me at more risk every
time.”
That risk had his mother terrified.
“It’s like the agony and the ecstasy right now,” she said.
“I’m so glad to have my grandchildren visiting now, but on the
other hand, I’m terrified of something happening to my son. I feel
like I just want to protect him.
“There are all these feelings going through me, but I want to know
he’s safe.
“I’d like him to continue to help people, but I also want to make
sure he’s all right. I’m very frightened.”
The two spoke by phone on Thursday.
Marilyn Abrams said she’s afraid of the possibility of her son
catching a disease or being robbed.
“I asked him what the government was doing, and he said that the
problem was that they weren’t doing anything at the time,” she said.
“But he said he just couldn’t believe this -- that there were dead
bodies piled on the beach and people being washed away.”
Steve Abrams, an equipment salesman for Cingular/AT&T; Wireless,
echoed that Thursday.
“It’s sad, because lifeless, helpless people were swept out to the
ocean never to come back,” he said.
* JEFF BENSON covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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