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Man On Life-Support After Weightlifting Accident.

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  • Man On Life-Support After Weightlifting Accident.

    A college student and competitive bodybuilder was on life-support Tuesday night after a weightlifting accident.

    Chris Harmon, 20, of Granville has years of experience in weight training. On Monday he was at the gym, lifting hundreds of pounds, when the bar slipped 10TV's Glenn McEntyre reported.

    Those who know Harmon describe him as a young man of exceptional focus and determination.

    "Lifting weights and bodybuilding's always been his passion," said Harmon's father Scott Harmon.

    On Monday, Harmon broke a personal record, bench-pressing more than 400 pounds. He was following that up with a 250-pound incline bench press when the bar slipped.

    "And somehow the bar slipped from his hands and fell about two and a half feet and struck him across the face," Scott Harmon said.

    The impact shattered his cheekbones and jaw, crushed an eye socket and severed two arteries, McEntyre reported.

    Doctors told Harmon's parents there was some good news.

    "He said if the bar would have hit him that much higher, on the head, he would have been paraplegic and been brain-dead basically," Scott Harmon said.

    Harmon's future is still uncertain, McEntyre reported.

    He has already undergone two surgeries, with more to come. In the last 24 hours, his father said he was conscious for only a brief moment.

    "I was sitting there stroking his head. And he grabbed my hand, and he looked at me and they gave him some medicine and made him go back to sleep," Scott Harmon said.

    As experienced a weight-trainer as Harmon is, his father said his mistake was lifting without someone to spot him.

    "Because it only takes a split second. In one second he dropped that weight and his life is forever changed," Scott Harmon said.

    Harmon's father said he wants to thank those who helped his son immediately after the accident.

    He does not know if it was the medics or gym staff, but someone placed Harmon face down, rather than on his back. Doctors said that prevented his lungs from filling with blood, and likely saved his life, McEntyre reported.

    The owner of the Advantage Club Gym did not want to comment, McEntyre reported.

  • #2
    What state was this in? A couple of those key details sound very familiar.

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    • #3
      that was all it said. not sure where.

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      • #4
        Happened in Newark.

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        • #5
          well compared to impact sports and racing, bodybuilding is a lot safer, its all too often the case that people get injured on lighter weights after lifting heavier before, its as if they lose focus.

          Also I'm willing to be he had thumbs on the same time as his fingers instead of the other side, I do this also but it makes me think about changing it

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          • #6
            that's unbelievable. You go in to lift and get as strong and big as possible. One tiny slip of the hand puts you out. Thats horrible. I hope he makes it through and goes back to lifting.

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Mr incredible View Post

              Also I'm willing to be he had thumbs on the same time as his fingers instead of the other side, I do this also but it makes me think about changing it
              i bet you are right. and i do the same thing. it just feels more natural.

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              • #8
                wtf is a spotter supposed to do if you just drop 250 lbs on your face? Story sounds a bit far fetched to me, also your locomotor centers are not in the front of the brain.

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                • #9
                  Granville weightlifter through first surgery.
                  A Granville man critically injured in a weightlifting accident Monday has successfully undergone a five-hour surgery to begin reconstructing his face, completing yet another small step on his journey toward recovery, his father said Thursday.

                  Chris Harmon, 20, dropped a 250-pound weight on his face Monday while on an incline press at the Advantage Club in Newark, where he had just broken his previous bench press record of more than 430 pounds.

                  The weight slipped from his hands and destroyed his cheekbones, nose and jaw, severing two arteries and resulting in a large amount of blood loss. Harmon faces several reconstructive surgeries in forthcoming days, his father said, but on Thursday afternoon had pulled through the first of those.

                  "He made it through five hours of surgery, and he's doing great. So now he's got to recover," Scott said.

                  Chris remains in critical but stable condition and on life support, and has not been conscious since the time of the accident, Scott said. Thursday's surgery had been delayed twice because of fluid filling his lungs.

                  And though he knows the road is long and the situation dire, Scott -- running on precious little sleep since Monday -- remains optimistic.

                  "We're not out of the woods yet, but we've gone through some serious, serious issues and we've pulled through," he said Thursday.

                  Thursday's surgery involved rebuilding Chris' right eye socket, the right side of his skull, jaw and both cheek bones. There is a high danger of infection, and Chris' face will continue to swell for the next few days before it begins to get better, Scott said.

                  The family is discouraging visitation at this point because of the high risk of infection and fragility of Chris' condition; however, a flood of support and prayers continues to come in through phone calls, e-mails and a Facebook page named "Pray for Chris Harmon," whose members reached nearly 2,000 Thursday afternoon.

                  A trust fund in Chris' name has been set up and is available at any Chase Bank to help with medical expenses.

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                  • #10
                    Wow what a horrible accident, at first I was a bit skeptical at first, but get the picture now.

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