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AIBU?

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My child had a horrific accident on an escalator

310 replies

Oneluckyescape · 02/01/2018 20:40

This is not an IABU, but I wasn’t sure of the best place to post it, and wanted as many people as possible to read it in case it might be useful to them.

I am always paranoid whenever I am near an escalator with my children and I make sure I hold their hand and remind them to be careful, not to play or be silly on it, to hold on properly to the handrail. This is in part due to the stories I have heard about children wearing crocs on escalators, but somehow I just had this idea that the dangerous parts of the escalator were the “teeth” at the bottom or top of the escalator (the comb plate), or in the crack between the steps. What I was unaware of was the danger of the brush and the gap on the sides of the escalator.

Last week some friends came to visit and we arranged to meet them in central London. After a day of visiting a crowded museum and having a late lunch, we decided to go to Hyde Park to watch the Winter Wonderland lights. As we stepped inside the underground station we stopped to look at the map and figure out the best route. We then started to walk in the direction of the escalators. As usual, my first instinct was to grab my children’s hand. Only the youngest was right next to me. The older one (8 years-old) was a bit further ahead as we were a large group, and as we approached the escalator there were already three people between him and me. I saw that DH was one of them, and was in the step right behind DS. I thought it would be okay then, as DS is older now and was standing next to his dad. I thought to myself if just this time I am not next to him reminding him to be careful on the escalator, I’m sure it will be okay.

We started to go down the long escalator and just a few moments later I heard a really loud distressed high pitched scream. At first I didn’t know where it came from, I looked down at the escalator coming up on the other direction or ours expecting to see a woman in trouble but eventually I saw it was coming from someone not far in front of me. My biggest nightmare came true when I realised it was my own son lying on the step with DH sitting next to him hugging him as he continued to cry non-stop. I looked everywhere to see why he was crying and it was then I noticed the escalator had swallowed his whole foot and was dragging DS along as he screamed. It was the most horrific thing I have ever seen. I was so upset that the next things that happened are a blur. People started shouting for help and to stop the escalator. Someone at the bottom pushed one of those red buttons to stop the escalator. Someone from TFL arrived at the scene and said help was on its way. They cleared out the place, and asked me to go and wait in one of the station offices with my youngest son that was frightened and would not stop crying saying that he didn’t want his brother to die.

I waited in the office for what seemed like ages, my thoughts going forward and backward from fearing the worst to praying for a miracle where things could be like it had never happened. The people from TFL and emergency services were amazing. The police was the first to arrive at the scene, and DH told me how they took apart the panels, cut through his boot (he was wearing wellies) and sock, and managed to remove his foot, intact, with all his toes and everything, only bruised and with minor cuts. They said he was a lucky boy.

I later spoke with the TFL staff as I wanted to understand what went wrong. I also tried to google any incidents involving wellies, in case like the crocs, it had been due to DS wearing unsuitable footwear. At the end it turns out it can happen with any kind of shoes, but crocs are worse because they are soft and offer little protection to the feet. In a way it seems it was good his foot was in a welly as the thick rubber protected the foot, and at the same time they were able to cut through it to dislodge the foot. I also asked my son how it happened, if he had been playing and accidentally put his foot through the gap in the brushes. He said he didn’t. At first he had been standing in the middle of the step but someone came down walking on the left side and wanted to pass by so DS moved to the right. Then he crossed his left foot in front of the right one to stand like that and the tip of the left boot must have touched the edge of the skirt panel. It seems that the friction created by this contact drew his foot in the gap by the skirt panel and entrapped it inside. My son said he didn’t put his foot inside the gap, but that he just felt as if something suddenly pulled it inside.

When I tried searching for other incidents involving wellies in escalators I couldn’t find many, most of the accidents reported seem to involve crocs. There was, however, a thread posted by someone on Mumsnet many years ago with a similar incident on an escalator inside an underground station in London that involved a toddler wearing crocs. From reading that thread I saw that many people remember some Public Information Broadcasts from the 80s with a pair of empty wellies travelling on an escalator, but some people had never seen them (myself included, as I grew up in a different country). For those, I hope that reading this helps to raise awareness and decreases the chances of it happening again to another child.

OP posts:
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yawning801 · 02/01/2018 20:43

Thank you so much for sharing your story, and that sounds absolutely horrifying. I'm so glad your DS is OK.

Rebeccaslicker · 02/01/2018 20:45

Jesus Christ OP that's terrible, thank goodness your DS' foot is ok. I hope he's not too traumatised.

Thank you for sharing, it will make me more careful with DD.

Hatsoffdear · 02/01/2018 20:47

Fucking hell op. Stuff of nightmares and you should realise that your ds may well recover but you won’t. This may stay with you love. I know been there with my dd.

Great post to spread awareness and talk it through but just be aware of your fears Flowers

HopelesslydevotedtoGu · 02/01/2018 20:48

I hadn't realised this is a danger, thank you for sharing

MarshaBradyo · 02/01/2018 20:50

Oh my goodness that made me gasp, I’m glad he’s ok

Pibplob · 02/01/2018 20:50

Wow. I didn't know there was a gap at foot level. Will look next time I'm on one. So glad your son is ok. X

lurkingnotlurking · 02/01/2018 20:50

Holy fuck. I'm shaking. I'm so sorry for your experience and I'm glad your son is okay. Thank you for the warning.

didyoureally · 02/01/2018 20:51

That's awful, what a horrible experience for you all. I am glad that he is not badly injured.

I remember a public service film from my childhood - probably 1970s - advising people to take care on escalators. I think it showed a doll that had been mangled by the escalator. It frightened me and has had a lasting impression on me. I have always wondered if escalators are much safer nowadays since there don't seem to be many warning signs these days

KurriKurri · 02/01/2018 20:51

Oh gosh OP - what a nightmare experience, thank you for sharing and making others aware, I'm so glad your little boy wasn't seriously injured, but how frightening for him and you Flowers

midnightflowers · 02/01/2018 20:54

Thankyou for sharing. That sounds horrifying. Hope your ds is ok

KiteMarked · 02/01/2018 20:55

How terrifying. I will definitely be more careful in future. Thank you for sharing and I'm so glad your child is.ok!

MrsGrindah · 02/01/2018 20:55

How awful..glad he’s ok. Nowhere near as bad but when I was a teenager I was stood v close to the side of a descending escalator and as we got near the bottom I felt the edge of my boot/ foot being dragged into the side. I quickly wrenched it free and was unhurt but I’m anxious on escalators even now

melonribenia · 02/01/2018 20:55

Thank you for sharing. I'm glad your son is ok.

I still have nightmares about a potential awful accident that could have happened on an escalator.

About ten years ago, I was travelling down a very busy escalator in the Bull Ring. There was a couple in front of me and a lady with a shopping cart in front of them.
When she reached the bottom of the escalator, she suddenly fell and her shopping cart got tangled up with her and the escalator.
Because the escalator was so busy, the people directly behind her found themselves on top on her with nowhere else to go.
Luckily, there was a security guard nearby who dashed forward, grabbed the woman and her cart and literally yanked them off the escalator.
Someone stopped the escalator and it was able to be cleared safely.
Just showed me how easily an awful accident could happen and why they say not to travel on escalators with trolleys/carts/buggies etc

SagelyNodding · 02/01/2018 20:55

Flowers OP, that was an awful ordeal! A similar but less serious thing happened to Ds1 on an escalator in an airport - he had an adult sized backpack on his back with the straps hanging down and one got sucked into the escalator and started pulling him backwards to the ground-I luckily didn't freeze and ripped the backpack off his back and a bystander managed to free the pack from the escalator... I have been much more careful ever since.
I hope your Ds feels better soon xx

LipstickHandbagCoffee · 02/01/2018 20:56

Oh my word,how frightening for you all.glad son has no significant physical injuries
I’m aware of issue with rubber wheels on buggies (bugaboo bee) getting stuck on escalator

Tstar27 · 02/01/2018 20:57

So so happy your little boy is ok. I can't imagine what you went through. Thank you for sharing

londonrach · 02/01/2018 20:57

Hope you ok op. I hate escalators after seeing an old man die on one! He got on it just before me. Was in queue in bank in front of me. I have asked a shop to stop it once for me so i could go down them when they had no public stairs.

CQ · 02/01/2018 20:57

Jesus that was a lucky escape. So glad for your boy.

This made my blood run cold as my own DS had a near miss with an escalator when he was about the same age. He was wearing crocs, they got drawn into the 'teeth' at the top - luckily DH saw immediately what was about to happen and snatched boy, foot and half mangled croc straight out. My heart always lurches slightly now when I step on and off the damned things. DS, now a strapping 19 yr old, just laughs at me dithering.

froginapond · 02/01/2018 20:58

Thanks for sharing OP. So glad your boy is OK.

ThatsWotSheSaid · 02/01/2018 20:59

Thanks for sharing OP that must have been harrowing.

anothernetter · 02/01/2018 20:59

Oh my goodness your poor little boy he must have been so frightened. How is he now?

Trashboat · 02/01/2018 20:59

I have a proper phobia of escalators as I was on one once and someone got their buggy stuck at the top. I fell into it and got trapped between the buggy and the side, all the while the escalator turning round. I suffered very minor scratches and bruising but the feeling of dread - well I'll never forget it. I was only a teenager and it was also pretty embarrassing.

I won't use escalators at all with my daughter and I don't care if people think I'm nuts or whatever.

I hope your son is okay now OP. Poor kid.

MadMaryBoddington · 02/01/2018 21:00

Op how awful for you and your ds. I’m so sorry this happened but thank you for sharing. I will now be even more alert to my dc being careful on escalators - I’m already pretty paranoid having fallen down an escalator on the Victoria Line twenty odd years ago (not drunk I hasten to add - just tripped) and still have the scars to show for it.

ConcreteUnderpants · 02/01/2018 21:00

There was a safety advert I think you may be referring to.
Stand still.
Stand steady
Stand...? Can't remember.

Will have a look. I'm so glad your child is ok. Frightening. Very frightening.

jollyjester · 02/01/2018 21:01

Im so glad he is ok OP.

I gave off at my 6 year old the other day for running her boot along the brush on an escalator but it was more to do with the fact i didnt want her to ruin her boots. I had no idea this could happen