ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Ed Gavagan - Designer, Storyteller
Ed Gavagan was walking down the street in downtown Manhattan when he was the victim of a gang assignment to kill a random stranger. He lives to tell the amazing story.

Why you should listen

Ed Gavagan is the owner of PraxisNYC, a design firm specializing in boutique residences and aimed at designing for sustainability, habitability, durability and beauty. In 2007 Gavagan told the story “Drowning on Sullivan Street” at the Moth, the series devoted to stories told live without notes, about his near-death experience on the streets of New York as the victim of a gang initiation rite. His stories have been heard on NPR and the Moth podcast, and he has appeared onstage with the Moth in events across the U.S. Gavagan lives in New York City with his wife and daughter.

More profile about the speaker
Ed Gavagan | Speaker | TED.com
TEDMED 2012

Ed Gavagan: A story about knots and surgeons

Filmed:
1,054,849 views

One day, Ed Gavagan was sitting on the subway, watching two young med students practicing their knots. And a powerful memory washed over him -- of one shocking moment that changed his life forever. An unforgettable story of crime, skill and gratitude.
- Designer, Storyteller
Ed Gavagan was walking down the street in downtown Manhattan when he was the victim of a gang assignment to kill a random stranger. He lives to tell the amazing story. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:19
You know, we wake up in the morning,
0
3539
3076
00:22
you get dressed, put on your shoes,
1
6615
2520
00:25
you head out into the world.
2
9135
2512
00:27
You plan on coming back, getting undressed,
3
11647
4251
00:31
going to bed,
4
15898
2225
00:34
waking up, doing it again,
5
18123
1754
00:35
and that anticipation, that rhythm,
6
19877
3148
00:38
helps give us a structure
7
23025
2270
00:41
to how we organize ourselves and our lives,
8
25295
3588
00:44
and gives it a measure of predictability.
9
28883
3480
00:48
Living in New York City, as I do,
10
32363
2388
00:50
it's almost as if, with so many people doing so many things
11
34751
7239
00:57
at the same time in such close quarters,
12
41990
3350
01:01
it's almost like life is dealing you extra hands
13
45340
3239
01:04
out of that deck.
14
48579
1526
01:06
You're never, there's just, juxtapositions are possible
15
50105
4668
01:10
that just aren't, you don't think they're going to happen.
16
54773
5003
01:15
And you never think you're going to be the guy
17
59776
2343
01:18
who's walking down the street
18
62119
1630
01:19
and, because you choose to go down one side or the other,
19
63749
3422
01:23
the rest of your life is changed forever.
20
67171
3160
01:26
And one night, I'm riding the uptown local train.
21
70331
5728
01:31
I get on. I tend to be a little bit vigilant
22
76059
3496
01:35
when I get on the subway.
23
79555
2117
01:37
I'm not one of the people zoning out with headphones
24
81672
3046
01:40
or a book.
25
84718
1383
01:42
And I get on the car, and I look, and I
26
86101
2806
01:44
notice this couple,
27
88907
2584
01:47
college-aged, student-looking kids,
28
91491
3488
01:50
a guy and a girl, and they're sitting next to each other,
29
94979
1797
01:52
and she's got her leg draped over his knee,
30
96776
2649
01:55
and they're doing -- they have this little contraption,
31
99425
4160
01:59
and they're tying these knots,
32
103585
1758
02:01
and they're doing it with one hand,
33
105343
1837
02:03
they're doing it left-handed and right-handed very quickly,
34
107180
3964
02:07
and then she'll hand the thing to him and he'll do it.
35
111144
2248
02:09
I've never seen anything like this.
36
113392
1201
02:10
It's almost like they're practicing magic tricks.
37
114593
3384
02:13
And at the next stop, a guy gets on the car,
38
117977
4319
02:18
and he has this sort of visiting professor look to him.
39
122296
3978
02:22
He's got the overstuffed leather satchel
40
126274
2120
02:24
and the rectangular file case and a laptop bag
41
128394
3310
02:27
and the tweed jacket with the leather patches,
42
131704
2512
02:30
and — (Laughter) —
43
134216
1977
02:32
he looks at them, and then
44
136193
2823
02:34
in a blink of an eye, he kneels down in front of them,
45
139016
3016
02:37
and he starts to say,
46
142032
1665
02:39
"You know, listen, here's how you can do it. Look,
47
143697
2069
02:41
if you do this -- " and he takes the laces out of their hand,
48
145766
2619
02:44
and instantly, he starts tying these knots,
49
148385
3311
02:47
and even better than they were doing it, remarkably.
50
151696
4661
02:52
And it turns out they are medical students
51
156357
3080
02:55
on their way to a lecture about the latest
52
159437
2112
02:57
suturing techniques, and he's the guy giving the lecture.
53
161549
3226
03:00
(Laughter)
54
164775
1608
03:02
So he starts to tell them, and he's like,
55
166383
2414
03:04
"No, this is very important here. You know,
56
168797
2508
03:07
when you're needing these knots,
57
171305
2280
03:09
it's going to be, you know, everything's
58
173585
1592
03:11
going to be happening at the same time, it's going to be --
59
175177
3753
03:14
you're going to have all this information coming at you,
60
178930
3637
03:18
there's going to be organs getting in the way,
61
182567
1496
03:19
it's going to be slippery,
62
184063
2035
03:21
and
63
186098
1310
03:23
it's just very important that you be able to do these
64
187408
2758
03:26
beyond second nature, each hand, left hand, right hand,
65
190166
3370
03:29
you have to be able to do them without seeing your fingers."
66
193536
2828
03:32
And at that moment, when I heard that,
67
196364
2370
03:34
I just got catapulted out of the subway car into a night
68
198734
7072
03:41
when I had been getting a ride in an ambulance
69
205806
3134
03:44
from the sidewalk where I had been stabbed
70
208940
4491
03:49
to the trauma room of St. Vincent's Hospital in Manhattan,
71
213431
4319
03:53
and what had happened was
72
217750
1989
03:55
a gang had come in from Brooklyn.
73
219739
3209
03:58
As part of an initiation for three of their members,
74
222948
2623
04:01
they had to kill somebody,
75
225571
1704
04:03
and I happened to be the guy walking down Bleecker Street
76
227275
3387
04:06
that night,
77
230662
1297
04:07
and they jumped on me without a word.
78
231959
4437
04:12
One of the very lucky things,
79
236396
2325
04:14
when I was at Notre Dame, I was on the boxing team,
80
238721
3008
04:17
so I put my hands up right away, instinctively.
81
241729
4648
04:22
The guy on the right had a knife with a 10-inch blade,
82
246377
3552
04:25
and he went in under my elbow,
83
249929
3293
04:29
and it went up and cut my inferior vena cava.
84
253222
4467
04:33
If you know anything about anatomy,
85
257689
1720
04:35
that's not a good thing to get cut,
86
259409
1708
04:37
and everything, of course, on the way up,
87
261117
3158
04:40
and then — I still had my hands up —
88
264275
1890
04:42
he pulled it out and went for my neck,
89
266165
2489
04:44
and sunk it in up to the hilt in my neck,
90
268654
4205
04:48
and I got one straight right punch
91
272859
2724
04:51
and knocked the middle guy out.
92
275583
1771
04:53
The other guy was still working on me,
93
277354
2213
04:55
collapsing my other lung,
94
279567
1865
04:57
and I managed to, by hitting that guy, to get a minute.
95
281432
5980
05:03
I ran down the street and collapsed,
96
287412
2093
05:05
and the ambulance guys intubated me on the sidewalk
97
289505
3047
05:08
and let the trauma room know
98
292552
2473
05:10
they had an incoming.
99
295025
1618
05:12
And one of the
100
296643
2999
05:15
side effects of having major massive blood loss
101
299642
3941
05:19
is you get tunnel vision,
102
303583
1847
05:21
so I remember being on the stretcher
103
305430
1813
05:23
and having a little nickel-sized cone of vision,
104
307243
4005
05:27
and I was moving my head around
105
311248
1549
05:28
and we got to St. Vincent's,
106
312797
1356
05:30
and we're racing down this hallway,
107
314153
1643
05:31
and I see the lights going,
108
315796
2268
05:33
and it's a peculiar effect of memories like that.
109
318064
6728
05:40
They don't really go to the usual place that memories go.
110
324792
4179
05:44
They kind of have this vault where they're stored in high-def,
111
328971
5204
05:50
and George Lucas did all the sound effects. (Laughter)
112
334175
4485
05:54
So sometimes, remembering them, it's like,
113
338660
4496
05:59
it's not like any other kind of memories.
114
343156
3724
06:02
And I get into the trauma room,
115
346880
2672
06:05
and they're waiting for me, and the lights are there,
116
349552
3022
06:08
and I'd been able to breathe a little more now,
117
352574
5295
06:13
because the blood has left, had been filling up my lungs
118
357869
3479
06:17
and I was having a very hard time breathing,
119
361348
1966
06:19
but now it's kind of gone into the stretcher.
120
363314
3042
06:22
And I said, "Is there anything I can do to help?"
121
366356
3304
06:25
and — (Laughter) —
122
369660
1772
06:27
the nurse kind of had a hysterical laugh, and
123
371432
3314
06:30
I'm turning my head trying to see everybody,
124
374746
2248
06:32
and I had this weird memory of being in college
125
376994
3816
06:36
and raising,
126
380810
2912
06:39
raising money for the flood victims of Bangladesh,
127
383722
4057
06:43
and then I look over and my anesthesiologist
128
387779
2457
06:46
is clamping the mask on me, and I think,
129
390236
1533
06:47
"He looks Bangladeshi," — (Laughter) —
130
391769
2061
06:49
and I just have those two facts, and I just think,
131
393830
3485
06:53
"This could work somehow." (Laughter)
132
397315
3714
06:56
And then I go out, and
133
401029
2278
06:59
they work on me for the rest of the night,
134
403307
1776
07:00
and I needed about 40 units of blood to keep me there
135
405083
5013
07:05
while they did their work,
136
410096
3045
07:09
and the surgeon took out about a third of my intestines,
137
413141
4224
07:13
my cecum, organs I didn't know that I had,
138
417365
3419
07:16
and he later told me one of the last things he did
139
420784
2371
07:19
while he was in there was to remove my appendix for me,
140
423155
3345
07:22
which I thought was great, you know,
141
426500
2223
07:24
just a little tidy thing there at the end. (Laughter)
142
428723
3163
07:27
And I came to in the morning.
143
431886
4318
07:32
Out of anesthetic, he had let them know
144
436204
1816
07:33
that he wanted to be there, and he had given me
145
438020
3488
07:37
about a two percent chance of living.
146
441508
3195
07:40
So he was there when I woke up,
147
444703
1912
07:42
and it was, waking up was like
148
446615
2161
07:44
breaking through the ice into a frozen lake of pain.
149
448776
6217
07:50
It was that enveloping,
150
454993
2103
07:52
and there was only one spot that didn't hurt
151
457096
4172
07:57
worse than anything I'd ever felt,
152
461268
1473
07:58
and it was my instep,
153
462741
1406
08:00
and he was holding the arch of my foot
154
464147
3746
08:03
and rubbing the instep with his thumb.
155
467893
3868
08:07
And I looked up, and he's like,
156
471761
2936
08:10
"Good to see you,"
157
474697
1121
08:11
and I was trying to remember what had happened
158
475818
3936
08:15
and trying to get my head around everything,
159
479754
1718
08:17
and the pain was just overwhelming, and he said,
160
481472
4057
08:21
"You know, we didn't cut your hair. I thought
161
485529
3376
08:24
you might have gotten strength from your hair like Samson,
162
488905
4372
08:29
and you're going to need all the strength you can get."
163
493277
2783
08:31
And in those days, my hair was down to my waist,
164
496060
3709
08:35
I drove a motorcycle, I was unmarried,
165
499769
2872
08:38
I owned a bar, so those were different times. (Laughter)
166
502641
5309
08:43
But
167
507950
2260
08:46
I had three days of life support,
168
510210
2972
08:49
and everybody was expecting,
169
513182
3781
08:52
due to just the massive amount of what they had had to do
170
516963
4493
08:57
that I wasn't going to make it,
171
521456
1828
08:59
so it was three days of
172
523284
2045
09:01
everybody was either waiting for me to die or poop,
173
525329
2827
09:04
and — (Laughter) —
174
528156
1596
09:05
when I finally pooped, then that somehow,
175
529752
2959
09:08
surgically speaking, that's like you crossed some good line,
176
532711
3407
09:12
and, um — (Laughter) —
177
536118
1040
09:13
on that day, the surgeon came in
178
537158
3265
09:16
and whipped the sheet off of me.
179
540423
3192
09:19
He had three or four friends with him,
180
543615
1661
09:21
and he does that, and they all look,
181
545276
2402
09:23
and there was no infection,
182
547678
1881
09:25
and they bend over me and they're poking and prodding,
183
549559
2870
09:28
and they're like, "There's no hematomas, blah blah,
184
552429
2097
09:30
look at the color," and they're talking amongst themselves
185
554526
2870
09:33
and I'm, like, this restored automobile
186
557396
2923
09:36
that he's just going, "Yeah, I did that." (Laughter)
187
560319
3191
09:39
And it was just,
188
563510
3024
09:42
it was amazing, because these guys are high-fiving him
189
566534
3136
09:45
over how good I turned out, you know? (Laughter)
190
569670
2060
09:47
And it's my zipper, and I've still got the staples in
191
571730
3521
09:51
and everything.
192
575251
1236
09:52
And
193
576487
2215
09:54
later on, when I got out
194
578702
2611
09:57
and the flashbacks and the
195
581313
5612
10:02
nightmares were giving me a hard time,
196
586925
4505
10:07
I went back to him
197
591430
1682
10:09
and I was sort of asking him,
198
593112
3893
10:12
you know, what am I gonna do?
199
597005
2181
10:15
And I think, kind of, as a surgeon, he basically said,
200
599186
4608
10:19
"Kid, I saved your life.
201
603794
1726
10:21
Like, now you can do whatever you want, like,
202
605520
2650
10:24
you gotta get on with that.
203
608170
1666
10:25
It's like I gave you a new car
204
609836
1832
10:27
and you're complaining about not finding parking.
205
611668
2292
10:29
Like, just, go out, and, you know, do your best.
206
613960
3601
10:33
But you're alive. That's what it's about."
207
617561
4806
10:38
And then I hear, "Bing-bong," and the subway doors
208
622367
5781
10:44
are closing, and my stop is next, and I look at these kids,
209
628148
6239
10:50
and I go, I think to myself,
210
634387
1869
10:52
"I'm going to lift my shirt up
211
636256
1562
10:53
and show them," — (Laughter) —
212
637818
1617
10:55
and then I think, "No, this is the New York City subway,
213
639435
2229
10:57
that's going to lead to other things." (Laughter)
214
641664
3631
11:01
And so I just think, they got their lecture to go to.
215
645295
4042
11:05
I step off, I'm standing on the platform,
216
649337
3961
11:09
and I feel my index finger
217
653298
2864
11:12
in
218
656162
2179
11:14
the first scar that I ever got,
219
658341
3703
11:17
from my umbilical cord,
220
662044
3114
11:21
and then around that, is traced
221
665158
3238
11:24
the last scar that I got
222
668396
2496
11:26
from my surgeon,
223
670892
2377
11:29
and I think that, that chance encounter
224
673269
5314
11:34
with those kids on the street with their knives
225
678583
3889
11:38
led me
226
682472
2433
11:40
to my surgical team,
227
684905
3125
11:43
and their training
228
688030
4075
11:48
and their skill
229
692105
2116
11:50
and, always, a little bit of luck
230
694221
3420
11:53
pushed back against chaos.
231
697641
2971
11:56
Thank you. (Applause)
232
700612
4054
12:00
(Applause)
233
704666
8944
12:09
Thank you. Very lucky to be here. Thank you. (Applause)
234
713610
6420
Translated by Joseph Geni
Reviewed by Morton Bast

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Ed Gavagan - Designer, Storyteller
Ed Gavagan was walking down the street in downtown Manhattan when he was the victim of a gang assignment to kill a random stranger. He lives to tell the amazing story.

Why you should listen

Ed Gavagan is the owner of PraxisNYC, a design firm specializing in boutique residences and aimed at designing for sustainability, habitability, durability and beauty. In 2007 Gavagan told the story “Drowning on Sullivan Street” at the Moth, the series devoted to stories told live without notes, about his near-death experience on the streets of New York as the victim of a gang initiation rite. His stories have been heard on NPR and the Moth podcast, and he has appeared onstage with the Moth in events across the U.S. Gavagan lives in New York City with his wife and daughter.

More profile about the speaker
Ed Gavagan | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee