Five days ago, the world didn’t end, but it shifted. It cracked open in a way I’ll never forget.
The day before Thanksgiving, I was just driving. Nothing dramatic. Nothing memorable. Just the kinds of thoughts that fill your head when you assume you’ll make it home, Billy Joel on the radio, the cold air outside, the comfort waiting for me later. And then, in one violent, impossibly fast second, everything changed.
There was no warning.
No screech.
No chance to brace.
Just a boom, a crash so violent it felt like the universe punched the air out of my lungs. My car launched forward like someone had lifted the ground and dropped it out from under me. The seatbelt dug into my chest. My ankle snapped. My face slammed into the steering wheel with a force I can still feel, like fire and lightning exploded behind my eyes at the same time.
The world wasn’t the world anymore. It was noise. It was metal. It was ringing in my skull. The smell of burnt rubber. The taste of blood. A pressure in my chest so heavy I couldn’t tell if I was breathing or drowning. I couldn’t tell where my body ended, and the pain began.
When the paramedics came, everything felt far away, like I was hearing life through a wall, muffled and unreal. One of them crouched beside me, looked me straight in the eye, and said words that didn’t fully register until later:
“If you weren’t wearing your seatbelt, you’d have been thrown forty feet. You wouldn’t have survived.”
Forty feet.
Onto concrete.
Final.
And that’s when life, ordinary, easy-to-ignore life, suddenly became the most precious thing in the world. Every heartbeat was loud. Every breath felt like awakening. Even the pain was proof that I was still here. Judaism teaches us that every moment holds holiness, that just waking up deserves gratitude: Mo deh Ani. But this wasn’t the quiet morning prayer version. This was the raw, shaking, “I almost didn’t make it” version. This was gratitude punched into my bones.
In BBYO, we talk about community, purpose, leadership, and connection. But lying there, realizing how close I came to losing everything, I felt those words differently. More intensely. More truthfully. Every friend who checked in. Every adult who reached out. Every hug from my family. Every text. Every breath in the hospital. Every single bit of love, I felt all of it like I never had before.
Life doesn’t feel guaranteed anymore.
It feels like a gift handed back to me.
Five days later, I’m still replaying it. Not because I want to, but because it changed something deep inside me. The things I used to rush through…I want to slow down for. The people I used to assume would always be around…I want to hold closer. The moments I used to overlook…I want to notice. Judaism teaches that miracles aren’t just seas splitting; they’re survival, connection, gratitude, and renewal. And now I understand that in a way I never did before.
This Thanksgiving wasn’t about a meal.
It wasn’t about a break from school.
It was about being alive.
It was about thanking God, not in the abstract way, not the going-through-the-motions way, but in the “I’m literally still here” way.
I shouldn’t be writing this.
But I am.
And I won’t forget that.
Gavin is an Aleph living in Deerfield, Illinois and loves fishing, hanging out with friends, Wrestling for his High School team, and helping the community!
All views expressed on content written for The Shofar represent the opinions and thoughts of the individual authors. The author biography represents the author at the time in which they were in BBYO.