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Hero 10-year-old twins describe saving drowning dad with CPR they saw in movies

When Alabama dad Brad Hassig lost consciousness in the family pool, his young sons and a neighbor saved his life. "(I thought), 'I don’t want this to be the last moment,'" twin Bridon Hassig said.
/ Source: TODAY

Ten year-old twin brothers and their neighbor saved their dad from drowning in a backyard pool — with moves they copied from classic movies.

“I was like, I’ve had some moments with him, with happy, sad and some mad moments, but I’m like, 'I don’t want this to be the last moment,'” Bridon Hassig said about saving his dad, Brad, in an appearance on TODAY alongside his father, his brother, Christian, and friend Sam Ebert.

On June 14, Brad Hassig, of Mountain Brook, Alabama, was hanging out in his pool with Christian, Bridon and Sam, 11.

“It was a typical afternoon — we had music on the speakers and I was doing breathing exercises underwater to relax,” Hassig, a 46-year-old chiropractor, told TODAY Parents. “I wasn’t pushing myself or trying to be a Navy Seal.”

But moments after submerging himself in 5 feet of water, Hassig lost consciousness.

“I went from just complete peace, saying the Lord’s Prayer and then everything was just white,” Hassig said on TODAY Wednesday.

After seeing their father underwater on his side, Bridon and Sam swam down to pull him out. Bridon performed CPR he'd seen in movies like "The Sandlot," even though he was not trained in the life-saving technique.

"I went from peace to being slammed on the deck of the pool, and then just chaos everyone was everywhere," Brad Hassig told Hoda on TODAY. "They were first responders. I heard, 'Daddy, Daddy. Come back, Daddy. You have to be okay.' It was crazy."

Hassig also said he believed there was some divine intervention behind the rescue.

"There's no way, physically, they should have been able to pull a 185-pound man out of out of the water like that and to know and do what all of them did, perfectly as quickly (as they did)," he said. "No lack of action, to run as fast as they did. It's God's hands all over it."

Related: Heroic girl saves 4-year-old boy who fell into a sewer hole

In an interview last week with TODAY Parents, Brad Hassig said the frightening incident began after Bridon and Sam noticed him slumped over underwater in a cross-legged position.

They alerted Christian, who quickly strapped on his goggles and dove underwater.

Alabama dad Brad Hassig is thanking his 10-year-old twin sons and their 11-year-old neighbor for saving his life in their backyard pool.
Alabama dad Brad Hassig is thanking his 10-year-old twin sons and their 11-year-old neighbor for saving his life in their backyard pool.nbc15.com

"Christian said I was on my side and shaking and my head was turning blue," recalled Hassig. "He yelled for Bridon and Sam to jump in and they each grabbed a shoulder and pulled me to the stairs."

With their mother at work, Christian knocked on neighbors' doors, but no one answered. He eventually ran into the street and flagged down a car, and the driver called 911.

Meanwhile, Bridon started trying to do CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) on his dad, an emergency move involving chest compressions and mouth-to-mouth breathing.

Bridon doesn't have emergency training — but he did recall seeing mouth-to-mouth performed in two movies: "Hook" and "The Sandlot," so he mimicked those moves until the police and ambulance showed up.

A neighbor who is also cardiologist heard police sirens in the area and ran to Hassig's backyard, dragging his body from the pool steps to the deck.

Brad Hassig with his sons.
Brad Hassig with his sons.nbc15.com

When Hassig regained consciousness, he was coughing up blood, foam and water. He said Christian was by his side begging, "Daddy come back. You have to be OK."

"There were people everywhere," Hassig recalled.

First responders rushed Hassig to the emergency room where doctors admitted him to the cardiac intensive-care unit.

After 24 hours, Hassig's vitals stabilized and he was released from the hospital with a diagnosis of hypoxia (low oxygen in the organs and tissue), pulmonary edema (caused by fluid buildup in the lungs) and shortness of breath.

Hassig still has trouble catching his breath and he has fatigue, but he's getting better.

"I had a follow-up appointment yesterday and my EKG and blood pressure was normal," he said. "I walked my dog for the first time this morning."

Hassig vowed to never do breathing exercises underwater or swim alone again.

"I'm so proud of my boys. I tell them, 'Remember you guys are heroes' and I will be grateful to them forever," said Hassig. "And Sam is such a kind and gentle kid. It's a bond now."

But the dad fights with guilt now too. "My boys saved my life and it's hard because you put them in that position," he noted. "It's confirmation that God is always with you.

Hassig's sons will now take formal CPR training and he gave them cell phones for future emergencies.

"It's a reward but it's also for peace of mind," he explained. "With the Fourth of July coming up, we need (more) water safety awareness."

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Nathan Congleton / TODAY