Well I'll try to answer most of the questions and give as much info as possible. The truck was a 1993 mazda b2200 that I got 6 years ago, it was only a small truck like the size of a ford ranger. What entirely happened was that I was driving on a 2 lane hiway for all you city people who have 12 lane hiways there is one lane going one way and right beside it is the other lane going the other way. I don't remember the last 100 km before the accident but what I was told by the police was that it was me that crossed over the median and I went head on. Now, this is part that is really surprising and unreal was what I went head on with. It was a full size transport truck who was loaded and was probably a good 50 times heavier then I was. The collision ended up where half of my truck was in the contact zone, and that half was my side. Both pictures are of the side I was sitting on, but as I said I have frontal pictures and inside pictures as well. The inside ones aren't all that great, but it's pretty penetrating hard getting a good pic when it is in that condition. For my injuries, the major ones were broken leg, dislocated hip, broken arm, dislocated shoulder, lacerated spleen, punctured lung, my whole face breaking so there is 15 titanium plates in there now, the blindness where I can see complete fuzziness, the hearing, as well as severe memory loss as well as some brain damage that has an extremely good chance of not being permanent. I have been told by every doctor that I was the luckiest person they ever met and that I am a miracle to be in the condition I'm in. The transport was going 90 km/h which is 60 mph and I was probably going 105 km/h or 70 mph. I don't know my speed for sure but that's what I typically drive on that hiway. Reasons I might have crossed are not that many. The hiway was snow covered so a loss of control could be one reason, but the other most likely reason, and
I'm not going into details, was because of what was on my mind at the time and ............ you can figure out the rest of the sentence. Fortunately the accident has changed me and I never want to do that again because I realize now how much people care for me and how much it would truly hurt them. Also, I feel so fortunate to still be here and not paralyzed or amputated or both eyes blind that I would never be able to do that again because it could be so much worse.