Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

10-Year-Old Boy Swept Out To Sea Used A Technique Learned On TV To Stay Alive

10-Year-Old Boy Swept Out To Sea Used A Technique Learned On TV To Stay Alive
Erik Woolcott/PA Media

A 10-year-old boy has said he thought he was moments away from dying when he was swept out to sea during a day trip to the beach with his family.

Lifeboat crews believe Ravi Saini's life was saved by his use of the Float To Live technique he learned watching TV programs about ocean rescues.


Ravi told the RNLI team that pulled him from the water that they gave him “a second chance to live" when he visited Scarborough lifeboat station to thank them.

The crew told the youngster he was “an inspiration" as they presented him with gifts and showed him round the base.

Ravi described how he was on a day trip from his home in Leeds with his father, Nathu Ram, 37, his mother, Puspa Devi, 34, and his sister, Muskan Saini, nine, on one of the hottest days of the year last week.

He said that he was in the water with his father when he suddenly realised he was out of his depth and floating out into the North Yorkshire seaside town's South Bay.

Ravi Saini RNLI rescueRavi Saini, 10, from Leeds, and his father Nathu Ram, walk in the sea (Erik Woolcott/PA)PA Media - Erik Woolcott

“I realised I was floating and I was like 'help me, help me'," Ravi said as he sat in the inshore lifeboat which came to pluck him from the sea.

“My dad tried to come but the water was higher than him."

He said he was thinking:

“Is this really happening, is this the end of my life?."

But he said he was a fan of shows including the BBC documentary Saving Lives At Sea, which follows lifeboat crews across Britain.

This is how he knew the Float To Live technique which he described as staying on your back, staying calm and spreading out like a starfish.

He said:

“All of a sudden the waves were so strong that every single part of my body goes into the water and then it takes 10 seconds or something to get back."

Ravi Saini RNLI rescueRavi thanked lifeboat crews for saving his life (Erik Woolcott/PA)PA Media - Erik Woolcott

But he said that, after what felt like five hours, he heard the inshore lifeboat's engine.

Ravi said:

“I felt like 'yeah I finally got a second chance to live'."

His father, who is a chef, described how he tried to get to his son but the water was too deep with strong currents.

Mr. Ram said:

“He called me—'dad help me'—and I tried to go and bring Ravi back."

“The water was round my neck in the water and I lost my control."

“Slowly, slowly he was going too far. Once or twice we saw his face. After that we didn't see him."

“He kept asking 'dad, help' but we couldn't do anything."

Mr. Ram added:

“When I was in the water I was struggling and I was thinking that we could both lose our lives today."

Ravi Saini RNLI rescueRavi with lifeboat crew member Rudi Barman (Erik Woolcott/PA)PA Media - Erik Woolcott

He said he thought his son was going to die in front of his eyes.

Mr Ram said that when Ravi was in hospital later he told his parents he thought he was “a few minutes away from dying".

Lifeboat crewman Rudi Barman, who also runs a speedboat attraction in the bay, said:

“He was an incredible young man."

“He resisted the urge to panic which, in those conditions, would have been a big problem."

“The fact that he was on his back Floating To Live is just amazing really. That's what saved his life."

The crew said Ravi was swept across the bay from the Spa complex to the harbour and was in the water for around an hour.

The youngster was taken to hospital for checks but was discharged the next day.

More from Trending

Karoline Leavitt
Win McNamee/Getty Images

Karoline Leavitt Slammed After Suggesting Reports Of Deadly Strike On Iranian Girls' School Are Just 'Propaganda'

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was criticized after she rejected reports that the U.S. struck a girls' elementary school in Iran, killing 175 people, insisting in remarks to the press pool that it's just Iranian "propaganda" that they've "fallen" for.

Iranian state media and health officials said the strike occurred early Saturday morning in Minab, in the country’s southern Hormozgan Province. Journalists from international news organizations have not been granted access to independently verify the reported death toll or the circumstances surrounding the strike.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @madswellness's TikTok video
@madswellness/TikTok

Woman Sparks Debate With Her Viral Hot Take That We Should 'Normalize Not Liking Dogs'

We're all different people with different interests, and it's perfectly okay that we like different things.

But there are some people who passionately, even vehemently, draw the line at other people liking or disliking dogs.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @vanellimelli030's TikTok video
@vanellimelli030/TikTok

Model Accuses Fashion Brand Of Using AI To Recreate Her Looks For Ad Instead Of Hiring Her

There used to be laws in place for someone's likeness being used without their consent, and most certainly if their likeness was being used in an exploitative way for profit.

But now with the rise of AI-generated photographs, advertisements, and other digital products, the lines seem to have become muddied between the illegal stealing of someone's likeness and AI "inspiration."

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @anissahm15's TikTok video
@anissahm15/TikTok

TikToker Secretly Records Unhinged Spectrum Employee Screaming At Her For Trying To Cancel Her Service

Employees in commission-based positions are feeling increasingly pressured to acquire new clients, retain previous clients, and solve the issues their clients call in about with high satisfaction ratings.

Even though tensions are high, and the pressure they're feeling may be unrealistic for any one person to take, that doesn't give them the right to mistreat people who do not want to sign up or want to cancel.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @hustleb***h's TikTok video
@hustleb***h/TikTok

Travel Influencer Posts Viral 'Hack' Using Hotel Coffee Maker To Wash Her Underwear—And We're Horrified

We've all worried about packing enough clothes when we go on a trip, especially when it's the really important stuff, like underwear and socks.

But travel influencer @tarawoodcox11 thoroughly grossed out the internet when she shared a hack for maintaining clean, or at least cleaner underwear, while on the go. The video was later shared by the TikTok platform @hustleb*tch where it went viral.

Keep ReadingShow less