Student Flashes Peace Sign as He's Awaiting Rescue from Car Crushed Under Fallen Tree
"This was the scariest thing I ever experienced,” the driver, Tyson Ramirez, wrote in a GoFundMe
A University of Washington student survived a near-fatal incident in which a tree fell onto the roof of his car during the recent bomb cyclone that hit the Pacific Northwest.
"This was the scariest thing I ever experienced,” the driver, Tyson Ramirez, wrote in a GoFundMe as he is currently raising money to replace his damaged blue Hyundai.
According to Ramirez, he was driving down 35th Avenue in Seattle on the night of Nov. 19 while it was pitch black out.
As he approached an incline near 100th Street, he saw, through his windshield, the trunk of a tree falling onto the car.
“I slumped back and down in my seat at the very last second as it smashes through the roof, which caves in deeply but somehow just narrowly missed my head,” he wrote. “I was quick enough then to put the car in park and try to register what just happened."
Ramirez told local NBC affiliate KING that the fallen tree left him pinned in his car and unable to get out.
Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
“I tried to open my driver’s side, no use,” Ramirez said. “The tree was totally horizontal on my car, pinning both the driver’s side and passenger side door, and I was stuck.”
Miraculously, Ramirez said he was not injured from the ordeal — adding that other people got out of their vehicles and homes to check on him and call 911.
While waiting for help to arrive, one of those people took a photograph of Ramirez flashing the peace sign from inside his car.
"She said, 'Well do you want me to take your picture and her reasoning was you may never get to see this angle again,' and at first, it threw me off, but she was right," Ramirez recalled to KING.
Authorities eventually arrived and, after what Ramirez described as an “excruciating wait,” were able to pull a door off so he could get out. He told KING that he hugged his parents, who were there at the scene.
“I was very happy to sleep in my bed that night,” Ramirez later wrote.
He also expressed gratitude following the scary experience. “Whether it be angels, whether it be God, the amazing firefighters, Squad 31, I was really blessed that night," said Ramirez, KING reported. “It was really a lot of shock, but also, even in the moment, as I was trapped, a bit of gratefulness to know I’m okay.”
Related: Woman Celebrating 73rd Birthday Killed by Falling Tree While Cleaning Up After Hurricane Milton
As of Wednesday, Nov. 27, Ramirez's GoFundMe has generated over $1,400.
PEOPLE contacted Ramirez for additional comment.