The family of Marvin Guzmán Sequeira, 31, hopes that a miracle will happen so that he can come out of the coma he is in, after suffering a traffic accident in the city of Miami, this past weekend.
Guzmán Sequeira, who is in the Jackson hospital, assisted by an artificial respirator that keeps him alive, is originally from the Montes Verdes region, in the municipality of Camoapa.
At the end of 2021, he came to the United States in search of opportunities. Marvin is connected to life support machines and his brother, Ángel Guzmán Sequeira, is the one who accompanies him and is watching his condition.
According to the family, doctors have said that Marvin’s condition is delicate. His prognosis is guarded. “The doctors hardly give hope,” explained his sister, Concepción Guzmán Sequeira.
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They don’t give up, neither does he.
In a photograph circulating on social networks, Marvin can be seen with bandages on his head, an arm in a cast and visible blows on his face. It is also observed that he is intubated to guarantee assisted breathing.
Her sister is convinced that only a miracle could make a difference in this painful moment. “The doctors told my parents that they couldn’t do much anymore, that if the machines stopped it would be useless to try a resuscitation,” she lamented.
Although the family has not published anything about the misfortune they are experiencing, their story is already being shared on their social networks and in some profiles of acquaintances, asking for prayers for their recovery. The family comments that this is a painful situation, but they also hold out hope for a miraculous recovery.
From the countryside to the big city
That same person who is in a coma today was able to demonstrate that dreams are achievable, although the price could be high in his case. The community of Montes Verdes, is located about ninety kilometers northeast of the city of Camoapa and in those fields, Marvin, struggled daily with the work day, maintaining the dream of getting ahead.
In the same way that many Nicaraguans have made the decision to emigrate, Marvin raised his gaze to the north and opted to seek the so-called “American dream”, crossing the US-Mexico border at the end of 2021.
Those who know him speak of Marvin as a hard-working and energetic young man. Just last Saturday, April 22, Marvin celebrated 31 years of life in that hospital bed that catches him today and from where his family hopes that he can get up by a miracle.
By United Voices