One night last October, Kaliyah woke up around 2 a.m. and smelled smoke.
“I could barely breathe,” she recalls.
She sprang out of bed to investigate and saw a fire blazing on the stove in the kitchen. The flames were starting to spread.
Kaliyah didn’t panic. Thanks to a fire drill at her school, she knew exactly what to do. She held a bandanna over her nose and mouth so she wouldn’t breathe in the smoke. She dropped to the floor because she knows smoke rises. Kaliyah crawled to her mom’s bedroom to wake her up. Then she woke her younger siblings and carried some of them outside.
“I was scared, but I was more focused on trying to get everybody out,” Kaliyah says.
Firefighters arrived and put out the flames. Unfortunately, the house was destroyed. But because of Kaliyah’s quick thinking, no one was injured.
Kaliyah’s Tip: “Try not to panic. If you do, you won’t be able to think clearly.”
One night last October, Kaliyah woke up around 2 a.m. and smelled smoke.
“I could barely breathe,” she recalls.
She sprang out of bed to investigate. That’s when she saw a fire. It was blazing on the stove in the kitchen. The flames were starting to spread.
Kaliyah didn’t panic. Thanks to a fire drill at her school, she knew exactly what to do. She held a bandanna over her nose and mouth. That way she wouldn’t breathe in the smoke. She dropped to the floor. That’s because she knows smoke rises. Kaliyah crawled to her mom’s bedroom to wake her up. Then she woke her younger siblings. She even carried some of them outside.
“I was scared, but I was more focused on trying to get everybody out,” Kaliyah says.
Firefighters arrived and put out the flames. Unfortunately, the house was destroyed. But because of Kaliyah’s quick thinking, no one was injured.
Kaliyah’s Tip: “Try not to panic. If you do, you won’t be able to think clearly.”