GREENWOOD — Reading a book to his two children are precious moments Dustin Moody isn't taking for granted.
He was away from his boys for about 6 months while recovering in a Chicago hospital.
The Trafalgar Police Officer's life changed following a pursuit on June 25. His injuries left him paralyzed from the waist down.
"It's 300 south, westbound where it T's. I'm trapped. It's not good," he radioed.
"It's not good," said Moody.
"Dustin you keep talking," said the dispatcher.
"We're coming to you buddy," said an officer.
Moody and the man he was chasing crashed into a tree line.
"Control please contact my family and tell them I love them," said Dustin.
The family is now navigating a new normal.
"The last thing I remember saying was Lord please help me. I would keep replaying that and would wake up in the middle of the night. That has since gone away and is something thankfully I don't deal with," said Dustin.
Recovery, both mentally and physically, hasn't been easy, but Dustin and his wife Emily continue to work at it together.
"Every day presents its own unique challenges, but [I'm] staying focused on faith, staying focused on family and getting better and continuing to fight and do everything I can," Dustin said.
"Your strength, the person you needed, was hurt," Dustin's wife Emily said. "Our lives were at a standstill ... it's been good because Dustin and I have had to learn things that the other person had to do."

With two children in car seats, a furry companion and Dustin's wheelchair, getting to and from places is a challenge.
RELATED: Community backs injured Trafalgar officer and family
The Moody's are thankful for the outpouring of support but are hoping for help getting an accessible van.
"Our son's birthday is coming up and that was one of the biggest things we would like to have. A van that we can just go without fear that Dustin's pain is too bad or the wheelchair wheel is going to pop. If we want to buy stuff, we have room in our car now," said Emily.
The Central Indiana Police Foundation has launched a fundraiser to help the Moody family.
-
Report: Colts open practice window for Anthony Richardson
The Colts are opening the 21-day practice window for quarterback Anthony Richardson, though he continues to deal with vision limitations from his eye injury, NFL Network's Ian Rapoport reported.
Richard Allen files appeal of Delphi Murder conviction
Attorneys for Richard Allen have filed a 113-page appeal challenging his conviction and 130-year prison sentence for the 2017 killings of 13-year-old Abigail Williams and 14-year-old Liberty German.
Shoppers’ Survival Guide: Steering kids past tempting holiday displays
If you’ve ever walked into a store, list in tow, with your children and walked out with things you didn’t plan to buy, you’re not alone.
The City of Indianapolis' "Indy Peace Fellowship" 2025 review
WRTV spoke with Dane Nutty, President & CEO of the Indy Public Safety Foundation, about its efforts in 2025 and continued targets ahead for 2026.