

She sought help from a counselor in an attempt to try to shake the repeated visions.

It got so bad that whenever he would leave the house I would fall on the floor on my knees and pray,” shared Salveski. “I really couldn’t get rid of the feeling that something bad was going to happen. “I got up from the table and left the restaurant and walked several miles to our home,” described Salveski of her intense reaction to her son’s news.

Upon her return the family went to a local restaurant to have dinner where her son reluctantly told her he had already purchased the bike. “I was out of town when he called to tell me his plans,” said Salveski, “and I asked him to promise he would wait until I returned home to make the decision.” Her troubling visions began shortly after her son announced his plans to purchase a motorcycle in 2006. “I kept seeing his body flying through the air from a motorcycle,” said Salveski. In the year before the accident, Salveski began having repeated premonitions of her son’s death. “When my girlfriends were sharing problems with their children I was worried because Matthew was so good and I remember telling them I was afraid God was going to take him from me.” “He never left the room without saying he loved you,” shared Salveski. He stood 6 feet-1-inches tall and weighed 280 pounds, had a big smile and always put others’ needs before his own, even strangers. Salveski describes her son as the kind of person that walked into a room and everyone was drawn to him. “He did everything for me and my boys,” said Matheson. Janine Matheson, Salveski’s daughter, said her brother would drop all his plans and cancel on his friends if she needed a babysitter. “I think he would be happy to know that money from the benefit ride would be used to help pay the medical bills for his nephew,” said Salveski. Salveski’s grandson suffers from a condition known as hydrocephalus and also suffers from scoliosis and other medical challenges and recently underwent surgery. Funds from the ride will go to help pay medical expenses for her grandson, Austin, who her son Matthew cared for before his death. Salveski has plans to continue the benefit ride each year in honor of her son’s legacy. 2 on her son’s birthday, was hosted by members of three local motorcycle clubs that her son was a member of - the Corvette Club, Honda Club and the Motor Houston Motorcycle Club. Since his death, Salveski’s grief has transformed into a resolve to honor her son’s legacy of helping others by hosting an annual motorcycle benefit ride.
#Premonitions before death come true license
Her 26-year-old son was traveling as a member of a motorcycle club and had stayed behind to wait on a fellow member when a vehicle driven by a young woman with a suspended driver’s license struck her son’s motorcycle. “I remember her saying over and over ‘I knew it was going to happen, I knew it was going to happen,’” said client Dollie Thomas. In the year prior to her son’s death, Salveski had been haunted by repeated visions of his death.Ī Houston-based new home sales professional, Salveski was helping clients when the call came that her son had been killed in an accident. But the news did not come as a complete surprise. Her son Matthew had been killed in a motorcycle accident.
