She Survived 10 Days Inside a Plastic Tomb — Trapped Not Once, But Twice

Picture this: food is right in front of you, but you physically cannot open your mouth. Water is inches away, yet you can’t take a single sip. The sun burns overhead. Your throat feels like fire. And there is nothing you can do about it.

Now imagine surviving like that for ten days.

For a stray dog in a small rural village about 160 kilometers from Hyderabad, this wasn’t imagination. It was her life — a life twisted by fate in the cruelest way possible.

When villagers first saw her, they were horrified. She didn’t look like a dog anymore. Her face was completely hidden behind a hard plastic container, sealed tight around her head. From a distance, she looked like something out of a nightmare — a silent figure wandering through fields with a plastic mask of death.

VIDEO: 10 Days Without Food or Water — Watch the Exact Moment She’s Freed From the Double Plastic Trap

A Cruel Chain Reaction: How She Was Trapped Twice

Her suffering began weeks earlier.

While scavenging for scraps — something stray dogs must do to survive — she pushed her head into a discarded plastic pot. It got stuck. Incidents like this are heartbreakingly common in areas where waste disposal is limited.

The villagers noticed her and tried to help. They managed to catch her and break the pot.

They believed the nightmare was over.

But it wasn’t.

A thick, jagged rim from that first pot remained locked around her neck like a rigid collar. Hungry again, she later pushed her head into another plastic container. This time, the leftover rim from the first pot acted like a wedge — sealing the second container tightly in place.

Now she was completely imprisoned.

No food.
No water.
No way out.

For ten days, she ran from anyone who tried to approach. Fear made her fast. Each attempt to help only drove her deeper into the brush. With every passing day, she grew weaker — but desperation kept her moving.

A Desperate Call for Help in the Dark

Realizing they couldn’t save her on their own, the villagers turned to social media and reached out to the Animal Warriors Conservation Society — a rescue group known for taking on the toughest cases.

The message was urgent:
She has been like this for ten days. She is dying.

Without hesitation, the rescue team began the 160-kilometer journey into the countryside. By the time they arrived, the village was wrapped in darkness.

They couldn’t wait until morning.

Ten days without water is often fatal.

Armed with flashlights, they searched through fields and thorny bushes throughout the night. They called softly. They listened for movement.

But she was smart. And she was terrified.

She stayed hidden.

One Shot at Saving Her Life

At dawn, they finally saw her.

She was crouched deep inside a cluster of bushes. The plastic container reflected the first light of morning. Her ribs were visible now. She barely moved, conserving the last fragments of energy her body had left.

The rescuers knew something critical:

They would only get one chance.

If she escaped again, adrenaline might carry her far enough that she would never be found in time.

Moving silently, they surrounded the bushes. No shouting. No sudden noise. Only hand signals and slow steps.

Then — in one coordinated second — they moved.

The net flew.

She was secured before she could bolt.

Pinned gently to the ground, the team worked quickly. Industrial cutters pressed against the hardened plastic.

Snap.

The outer container cracked.

Snap.

The jagged rim from the first pot fell away.

And then it happened.

For the first time in ten days, she inhaled fresh air without plastic blocking her world.

She didn’t snarl.
She didn’t bite.
She didn’t fight.

She simply shook her head — almost as if trying to understand what freedom felt like — and ran.

But this time, she wasn’t running from fear.

She was running back to life.

More Than a Rescue — A Lesson

This story is about persistence.
It’s about villagers who refused to ignore suffering.
It’s about rescuers who drove 160 kilometers through the night because time mattered.

160 kilometers traveled.
10 days of starvation ended.
2 plastic traps removed.

Plastic pollution isn’t just ugly litter scattered across the ground. For animals, it can become a weapon — silent, slow, and deadly.

Because of the Animal Warriors Conservation Society, this story didn’t end in tragedy.

It ended in freedom.

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