“It makes my whole week when I come up with a new way to accomplish a task and then share it with other people who have lost their hands,” said Matagi, who lives near Salt Lake City and works as an elementary school teacher’s aide for special-needs students.

His “no-handed” videos also include lessons for able-bodied people.

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“People often feel awkward when they see an amputee struggling with a task,” Matagi said. “They’re not sure what to do, and sometimes their actions can add to the person’s feeling of helplessness.”

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His advice?

"Say, ‘I know you can do this, but can I help you?’ " he said. “That leaves the person with a feeling of empowerment."

Matagi lost his hands in 2010 in an electrical accident while working as a power lineman in Kremmling, Colo. He was holding a piece of cut wire that touched a live wire while he was doing maintenance on a transformer from a cherry picker. In an instant, more than 15,000 volts of electricity surged through his body.

After a co-worker rescued him, he was rushed to the University of Colorado Hospital burn clinic, where doctors worked desperately to save his hands. But the damage was too severe. Doctors told him that if he didn’t amputate his hands, he would get gangrene and die.

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"It was tough to hear that, but I wanted to live,” Matagi said. “So I told them to take off my hands."

Family members flew from Utah to Colorado to support him, including his brother Fatu Matagi, 38, a father of three and a substitute teacher. Fatu could relate to his brother’s loss in a way nobody else could: He lost his right hand and arm in an electrical accident while working as a power lineman in 2008.

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Fatu Matagi knew that his brother was in for a journey of pain and frustration as he learned new ways to perform simple tasks once taken for granted.

“Get comfortable with failure,” Fatu told his brother. “Everything will be hard, but don’t give up. Eventually, you’ll forget how convenient it was to have two arms and hands.”

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Sam Matagi said it was hard to get his head around the idea that both he and his brother were amputees. The younger brother had a lot to teach his older brother.

"I told him, 'When you find yourself laughing again, you'll know you are healing,'" Fatu Matagi told The Washington Post.

It didn't take long.

After three weeks in the hospital, Sam Matagi was accompanied by his brother on a flight home for further treatment at the University of Utah Burn Center. On the plane, as Fatu fed Sam a hamburger, the brothers joked about how other passengers were staring at a one-handed guy feeding a no-handed guy, recalled Sam Matagi.

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The brothers decided that Sam should be known as “The No-Handed Bandit” and Fatu should be called “The One-Armed Dude.”

“Joking with my brother helped me to cope,” Sam Matagi said. “But even though Fatu is an amputee, he isn’t a double amputee. In the beginning, there were times when I felt alone, like I was the only double hand amputee in the world.”

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On social media, Sam Matagi found a community of other double hand amputees who offered support and gave him the courage to find new ways to accomplish old tasks. He learned how to hold a stylus in his mouth to type on his computer tablet, how to take a shower and how to cook for himself at the home he now shares with his sister, Selisitila Matagi.

"Learning these things gave me a lot of confidence to go out into the world,” he said, adding that he felt compelled to share his newfound knowledge.

He received his prosthetics, and about a year later he became a peer supporter for burn survivors through Phoenix SOAR (Survivors Offering Assistance in Recovery). Matagi now regularly offers pep talks at burn rehab group meetings, sometimes accompanied by his brother.

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Burn survivors at the University of Utah hospital said Matagi’s energy and enthusiasm are contagious.

Brad Wheeler, a Salt Lake City musician and radio DJ, said he will never forget the day Matagi walked into his group rehab meeting in March 2016. Wheeler, 47, had almost lost his leg in a car accident.

"Sam's charisma is so strong that you don't notice right off that he's missing both his hands,” said Wheeler. “He was empathetic and didn't tell me how to be or that everything was going to be all right. He simply listened."

One day Matagi asked him if he’d been getting out of the house.

"I told him, no, that I was able to go to work but hadn't felt comfortable being out in public and was spending a lot of time at home on my couch,” he said.

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His new friend looked at him and said one word: depression.

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“I knew he was right,” said Wheeler. “He said it in a loving way and talked of his own experience of what it was like.”

Wheeler said he owes a lot of his recovery to Matagi because “he shows people what it means to be a survivor."

Not to mention how to tie a pair of swim trunks with no hands.

Matagi, who lives in West Valley City, Utah, came up with the idea for his “No-Handed Bandit” series when he searched online for “how to” videos geared toward hand amputees and could find only one.

"Becoming an amputee is like being born again — you have to relearn how to do everything,” he said. “Buttoning was difficult. Tying a necktie. Folding down the collars on a dress shirt. I decided to figure it out and then share what I'd learned."

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From dribbling a basketball and snowboarding to playing Pokémon and grilling chicken, there is little that Matagi won't try.

“I remember that feeling of helplessness and hopelessness,” he said. “Helping somebody else is good for my soul. It’s what keeps me going.”