Author Topic: America's Most Injured Soldier Returns To Afghanistan,..Because He's That Tough  (Read 2468 times)

twyacht

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Absolutely Amazing American Soldier, Here's a real role model.



http://www.theblaze.com/stories/americas-most-injured-soldier-heads-back-to-the-battlefield/

America‘s ’Most Injured’ Soldier Heads Back to the Battlefield

After being caught in a battle for his life during the battle for Fallujah, Iraq in 2004, Captain D.J. Skelton fought back against the pain of his extensive injuries. Seven years later, he’s heading back to the battlefield to take charge of 192 men from his previous unit, the 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment, and to confront dangerous insurgents lurking in the plains of southern Afghanistan.


Friends said his recovery should have been physically impossible.  After enemy rocket-propelled grenades pummeled him, then-Lieutenant Skelton says he has scant memories of the battle that almost took his life.  “I remember all my vision went out. I was completely blind. I felt no pain. It felt as if I was floating through the air on my back. My audio was still intact. … I could hear the firefight and voices in the distance screaming, but could not make out the words. … Then all of a sudden, I felt the most intense pain I have ever felt in my life,” Skelton told ABC News.


“I wanted to die right then. I hear a voice yelling, ‘Lieutenant … Lieutenant … oh my God … I think the lieutenant is dead. …’ I remember being drug and put into a vehicle. … I was screaming the whole time … but with most of my face blown off and my mouth destroyed … it came out as this ghostlike hollow sound … not even human.

Shrapnel had blast through the Lieutenant’s right cheek and exited through his left eye.  He’d also been shot in the arm and had a “shrapnel tunnel” dug through his chest.


“My left arm was destroyed, but my hand was intact. I have no bone between my hand and elbow. My stomach and chest were split open where shrapnel and AK-47 rounds had shredded. My right leg had a fist-sized hole through the lower portion. All the bone was missing from my foot to my knee.”


When he woke up from his real-life nightmare, the Army’s “most seriously wounded commander” found himself at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, D.C.

Six years and more than 60 surgeries later, Skelton, 33, is missing his left eye, the roof of his mouth is gone, he has only partial use of his left arm and limited use of his left ankle.  But his friends say his uninhibited “warrior spirit” is helping guide him back to the battlefield.


“I wanted to return to my men,” Skelton says.  “The fact is they never quit on me, and I wasn’t going to give up my fight and quit.”

His recovery wasn’t always smooth sailing, however.  Skelton recalls laying in recovery feeling miserable when another wounded soldier — a double-amputee — inspired him.

“I saw a fellow wounded warrior who had lost both of his legs. He was an enlisted soldier and was going to therapy every day and always wore a smile and a great attitude,” Skelton said.

“One day my mom asked him why he was so happy, when he looked to be more injured than her own son who was being quite pathetic in [his] recovery. He didn’t even hesitate, ‘Well, look at it this way… at least I have my two eyes … I don’t what I would do if I ever damaged this handsome face.’ Life is all relative.”

From that point on, Skelton used his arduous recovery as a time to study and better himself.  He’s taught himself Mandarin Chinese, graduated from West Point military academy, completed a Harvard University fellowship, and wrote a book — a caretaker’s guide for wounded service members.  In addition, Skelton served as a military adviser to then-Deputy Secretary of Defense Gordon England and co-founded a non-profit organization to help physically disabled individuals participate in outdoor sports.

“I can either dwell on what happened and be miserable and pissy and complain or I can look at what I do have left and figure out how to make the most of my new life… how to make what I have work while always looking for creative ways to make up the difference,” he says.

Despite his injuries, Skelton is an avid outdoor sportsman (ABC News)

“It is physically incapable for him to do what he is doing,” Skelton’s friend, retired Army officer Lt. Gen. John Nagl, says. “And I have no doubt that he will succeed.”


Skelton, now a Captain, hopes to rejoin the 2nd Stryker Cavalry in the coming months.

“Capt. Skelton is providing a great example of courage, strength and commitment,” Gen. Peter Chiarelli, vice chief of staff of the U.S. Army, says.  “Although his body was wounded, his warrior spirit was not.”


****

True valor, bravery, honor, and downright tough ass American Soldier. Quite the inspiration the next time I whine about a bad day at work...
Thomas Jefferson: The strongest reason for the people to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against the tyranny of government. That is why our masters in Washington are so anxious to disarm us. They are not afraid of criminals. They are afraid of a populace which cannot be subdued by tyrants."
Col. Jeff Cooper.

Dakotaranger

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Ok I feel like a wuss.  I'd like to buy him steak
"One loves to possess arms, though they hope never to have occasion for them." --Thomas Jefferson, letter to George Washington, 1796

PegLeg45

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Ok I feel like a wuss.  I'd like to buy him steak

+1

"I expect perdition, I always have. I keep this building at my back, and several guns handy, in case perdition arrives in a form that's susceptible to bullets. I expect it will come in the disease form, though. I'm susceptible to diseases, and you can't shoot a damned disease." ~ Judge Roy Bean, Streets of Laredo

For the Patriots of this country, the Constitution is second only to the Bible for most. For those who love this country, but do not share my personal beliefs, it is their Bible. To them nothing comes before the Constitution of these United States of America. For this we are all labeled potential terrorists. ~ Dean Garrison

"When it comes to the enemy, just because they ain't pullin' a trigger, doesn't mean they ain't totin' ammo for those that are."~PegLeg

2HOW

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TOUJOURS PRET
AN ARMED SOCIETY IS A POLITE SOCIETY

Hazcat

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So Marines are the 'tough guys'. huh?

Said by an old Amy guy whose chest just got a litter bigger!
All tipoes and misspelings are copi-righted.  Pleeze do not reuse without ritten persimmons  :D

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r_w

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That guy makes Chuck Norris look like a wuss....


"Why are you carrying a pistol?  Expecting trouble?"

"No Maam.  If I was expecting trouble, I'd have a rifle."

bulldog75

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Thanks. I will tell some of my troops to suck it up next time they think they have it bad. Oh yea I am somewhere in a crap hole in the Desert.
Citizens sleep peacfully at night knowing that rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf - George Orwell

Hazcat

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Thanks. I will tell some of my troops to suck it up next time they think they have it bad. Oh yea I am somewhere in a crap hole in the Desert.

Keep yer head down, hero.  We need ya (all of you) to come home safe.  Thank all of your troops from a VERY great full old man.
All tipoes and misspelings are copi-righted.  Pleeze do not reuse without ritten persimmons  :D

1Buckshot

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Tough doesn't come close to describing this guy. Way to go soldier.

jaybet

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My nephew's MP unit lost one with two wounded to an IED the other day. God bless every one of them.
I got the blues as my companion.

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