PDA

View Full Version : Despite loss of legs, officer still plans to serve



bobdina
09-26-2009, 05:06 PM
Despite loss of legs, officer still plans to serve
By Kent Harris, Stars and Stripes
European edition, Sunday, September 27, 2009
Kent Harris / Stars and Stripes


VICENZA, Italy — It was a day that changed the Gadson family forever.

Lt. Col. Greg Gadson was returning to battalion headquarters on May 7, 2007, after attending a memorial service for two soldiers in his brigade killed in Iraq. The truck he was traveling in was hit by a roadside bomb and, within seconds, Gadson and his men were fighting for their lives.

Gadson was severely wounded in the blast. Despite the best efforts of his men — whom he credits for saving his life — the former Army football player lost both his legs above the knee.

Sitting in front of a few hundred soldiers in the Caserma Ederle theater Friday, Gadson — his artificial legs clearly visible — looked back on that day and the 860-some others that have passed since.

“I wouldn’t change a thing, even though I know what happened. It’s made me me. And I like me,” he said, adding with a smile: “Most of the time.”

Now facing the prospect of ending his 20-year military career, Gadson and his wife, Kim — a fellow West Point graduate — showed no bitterness about his loss.

“If you’re bitter about something, you haven’t accepted it,” he said following his talk. “And you can’t move on with your life. I’ve moved on.”

It hasn’t always been easy, though.

He admitted to a few setbacks during rehab and attempting to come to grips with his lost limbs.

“I tried to quit,” he said. “I told my wife, ‘Just wheel me in a corner and leave me alone.’ ”

She didn’t do that, even though she joked that she’s come close to strangling him a few times.

Both Gadsons spoke extensively about the help they received from military organizations, friends and fellow servicemembers. Kim Gadson urged troops to actively seek services the Army provides for soldiers and their families, not just for those with battle wounds such as her husband’s, but for other issues impacting their lives.

Each spoke about how the attack affected their lives and answered questions from the audience.

Gadson mixed in a few instances of humor, some of which caught audience members off guard. In one case, he mentioned he was the same person — minus a few inches — after the accident. “That was a joke,” he said, eliciting nervous laughter.

Gadson said he hopes to continue with his career through a program that evaluates whether servicemembers in conditions like his can still fulfill roles in the military.

He was the first person to be fitted with the Power Knee 2, the latest in prosthetic technology that allows those missing most of their legs to walk in a somewhat normal fashion. Several newspaper accounts related Gadson’s struggles and triumphs this spring while learning to walk with the device developed by Ossur, an Icelandic company.

He’s also been mentioned in newspaper sports sections. A New York Giants fan because of fellow Virginian and linebacker, Lawrence Taylor, he was named an honorary co-captain for the team during its Super Bowl run.

He hopes to provide similar inspiration to fellow servicemembers.

“At some point in your life, whether in uniform or not, you’re going to deal with adversity,” he told his audience. “Failure is temporary. Success is temporary. You’ve got to get up every day and work hard and try your best.”