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    Ride 2 Recovery makes its way through Fort Hood

    Ride 2 Recovery makes its way through Fort Hood

    Photo By Sgt. Christopher Gaylord | Delvin McMillian, a former airman first class and a quadruple amputee, begins the...... read more read more

    FORT HOOD, TX, UNITED STATES

    04.09.2010

    Story by Spc. Christopher Gaylord 

    13th Public Affairs Detachment

    When Delvin McMillian contracted a virus nine years ago that caused him to lose all four limbs, he never stopped believing he was just like anyone else.

    He was right.

    McMillian, a former Airman first class and armament systems repairer in the Air Force, was just one of 130 other injured military veterans, civilians and active U.S. troops from all over the country who set out April 5 on a 350-mile, six-day cycling ride through the state of Texas to support the rehabilitation of wounded veterans.

    The cycling tour, put on by Ride 2 Recovery, a non-profit organization that raises funds to support the rehabilitation of injured veterans through indoor spinning and outdoor cycling, was just one of five that will take place this year in separate states.

    The ride began in San Antonio at Brook Army Medical Center and will end in Dallas/Fort Worth April 11. Gen. George Casey, the Army's chief of staff; Brig. Gen. Gary Cheek, Warrior Transition and care commander; Medal of Honor recipient Mike Thorton; and actors Adam Baldwin and Ethan Suplee also joined the group for the ride.

    Making a halfway stop at Fort Hood April 8, McMillian and fellow riders were welcomed by the post's senior leadership and then cheered on by thousands of motivated Soldiers as their group cycled through Fort Hood the following day on its way to Waco.

    Several Fort Hood Soldiers left with them and rode as far as they could. One of those Soldiers, Command Sgt. Maj. George Zamudio from Fort Hood's Warrior Transition Brigade, works with recovering Soldiers every day.

    "I feel like I should be part of this to show them we haven't forgotten them and they're still part of our team," Zamudio said, adding that he's never ridden more than 15 miles before, but was inspired by the group.

    While the trail of determined athletes slithered its way between crowds of applauding Soldiers April 9, it left behind nothing but inspiration for all and proved that anything really is possible to those who are willing to work for it.

    As founder John Wordin would tell anyone, that's exactly what Ride 2 Recovery is all about: encouraging wounded troops to believe they can bounce back from anything.

    "There are a lot of guys riding who never thought in a million years they would be able to do this, but they're doing it," said Wordin, who founded Ride 2 Recovery in late 2007 after the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs asked him to create a program to help wounded troops. "It's truly amazing."

    For McMillian, who contacted Wordin by email in January and asked if he could be a part of this year's ride, it was quite a different story.

    No one believed McMillian would ever ride a bike; no one thought he ever could. But he didn't need encouraging; it was something he wanted to do.

    After McMillian asked Wordin for help, Wordin and a team of mechanics began creating a unique bicycle with specialized mechanisms for steering and shifting that would allow him to ride comfortably.

    When everyone told him McMillian would never ride a bike, Wordin only tried harder. Two and a half months later, McMillian tested his bike at Wordin's home in California.

    Like Wordin, McMillian is the kind of guy who loves a challenge, and with this ride, he got his challenge. He hopes to show other wounded veterans that no obstacle they face is too large for them.

    "No one's life ended when they were injured; they just started a new chapter," said McMillian, who travelled from Maylene, Ala., to participate in the ride. "You have to adapt and move on."

    "This ride shows [other veterans] that although they may be injured, there are activities they can still do," he added.

    Fort Hood's senior leadership personally recognized McMillian April 8 and 9 for his extraordinary resilience and determination to take on a physical feat the average able-bodied person wouldn't even think of undergoing.

    "He's the poster child of what a wounded warrior's life can be like," Wordin said. "It's guys like him who make me motivated to do this."

    McMillian said that at times the ride has been a struggle, but he loves the camaraderie and the opportunity to push himself.

    "You just have to tell yourself you can make it," he said. "I may be grunting and in pain, but I like pushing myself."

    With the ride reaching its end, each participant got, if nothing else, a long-lasting boost of confidence from the ride, but according to Maj. Gen. Will Grimsley, deputy commanding general for III Corps and Fort Hood, everyone got something.

    "This is really a ride for inspiration for the rest of us," Grimsley said.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 04.09.2010
    Date Posted: 04.09.2010 16:33
    Story ID: 47915
    Location: FORT HOOD, TX, US

    Web Views: 516
    Downloads: 438

    PUBLIC DOMAIN