Posted on 03/11/2007 12:42:31 PM PDT by SandRat
VAIL, Colo., March 11, 2007 As the Vail Veterans Program wrapped up the last day of its fourth annual winter sports clinic here yesterday, the veterans and their guests expressed their appreciation for what theyd gained at the four-day event.
The ones whove never done it before or did it before they got hurt are definitely apprehensive, but theyll never tell you, Franklin said. By today theyre feeling pretty good because theyre up on the hill. Theyre happy, and theyre smiling, and its completely different. They take those positive feelings back to Walter Reed, she said. They realize that all the exercises theyve been learning and the medications theyve been taking help them to do things many of them thought they couldnt do since being injured. It gives them confidence to say, Hey, Ive never snowboarded before, but now I can, Franklin said. (That) can translate into, Well, I didnt think I could do this anymore either, but I didnt think I could (snowboard) either, and now Im going to try at least. While she credits these changes, in large part, to the Vail Veterans Program, the Vail community earned her kudos as well. The whole community came together and was very welcoming, she said. Theyd do pretty much anything for these guys, Franklin said. Sandy Homuth, accompanying her son Army Spec. Jeremiah Homuth, who lost his right arm while serving in Iraq, reported similar observations. He was really nervous; he was really apprehensive, Homuth said. He felt like hed never be able to do it. She said watching other injured veterans working through the same struggles motivated her son. I think its been freeing for him, in a way, thinking that, Wow, I can accomplish this missing my right arm, she added. Simply coming to Vail was a big step for her son, Homuth said. Spc. Homuth has been at Walter Reed since June 16, and this is only his third trip from the hospital. He hasnt been home (to Illinois) yet because hes so nervous, she said. If it wasnt for a couple of guys he knew coming here, I think he would have definitely not wanted to be a part of it. Now hes made some other tremendous friends, she said. She and her husband, along with Jeremiahs occupational therapist at Walter Reed, encouraged their son to take this trip. They saw it as an opportunity for him to get back into the world outside the hospital and not feel like people are going to treat him any differently. This is going to help him to come home, Homuth said. Through tears, she expressed her gratitude for the Vail Veterans Program and the support it provides not only the recovering veterans, but also their loved ones. This is such a healing program, and its healing for me too, she said. To see my son be able to do something like this, its been emotional for me too because my husband and I are scared too. (This) gives us encouragement to keep encouraging him, she added. Im telling you, it really does touch the soul. And that, according to Army Reserve Cpl. Harvey Naranjo, an occupational therapist at Walter Reed, is just what the veterans need. They always get recharged. Youve got to recharge to get better, go out there and get back to life, Naranjo said. Army Sgt. Brian Fountaine has found that to be true through the course of the program, he said. He said hes learned there are ways to do what he wants in life and that the public can be very supportive. I just think its awesome, Fountaine, who lost both of his legs below the knee in Iraq, said. Its taken guys and given them liberties and freedoms and just feelings of exhilaration and excitement again that they havent felt in -- some of us -- over a year. |
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Happy Wounded Warriors and Families.
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