Aug 19, 2013 - Since moving to this rustic hamlet last year, Jeff Kelly has met a lot of neighbors like himself.The former Army sergeant, who often uses a wheelchair to get around, has gone deer-hunting with Patrick Corcoran; golfing with Josh Cope and Marcus Griffin; and boating with C.J. Barnes, who is moving into a new home next door.
The men talk about football, fishing and fatherhood. But they rarely speak of fate, the very thing that brought the five combat-disabled veterans to the same town after surviving life-changing injuries in Iraq or Afghanistan.
"We all know what we've been through, more or less," said Kelly, who retired from the Army with wounds from serving in Iraq and is facing the likely amputation of his left leg this year.
The men and their families, strangers to one another until they moved to the west Orange County, Fla., town, have formed a safety net woven not only of military service but also of common circumstance and challenges. The accidental band of brothers and their families support one another in ways both large and small as they adapt to lives without limbs and cope with the aftermath of war wounds. read more>>>
No comments:
Post a Comment