And when his story was
told by the President of the United States, that story brought a packed
house in the U.S. Capitol to its feet for a standing ovation.
"Cory Remsburg never
gives up, and he does not quit," President Barack Obama declared to the
nation in his State of the Union address in January.
Being singled out for
presidential recognition made Remsburg overnight the most recognizable
veteran in the country, a position he's not entirely comfortable with.
But he says he's OK with the attention as long as it brings attention to
all wounded veterans.
"There are other people
who would have quit a long time ago and would have been happy in their
wheelchair. Me? Oh, no," he said in an interview on CNN's "New Day" that
aired Thursday.
It's incredibly poignant
when he makes such statements. His speech is labored and a little
slurred. Every word and movement clearly takes great effort.
But it is effort he makes without complaint, without flinching.
Before the accident
Remsburg joined the Army when he was 18 years old. He wanted to join sooner, but his father, Craig, would not let him.
He went through the
rigorous, specialized training to become an elite Army Ranger, deploying
to Iraq and Afghanistan 10 times. He spent a total of 39 months in
combat, and was eventually made leader of his company's heavy weapons
squad.
In June 2009, he
participated in ceremony for the 65th anniversary of D-Day, parachuting
in on the shores of Omaha Beach in Normandy, France, as part of a
ceremony President Obama attended. Afterward, the two met briefly.
What Remsburg didn't know then was that he would meet the President again just a year later, under very different circumstances.
On October 1, 2009,
Remsburg and his platoon hit a roadside bomb in Kandahar, Afghanistan,
and the immediate explosion nearly killed him. He was found face down in
a pool of water, shrapnel lodged in his brain.
His father still remembers the phone call.
"I immediately went into
the mode of saying, 'Hey Cory, how are you doing?' " he said. "And
there was silence. And that's when the officer identified himself as
Cory's company commander and said Cory's been injured."
Remsburg was in a coma
for more than three months. He's undergone dozens of surgeries, is still
blind in his right eye and is partially paralyzed on his left side.
But he's come a long way from those first few months.
Recovery
After years of rehabilitation centers and hospitals, Remsburg now lives at home with a full-time caregiver in Phoenix, Arizona.
This week, Remsburg
returned to Casa Colina Centers for Rehabilitation in Pomona,
California, where he lived for 16 months going through intensive daily
therapy to regain his ability to walk and talk.
This was his first time
back since leaving 10 months ago. Everyone there -- doctors, nurses and
patients -- all came up to say hi, give him a hug and ask how he's
doing.
Remsburg acknowledges
that his recovery would not have been possible without the support of
his family. His stepmother, Annie, left her job for more than a year and
a half to stay with him full-time at a hospital in Florida. And his
father's employer has allowed him the flexibility to be at his son's
side whenever necessary.
His parents are also grateful to all the charities that have supported their son's recovery over the past five years.
Remsburg clearly has
been through a lot, but one thing he has not lost is his sense of humor.
During a speech therapy session that tested articulation and memory, he
had to name something from a category -- his favorite baseball team, a
color, a state, a street name -- followed by a card number from a deck.
When asked to name a
news website, he said, "Fox News," but then remembered who was in the
room with him, and quickly corrected himself by saying, "Or, CNN. Oops."
Meetings with the President
Remsburg met President
Obama for the second time in 2010, shortly after coming out of his coma.
The President happened to be visiting Walter Reed Medical Center
outside Washington, and realized he knew the young man once he saw the
photo of their first meeting hanging on the wall near his bed.
Remsburg is the only known wounded veteran to have met the President both before and after his injury.
Their third meeting was
about a year ago, when President Obama made a stop in Phoenix and
requested to see how Remsburg was doing. When Obama arrived, Remsburg
did something that shocked even his father.
"Cory got up, saluted him, then got up with a walker and walked across the floor," Craig said.
For Cory, the gesture was to prove a point: "To show the President that this is what happens when you don't quit."
What's next
On Wednesday, Remsburg turned 31. To celebrate his birthday, he took a tandem skydiving jump; his first since his injury.
He's also working with a therapy dog that will help him do some of the things he can no longer do for himself.
He says his heroes are
his Army Ranger buddies who gave their lives serving their country. He
wears a bracelet engraved with their names as a reminder of their
ultimate sacrifice.
His long-term goals are to go to college, get married and have children, to live a full life, just like anyone else.
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