PDA

View Full Version : "What I have fought for, I'm still involved in."


Gypsy
07-31-2006, 19:06
Our Country is blessed to have Men like this...another incredible story of one of our Wounded.

There is a slide show at the link.


http://home.hamptonroads.com/stories/story.cfm?story=107966&ran=18800

Army tenure far from over, blind soldier advances career after Iraq


By KATE WILTROUT, The Virginian-Pilot
© July 22, 2006



FORT MONROE - Something told Tiffany Smiley not to sign the papers that would end her husband's Army career.

A week earlier, Scott Smiley had been a lieutenant in charge of a Stryker Brigade Combat Team platoon in Mosul, Iraq. He'd graduated from West Point, made it through Ranger school and hoped to serve in special operations.

Yet in April 2005, he was barely conscious - the victim of a suicide car bombing that sent shrapnel into his brain, leaving him temporarily paralyzed and permanently blind.

Within days of Smiley's arrival at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, a civilian social worker encouraged his wife to fill out forms to medically retire him.

"Instantly, this thing inside me was like 'No, this isn't right,'" Tiffany Smiley, now 25, recalled. "It was just this gut feeling."

Through weeks and months to come, as Scott Smiley's body healed, as he learned how to walk with a cane and read Braille, he and his wife were told by doctors and therapists in Washington; Tacoma, Wash., and Palo Alto, Calif.: Your Army career is over.

Smiley - earnest, outgoing, quick to poke fun at himself, devoutly religious - has proved them wrong.

Taking advantage of the Army's new willingness to consider allowing seriously injured soldiers to stay in uniform, and with the backing of superiors all the way up to a three-star general, Smiley has settled into a job at Fort Monroe's Training and Doctrine Command.

He has matter-of-factly accepted his fate.

"Being blind is no different than being sighted," he said. "You just live life a little differently."

The guy everyone calls Scotty jokes about colleagues having to straighten crooked patches on his uniform and laughs about being stopped on base and asked for directions, which he was able to provide.

Last Thursday, with friends, family and more than 50 of his colleagues looking on, Tiffany Smiley attached captain's bars to her 26 -year-old husband's camouflage uniform.

"We aren't giving this to you; you have earned this," Lt. Gen. Robert Van Antwerp said during the promotion ceremony. The general - whose son, Capt. Jeff Van Antwerp, was Smiley's company commander in Iraq - perhaps has been Smiley's greatest ally in his quest to stay on active duty.

The general, who knew Smiley before his injury, kept tabs on the officer from the day he was hurt. He called the military doctors in Landstuhl, Germany, where Smiley was sent from Iraq. He got subordinates to research Army doctrine on medical retirement and called on colleagues - including the Army's surgeon general and the commanding officer of Walter Reed - for help.

Van Antwerp said in an interview last week he took to heart the Army's creed never to leave behind a fallen comrade.

"If they can contribute, they ought to be able to stay in," he said.

Van Antwerp offered Smiley a job at Fort Monroe in February, and the couple - high- school sweethearts from Pasco, Wash. - moved to Virginia in April.

Smiley works for the Army Accessions Command, evaluating basic training policies and procedures and making field visits to talk to soldiers about what to expect in war.

"What I have fought for, I'm still involved in," he said.

That hasn't always been the case in the Army.

Lt. Col. Kevin Arata, a spokesman for the Army's human resources command, said the service's approach toward injured soldiers has changed dramatically since the start of the war on terrorism.

"The mentality years ago was once you're injured, you're no longer of much value," Arata said.

Senior Army leaders think differently now, Arata said, citing the Wounded Warrior Program as an example.

The Army program, which has a staff of 40, helps severely wounded soldiers transition back to duty if they want to stay in, or assists them in finding civilian jobs, sometimes inside the Army.

"We're looking for ways to use the skills and experience that the soldiers still have," Arata said. "Because they're blind or missing a leg or have other difficulties doesn't meant they're not an asset to the Army."

The program began under a different name in 2004, b ut its message was just beginning to be heard, Van Antwerp said, when Smiley arrived at Walter Reed a little more than a year ago.

"He's been a pioneer through this process," Van Antwerp said.

Smiley credits the many people who interceded on his behalf so he could stay on duty.

"All along the way it's been kind of a fight," Smiley said. "But it's a good fight."

He worries about other injured soldiers who don't have high-ranking advocates or families to help them.

"A lot of soldiers are being told what to do, what they can and can't do," Smiley said. "There's tons of information that the Army doesn't necessarily tell that private or sergeant or lieutenant or captain."

Still, he senses some change. The Wounded Warrior Program now has counselors working directly with soldiers at Walter Reed and may expand that to other large Army hospitals.

And Smiley is doing his part to get the message out.

Last month, Smiley returned to Walter Reed with Van Antwerp to speak at a Wounded Warrior Program job fair. He told the crowd to think about staying on active duty, to tap into the Army's resources for training that will help them down the line.

"Allow the Army to make you better than you are right now," Smiley said he told them.

Smiley and his wife both credit their faith with sustaining them over the past 16 months. "I just thank Jesus Christ every day that I'm even alive," Smiley said after he was promoted.

His wife remembers him crying only twice, both times at Walter Reed - the day the Purple Heart was pinned to his T-shirt and the day he learned doctors couldn't salvage his right eye.

The officer wants to serve out his five-year commitment to repay his West Point education, meaning two more years in uniform. Staying in longer might be difficult; being blind likely prevents him from commanding soldiers, a requirement for officers moving up the ranks.

His job is still evolving. He participates in video teleconferences, e-mails friends serving in Iraq to learn about what kind of preparation their soldiers need and occasionally travels to Army bases to assess training procedures.

In the office, Smiley relies on a scanner to convert hard-copy documents into computer files. A special computer program "reads" those files or e-mails into an earpiece.

Smiley doesn't feel as productive as he did on the ground in Iraq, but it feels good to do what he can.

"I wake up in the morning and I'm happy to go to work," Smiley said. "Sometimes there's not much information that they need from me. But I feel that I'm useful."

He and his wife live on base in housing usually reserved for higher-ranking officers, two blocks from his office. He walks to and from work, pedals the back of the couple's tandem bicycle, walks their dog, Ocean, and goes running with his wife along the fort's seawall, a cloth band connecting their wrists. Two weeks ago, he went sky diving.

"I can't do a lot of the same things I used to be able to do," Smiley said. He misses watching the sun come up, seeing green grass and blue water. He regrets that he'll never again see his wife's face.

Though his injury altered the way he lives, Smiley insists it hasn't changed him at his core: "I'm the same exact person I was before."

MRF54
07-31-2006, 20:35
Incredible and inspirational

NSDQ
07-31-2006, 21:55
Our Country is blessed to have Men like this...another incredible story of one of our Wounded.
Here Here!
"The mentality years ago was once you're injured, you're no longer of much value," Arata said.


"All along the way it's been kind of a fight," Smiley said. "But it's a good fight."

He worries about other injured soldiers who don't have high-ranking advocates or families to help them.

"A lot of soldiers are being told what to do, what they can and can't do," Smiley said. "There's tons of information that the Army doesn't necessarily tell that private or sergeant or lieutenant or captain."

This is a great story in itself Gypsy, thanks for sharing it, but it also holds a reminder for me as I continue to work toward some unfinished military goals that I have, before they make me hang it up.
Mid way thru my first hitch in the Marines I had a mishap that got me medically disharged, even though I fought with what I knew at the time, to stay in. The "Experts", God bless them, told me I would never be able to serve in the military again. The lowest point in my life at the time. I put up with that for about 4 yrs, & then it dawned on me that was not the answer for me. After writing the Commandent of the MC a letter explaining to him that I could no longer take his retirement check, due to the fact I felt I was 100% ready to fullfill my original contract, no matter what the Dr's from Bethesdia said, and recieving a letter back from his Med Board stating that was good news & they would stop my retirement & retirement checks, but would not let me back in, I went knocking on doors until I found somebody that proved what I knew. That was 22 yrs ago & I have been fortunate enough to be able to finish the 1st contract & several more.
I share this not because I feel I have done anything great, for I serve because I feel indebted to the ones that have paid the highest price, But I share in hopes that this might strenghten that one or two who dare to believe in the impossibilities.
I read stories like the one above about CPT Smiley, and remember back as a young man watching soldiers trample thru rice paddies in some far away land fighting for something I did not understand in my head but felt it in my heart & gut & finding myself still wanting to pay them & my forefathers back for this thing I now know as Freedom.
So again I say thanks to Gypsy for sharing this story, to all those involved with this site & keeping it in the forum that it is, & those that share their stories.

God Bless,
NSDQ

x SF med
08-01-2006, 06:43
Reminds me of BH - drive on Scuba guy - got your story from some "mutual acqaintances". Older (my time) C/2/10th guys will know who I'm talking about.

NSDQ
08-01-2006, 08:24
I missed the slide show at the end of the article. Be sure & look at it. Amazing the Spirit of a Winner. Thanks CPT Smiley.

NSDQ

Razor
08-01-2006, 08:55
I'm happy to hear CPT Smiley was afforded the opportunity to continue serving in uniform. I wish him continued success, and hope the Army takes full advantage of the value of holding on to severely injured troops to serve in other capacities.

Monsoon65
08-01-2006, 15:09
"Through weeks and months to come, as Scott Smiley's body healed, as he learned how to walk with a cane and read Braille, he and his wife were told by doctors and therapists in Washington; Tacoma, Wash., and Palo Alto, Calif.: Your Army career is over."

Of course he had trouble walking. Testicles like that probably got in his way.

Outstanding story!! I wish him all the luck!!

Gypsy
08-01-2006, 18:30
.
I share this not because I feel I have done anything great, for I serve because I feel indebted to the ones that have paid the highest price, But I share in hopes that this might strenghten that one or two who dare to believe in the impossibilities.
NSDQ

NSDQ, the Men here, and our Military in general, are an inspiration to me in many ways. I'm so grateful I am allowed to participate as a guest in this home, glad you enjoyed this incredible story. I know for every story on CPT Smiley there are hundreds of others....

I'm glad that you "fought back" and have been able to continue on in your service to our Country. It is deeply appreciated, and I honor all of you, much more than I am able to articulate with mere words...

NSDQ
08-01-2006, 22:49
the Men here, and our Military in general, are an inspiration to me in many ways. I'm so grateful I am allowed to participate as a guest in this home...

...As am I, Gypsy.
Thank You for for your support to our military. I join with you and say My HEROES where camo's also.
I am sure you have seen the movie or read the book "Blackhawk Down". There is a post by "Tuukka" (#6) in the "SFC Randall Shughart" Thread that has a pic of 2 of these great American Warriors. I believe you would enjoy.

NSDQ

Cincinnatus
08-02-2006, 07:51
CPT Smiley's courage is truly inspiring.

I heard the tail end of an interview on NPR's "All Things Considered", IIRC, Monday. I missed the details of the action in which he was wounded and the extent of his wounds, but the interview was with a soldier or Marine who'd lost his leg in an ambush in Afghanistan. His attitude was outstanding. They also had his wife on and in response to a question about what she thought when she learned the extent of her husband's injuries she replied that she really regretted throwing away his unmatched socks! :cool:

They both have extraordinary spirit. He is planning to attend a surfing clinic on his prosthetic. I'm humbled by the strength of character and resiliency of these heroes.

NSDQ
08-02-2006, 11:53
They both have extraordinary spirit. He is planning to attend a surfing clinic on his prosthetic. I'm humbled by the strength of character and resiliency of these heroes.
I, 2nd that motion

NSDQ

Gypsy
08-02-2006, 20:35
...As am I, Gypsy.
Thank You for for your support to our military. I join with you and say My HEROES where camo's also.
I am sure you have seen the movie or read the book "Blackhawk Down". There is a post by "Tuukka" (#6) in the "SFC Randall Shughart" Thread that has a pic of 2 of these great American Warriors. I believe you would enjoy.

NSDQ

You're very welcome! Yes, NSDQ, I've read the book and have seen the movie a few times. My heart still stops when I reflect on the whole situation that day and the incredible actions of the men involved...

x SF med
08-02-2006, 21:21
You're very welcome! Yes, NSDQ, I've read the book and have seen the movie a few times. My heart still stops when I reflect on the whole situation that day and the incredible actions of the men involved...


Gypsy-
You should have known Gary and Randy - excellent men - all around - as are a couple of other people who were involved in that operation and were wounded and went back to their units...

I think about their choice to make the ultimate sacrice for another soldier, and thank God to have known them both.

Gypsy
08-02-2006, 21:39
Gypsy-
You should have known Gary and Randy - excellent men - all around - as are a couple of other people who were involved in that operation and were wounded and went back to their units...

I think about their choice to make the ultimate sacrice for another soldier, and thank God to have known them both.

I only wish I could have had such an opportunity x_sf, you are blessed for having known them. That is what I think about as well; their choice...knowing full well what they were doing. I get quite emotional when thinking of their ultimate sacrifices, and wish their families and Brothers peace. Then again, I get this way when I think of all of our Military.

NSDQ
08-12-2006, 05:21
- as are a couple of other people who were involved in that operation and were wounded and went back to their units... .
I think about their choice to make the ultimate sacrice for another soldier, and thank God to have known them both.
sf med,
I second Gypsy's comments, you have truly been blessed to have known these Heros to include those that have gone back. I am always humbled & at a loss for words when I think of or am reminded of these individuals (SFC Randall Shughart & MSG Gary Gordon) & others that have that same spirit of selfless service and commitment to their brothers in arms.

Thanks,
NSDQ

LibraryLady
07-10-2007, 17:12
A little update on the life of Captain Smiley.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/6600AP_WST_Blind_Soldiers_Climb.html

Army captain blinded in Iraq bombing summits Mount Rainier
By MELANTHIA MITCHELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SEATTLE -- Scott Smiley lives life a little differently since being blinded by shrapnel that ripped through his eyes in a suicide bombing in Iraq, but it's a challenge he has embraced.

Two days before the 27-year-old Army captain was to be honored as Army Times' soldier of the year, he reached the summit of Mount Rainier in the latest of what has been a whirlwind of adventures since losing his eyesight in the 2005 bombing in Mosul.

Smiley reached the top of the 14,411-foot peak south of Seattle early Tuesday along with several other climbers, including five to six guides from Rainier Mountaineering Inc.

"The team did summit at 8 a.m. on the north side of the mountain," said Peter Whittaker, an RMI co-owner who talked to the group by radio. He said the climbing party immediately began descending, so that Smiley could catch a flight to Washington, D.C., where he's being recognized as the 2007 Soldier of the Year on Thursday. The award is presented by Army Times Publishing Co.

Mount Rainier is considered a technical, difficult climb, and to attempt it climbers must have a certain level of skill or be guided. Of 8,972 attempts made in 2005, the most recent data available, 4,604 reached the summit.

Smiley's group was led by guides Art Rausch and Andy Kittleson. It set out Sunday, overnighting that evening at about 7,500 feet, below Camp Muir - the most popular route to the top. It stopped again at roughly 11,000 feet before pushing toward the summit early Tuesday.

The group included retired 1st Lt. Ed Salau of New Bern, N.C., who lost a leg in a 2004 grenade attack in Iraq. Whittaker said Salau had stayed at Camp Muir while the party climbed the peak.

The climb was sponsored by Camp Patriot, a company in Libby, Mont., that provides outdoor recreational experiences for disabled veterans.

Weather, avalanche danger and overall physical health are huge challenges for anybody who climbs Mount Rainier.

For Smiley, the risks are even greater, said Whittaker, noting that throughout the climb, guides had to remain close, with one person in front and behind the soldier.

Whittaker spent about 10 minutes with Smiley's group Sunday. "I was very impressed. They were moving very well," he said.

The climb was something the soldier from Pasco, Wash., has wanted to do since visiting the Army's Fort Lewis several years ago as a West Point cadet. He currently lives in Durham, N.C., with wife, Tiffany, and their 8-week-old son and is assigned to headquarters of the Army Accessions Command at Fort Monroe, Va.

"He loves it," Tiffany Smiley said during an earlier telephone interview with The Associated Press. "It's just who he is."

She added that since being blinded, her husband has surfed off the coast of Hawaii, gone skydiving and skied Vail. He also previously climbed Mount Democrat, a 14,148-foot peak near Alma, Colo.

Smiley was injured in Iraq in April 2005 while serving with the 1st Brigade, 25th Infantry Division - a Stryker combat team formerly based at Fort Lewis south of Tacoma.

He'd been in the country just six months when his unit came upon a suspicious man sitting in a vehicle. When Smiley fired off a couple warning shots, the man raised his hands and the car exploded.

"Everything went black," said Tiffany Smiley, recalling the attack as her husband had described it.

Shrapnel embedded in his eyes and brain, leaving him temporarily paralyzed and permanently blind. Doctors had to remove one eye and told him he'd never see again. He was eventually fitted with a prosthetic blue eye.

"It was hard," she said. "It took him awhile to realize what had happened."

But after receiving a Purple Heart just weeks after his injury, Smiley realized he could still do things he'd done before, including stay in the Army. He learned to walk with a cane, read Braille and traveled the country to speak to other soldiers.

"He is still the same person, he just does things in a different way now," his wife said.

---

On the Net:

Army Times: http://www.armytimes.com/

Camp Patriot: http://www.camppatriot.org/

LL