by Senior Airman Brett Clashman
99th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
11/14/2013 - NELLIS AIR FORCE BASE, Nev. -- "Making
a difference in the lives of healing heroes" is a motto the Ride 2
Recovery organization members live by and one that Staff Sgt. Brent
Olson, 99th Ground Combat Training Squadron military working dog
instructor, set out to honor during the Las Vegas Ride 2 Recovery Honor
Ride Nov. 9.
Olson is a part of TEAM BLEK, in honor of Military Working Dog Blek, who
was patrolling with him through a known hostile village in Kandahar,
Afghanistan, when they were both struck by an improvised explosive
device.
Olson and MWD Blek had been engaged off and on in a number of skirmishes
and located 17 IEDs on their third day of patrolling Sept. 13, 2010. At
approximately 9 p.m. while clearing the last structure in their sector,
an adversary triggered a pressure plate IED that initiated four other
devices leaving three killed in action and 13 wounded in action,
including Olson and MWD Blek, who were both transported to the Kandahar
Airfield hospital where they began their recovery.
The Ride 2 Recovery Honor Rides mission is to improve the health and
wellness for wounded, injured or ill servicemen and women with cycling
as the core activity. It gives the public the opportunity to ride with
healing heroes and enlisted military on a non-competitive, fun ride. In
Olson's case, the opportunity presented itself as a 39-mile bike ride
through the Las Vegas cityscape.
"All this is for a good cause," Olson said. "It's honorable to be with
other wounded warriors who are on the same path of recovery.
"My experience was great. I'm a very passionate person when it comes to
certain things, and this was a good one. I was very pleased on how well I
did. I proved something to myself."
Olson didn't participate in the endeavor for himself, but rather for
others who are likewise recovering or have made the ultimate sacrifice.
"It's all about the people next to you," Olson said. "I [didn't] even do
it for me, I dedicate it to the people that died or never came back."
Tiffini Skuce, Ride 2 Recovery social media representative and
photographer, sees Olson's reason for participation to be exactly what
Ride 2 Recovery is trying to emphasize.
"Olson's story is exactly what Ride 2 Recovery is about, healing and
growing," Skuce said. "Riding a bike is a great way to exercise, but
riding a bike at a Ride 2 Recovery event lets you ride with your fellow
veterans building camaraderie and motivation to keep riding. The person
next to you might be missing both legs, but he or she is still out there
on a bike, providing inspiration.
"We ride as groups so people can get to know other riders, share
stories, build friendships and find advice about things only other
injured service members can relate to," she added.
Olson believes that those who are recovering should pace themselves during recovery and not give up.
"Take it a day at a time," Olson said. "I think that's a lesson I still
deal with today. Get help, and don't be afraid to ask or find someone
you can connect with."
Olson was able to adopt MWD Blek in 2010 and hasn't left his side since.
"I love that dog, you know ... I love that dog more than anything," Olson chuckled.
Saturday, November 16, 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment