By Shannon Collins
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
MARINE CORPS BASE QUANTICO, Va., June 22, 2015 – Medically
retired Marine Corps Staff Sgt. Ronnie Jeffrey Jimenez kissed his wife and
hugged his father as he received his gold medal for the men’s H5 hand cycle
category during the 2015 DoD Warrior Games here yesterday.
For Jimenez, like so many others here, it’s been a long
journey from the point of injury to competing for medals.
During a deployment to a combat zone, the former infantry
platoon sergeant suffered a spinal cord injury and a traumatic brain injury. He
said it took him years before he admitted to having post-traumatic stress, but
once he did and sought help, his smile returned.
“For nine years, I wouldn’t admit I had any problems and
wouldn’t talk about it," Jimenez sad. "I didn’t want anybody to know
that I was dealing with certain things and couldn’t talk about them. I’d just
start crying. I finally came to the reality that with dealing with PTSD, it’s
not an anchor."
Adaptive Sports ‘Made Him Happy’
Patrice, Jimenez’s wife, recalled how adaptive sports
changed her husband’s life.
“It was something new. It made him happy, and that made me
happy,” she said. "He enjoys something again because he can’t run anymore,
but he’s happy again. He goes to another place when he’s on that bike, and
that’s his new happy place and that’s what I enjoy about that bike."
Jimenez acknowledged that he's been through "dark
times" and still has treatment ahead of him. "But it’s nice, just
being able to smile. The doctors remind me that my smile is contagious.”
He said riding is his happy place, and his wife said she
noticed a positive change in him as he started participating in adaptive
sports.
“I love when I hear people tell him, ‘I love your smile’ or
‘I love that smile,’" Patrice said.
Emotional Experience at Warrior Games
This year wasn't Jimenez's first successful experience at
the Warrior Games. In 2013, he earned a gold medal in the hand cycle and silver
medals in the men’s classified 50-meter freestyle, 50-meter backstroke and
100-meter freestyle.
“When I saw him cross the finish line at the Warrior Games
in 2013 and throw his arms up in the air, that was really neat because it was
like, ‘I did it,’" Patrice said.
She said she was standing next to his father, Ronnie Gomez
Jimenez, and it "was the first time I ever saw his dad cry."
“It felt good. I was proud,” his dad said.
Jimenez’s mother said it’s emotional watching all of the
athletes compete at the Warrior Games.
“I enjoy watching them, just to see that last person, how
everybody’s cheering them on just to get them across the finish line; it’s so
cool,” she said. “It’s very emotional to see that they’re trying. They’re doing
their hardest and actually do very well. You don’t think they can, but they
have it in them.”
Enduring Love for Sports
Jimenez began his love of sports with running as early as
age six, competing in 5-kilometer events with his father and sister.
Later in life, he was getting ready to transition into
long-distance running when he was injured. He needed a new outlet. He said he
was introduced to the hand cycle, and with only a week of training, he
completed a 40-plus-mile race.
“He was a runner, and when they asked him to ride the bike,
I was like, ‘Does he know how to ride a bike? We never saw him on a bike,” his
mom said with a smile that prompted a laugh from Jimenez.
He said he competes for his family, teammates and others.
“It’s great to be able to compete again and have fun, to
have a sense of purpose,” he said. “There are a lot of emotions that go through
it, every time I earn a medal, whether it’s hand cycling, swimming or whatever,
I try to remember my guys who didn’t make it back from combat.”
He said his teammates inspire him, and he hopes that if
anybody is inspired by him, that they will think, “I want to do what he can
do.”
Jimenez will be competing in sitting shot put and discus and
swimming later this week.
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