By Army Staff Sgt. Dee Jackson, 108th Training Command DoD
News Features, Defense Media Activity
CHARLOTTE, N.C., November 17, 2015 — In 2015, Army Capt.
Boyd “The Rainmaker” Melson became the World Boxing Council’s U.S. junior
middleweight champion.
Melson, an Army reservist assigned to the 1st Mobilization
Support Group in Fort Totten, New York, also is a U.S. Military Academy
graduate, a four-time U.S. Army champion and a three-time National Collegiate
Boxing Association all-American boxer who strives to live the Army values every
day.
The captain said he started his boxing career at West Point,
and that in 2002, he became friends with someone who went on to inspire him to
help raise awareness about chronic spinal cord injuries.
“We formed an extraordinary bond, and her dream to walk
again became my ultimate dream in this world,” Melson said. “Although it started
with her, and she remains the bedrock for my inspiration, ending [her]
suffering is a large part of my inspiration.” Melson’s efforts are focused on
fundraising for research and trial experiments.
‘This is True Service’
Determined to make a difference, Melson elevated his boxing
hobby to a more competitive level, earning more money for his fights, and he
donates 100 percent of his winnings to spinal cord injury research and
awareness.
“Boyd has given of himself, in a way no one else has,” said
Dr. Wise Young, director of the W.M. Keck Center for Collaborative Neuroscience
in New Jersey. “This is true service, service to human kind and he’s doing it
because he really cares.”
Melson gives to a charity called Justadollarplease.org, a
nonprofit organization that raises money for the first U.S. spinal cord injury
umbilical cord stem cell trials. Headed by Young, this trial aims to help
people with spinal cord injuries regain some movement in their extremities.
Melson said he will continue boxing in hopes of one day
helping his longtime friend to walk again. “I need my friend to walk,” he said.
“She still can’t, and when she does, that’s when I’ll have my moment. That’s
all that matters.”
Team Fight to Walk
Melson and his longtime friend have also started Team Fight
to Walk, in hopes of increasing awareness of the need for clinical trials in
the United States with the purpose of curing spinal cord injuries.
“The impact that he’s having on lives, to have the vision to
say I’m going to donate 100 percent of my purses to charity is unbelievable”
said Army Col. Chris Hart, the U.S. Military Academy’s boxing coach. “What a
leader of character for our nation, and he’s a young captain in the U.S. Army
Reserve.”
With each step in the ring, each punch he receives and each
round he goes, Melson said, he knows that he is one step closer to getting a
treatment for spinal injuries.
“We all share this planet, so hold on to a vision in your
head that you want for yourself with a grip that a mother would hold on to her
baby if someone were trying to take [it],” he said. “Hold on to it until you
die, because although a storm is gigantic, there was that first raindrop that
began that storm of change.”
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