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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 2014)
street roots Nov. 21, 2014 Sergeant Rick Clement In 2010, On his first tour in Afghanistan Rick lost both legs in an IED explosion, one up to the hip, the other amputated high up. Clement, now 30, needed massive • reconstructive surgery to his arm, genitals and intestines. “At Headley Court, things changed massively. My goals all related to independence, learning how to drive again and cook. I probably do more now than any of my mates who aren’t in wheelchairs. Ive just got a hand cycle so I m going to s training on that. Day-to-day I’ve adapted well. I clean my house, I’ve got three dogs ¿J to look after, I cook, I can chuck the wheelchair in the car myself. I’ve started ray'own charity, to give back to charities that helped me b u t” “Now that my health is back, the most important thing is to sort out ray sexual function. My genitals are still bemg reconstructed, and I was originally told I definitely couldn’t have kids. But developments have happened recently, and the doctors think maybe there’s a chance I could have them. It’s not that important to me right now, but in the future it could become the most important thing in die world.” Corporal Simon Brown O nhis second tour of Iraq in December 2006 CorporalSimon Brown was shot through the head by insurgents. As he got into his vehicle, a bullet hit his left cheek, went through his nose and came out of his right cheek. He held his palate up with his thumb to breathe and tried to bandage his own face. When he was told the extent of his injuries by doctors at Selly Oak - blind in his left eye, with 20 percent sight in the right, and needing massive facial reconstructive surgery - he began to have suicidal thoughts, and considered taking an overdose. But news of friends who had died started to turn him around, and he started to look at how he might live in the future. A s of May 2013 Corporal Brown had had 14 operations with more to come. There were many huge steps: making a cup of tea himself, going for a few pints with old rugby teammates, moving into accommodation on his own, getting a cat to take care oi, gaining a college qualification and volunteering to work with disadvantaged children. “Then this opportunity came along with the organization that I work for now, Blind Veterans UK. They wanted me to go and speak to people to try and convince them that it was a good idea to get some rehab off my organization. I found I was quite good at that, as I’ve rebuilt my life in under six years. And if I can do it, anyone can do i t “I feel that every time I get up and go to work, I am doing something good again with my life. It’s a funny thing because I lost my career in the Army and I thought everything was over. But I look back at the last six and a half years and I think I’m probably a better person now than I was before I got injured, because of the opportunities I’ve had, the things I’ve done, the people I’ve helped and what I’m actually doing with my life now.” 11 P H O T O BY B RYAN streel Roots is a member of the International Network of Street Papers, www.street-papers. org. Reprinted from The Big Issue UK.