|
Golf Is Therapy For Injured Vets
By MICK ELLIOTT The Tampa Tribune - Published: Nov 25, 2007
TEMPLE
TERRACE - Jim White, a gunner on a U.S Army Humvee, wasn't thinking
about golf that morning in Arab Jabour some four months ago when
hell suddenly rose up around him and two fellow soldiers, an improvised
explosive device tossing their vehicle into a fiery, end-over-end
tumble. If he had, however, it would not have been a surprise.
Mental
images of playing the game were something White often used in an
effort to hold onto any sliver of life's normalcy. "I never considered
myself a great player, but I had a few good games here and there,"
said the 41-year-old Washington native who played for 10 years.
"But I think it's one of the most fun games you can play."
The
last time White hit balls had been maybe seven months earlier, shortly
before being transferred to the Middle East. The next thing he knew,
he was living and fighting in the world's worst sand trap and orders
were to push south on a recon mission.
That's
when life changed.
A
rear wheel on the Humvee detonated the IED. The blast lifted the
vehicle from the back, igniting the fuel tank and sending it into
an oblong roll. All three soldiers lived, but their bodies were
burned, broken and torn.
White
sustained burns on 53 percent of his body. Both legs were broken,
his left one shattered. Hunks of meat and muscle were ripped away
from his lower limbs.
That
explains why White now is receiving treatment at Tampa's James A.
Haley Veterans' Hospital, where from waist down his body is wrapped
in elastic support bandages and a torturous-looking metal contraption
of pins and rods extends from his shattered left leg.
What
White was doing earlier this month at Terrace Hills Golf Club's
practice range with a club in his hands is a completely different
story.
"The
best day of therapy I've had," he said. "It was awesome."
White was there to attend a clinic hosted by Florida Adaptive Golf
Foundation for injured military veterans. The nonprofit organization's
goal is to offer physically challenged individuals an opportunity
to participate in the game, handicaps be damned.
"James A. Haley is one of the top poly-trauma centers in the country
now and more and more of our veterans are going to be transported
there in the future," said Adaptive Golf director David Windsor.
"We've already started a program for outpatients and we've got three
or four who haven't missed a Friday since September."
If an injured veteran has lost an arm, the program provides instruction
for hitting shots with one. If he or she has a prosthetic leg or
legs, there's help with balance and technique. In worse cases, the
SoloRider, a one-person golf cart that allows a player to be strapped
into a seat that hydraulically swivels and elevates, will provide
opportunity.
"We're altering grips, we're welding clubs, we're taping things,"
said Windsor, who is based in Sarasota. "We're doing whatever it
takes to make it happen. Our mission is to get folks back on track."
Jerry Lemoyne, 63, of Apollo Beach is in the fast lane.
He was injured 37 years ago in Vietnam, eventually losing his right
leg at the knee. A gregarious character with a shaved head and white
Hulk Hogan-like mustache, the still rock-hard Lemoyne wears a prosthesis
that features a red, white and blue collage of American flags.
"This is my good one," he said, pointing to the leg. "I got an old
one to wear when I mow the yard."
Lemoyne obviously remained active despite his handicap, but until
moving to Florida from Michigan two years ago, he had never tried
golf. As a member of the Amputee Veterans Support Team at the V.A.
Hospital, he learned about Florida Adaptive Golf's weekly Friday
program at Terrace Hill and gave it a try.
Now
Lemoyne and two fellow vets have become weekly regulars.
"We're laughing and just having a ball together," he said. "This
is such a good opportunity for injured veterans to come out because
even if you don't really learn the game of golf, you meet friends.
From one amputee to another, it makes a big difference.
"I've seen guys on the battlefield and one minute they are standing
and the next minute both legs were gone. That is really rough on
the mind. So you are here with other amputees and share stories
and everything. It's a big help."
That was White's original thought when Department of Veteran Affairs
therapeutic recreation specialist Jennifer Day mentioned the Adaptive
Golf clinic. The idea of getting outdoors and away from the hospital
sounded good.
"I
told them back at the V.A., you know, I just wanted to get out on
the course and watch some guys hit a few," White said. "I didn't
even think about actually swinging a club. I was happy just to get
out of the hospital for a little while."
But
that was before he knew about SoloRider, a company owned and operated
by Tampa resident Monroe Berkman. An hour into the clinic, White
had been helped from his wheelchair into the single-rider cart.
An instructor teed up a ball. The hydraulic seat was adjusted. White
took something of a one-handed swipe with a utility wood. The ball
dribbled off the tee.
More
adjustments were made. A little more coaching. Another swing.
Again.
And again.
And
then there was that clean and distinctive ping that golfers know
comes only from the sweet spot of a club. The ball rose in a climbing
line drive, straight and beyond the 150-yard marker.
"This
is awesome!" White said. "I mean, I was hitting it basically standing
up. With the cart I was able to take weight off my legs.
"You
know, we go to classes with therapists and they're great, but we're
inside. For me, being outdoors and having people help like that
to crack a few balls … this is my best day of therapy."
Different
people stopped to watch as White took another swing.
"You
can play," someone shouted.
"You
are so inspiring," someone else added.
Judy
Alvarez, a teaching pro in the PGA of America's Wounded Warrior
Project, stood to the side watching, a smile growing across her
face.
"This
can be therapy for emotional, social and physical reasons," Alvarez
said. "They realize, hey, I can do this and all of a sudden their
chests go out and their shoulders go back. It's more than hitting
a stupid little ball with a piece of metal. It's the challenge of
doing it and building self-confidence. They realize if I can do
this I can probably do other things."
For
more information on the Adaptive Golf Foundation, go to www.FloridaAdaptiveGolf.org
or call (888) 364-3524.
|