Department of Defense Warrior Games 2019 Official Program

Page 54

Be Inspired:

JOSHUA OLSON BY CRAIG COLLINS

PROBABLY NOT MANY WARRIOR GAMES COMPETITORS CAN SAY THEY SERVED ON ACTIVE DUTY FAR LONGER AFTER THEIR INJURY THAN BEFORE – AND NOT MANY ARE INELIGIBLE TO COMPETE IN THEIR SIGNATURE EVENT BECAUSE THEY’VE ALREADY COMPETED AT THE INTERNATIONAL LEVEL, IN THE PARALYMPIC GAMES. BOTH ARE TRUE OF JOSH OLSON. Olson grew up in Spokane, Washington, knowing he would serve in the military, and joined the Army right out of high school, in 1997, at the age of 17. He served a year in Kosovo, a year in Korea, and then in 2003, Olson, then a staff sergeant in the Army’s 101st Airborne Division, deployed to Iraq. In October of that year, his company was attacked by a group of guerrilla fighters while on patrol in Tal Afar, northern Iraq. It was early in the war, before the enemy began its widespread use of improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and before the Defense Department had begun deploying mine-resistant ambush protected (MRAP) vehicles to ground units. “We didn’t have up-armored vehicles at the time,” Olson said. “We just had cargo Humvees that were left over from the first Gulf War.” After the enemy fired a rocket-propelled grenade at Olson’s Humvee that wounded two soldiers in the back of the vehicle, Olson came out shooting, standing next to the passenger-side wheel well and firing at insurgents. A second grenade skidded under the vehicle and detonated, and the blast took off most of Olson’s right leg. In the days before military medicine had developed the junctional tourniquets that compressed the femoral artery at the hip, a quickthinking medic fitted Olson with a pair of medical anti-shock trousers (MAST) – inflatable pants that kept blood squeezed into his torso until he reached a hospital. Olson flew to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in a medically induced coma and woke eight days later to find his mother and father in the room with him – he thought for a while that he was still in Iraq, and wondered why his parents had traveled so far to see him – and his right leg completely gone. Surgeons had performed an amputation known as a hip disarticulation, the removal of the entire lower limb and the resurfacing of the pelvic bone to bear weight while sitting or standing. Six years into his military career, it looked as if Olson’s service was over – but actually, a new Army career lay just ahead. It was a long and difficult rehabilitation for Olson, who struggled to find a prosthesis that didn’t hurt. For some reason he was more

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2019 Warrior Games

comfortable shifting his weight toward the back of the socket that fit the leg to his hip, and none were designed to accommodate a person who wanted to get up and move around for longer than a few minutes. “It was mostly your elderly patients that would use those kind of prosthetics,” he said, “and they weren’t walking very much. They were just using it as a transition from a chair to a bed, to go to the bathroom and things like that.” Olson worked with a prosthetics company in Orlando, Florida, to devise a more flexible design, one with a socket that could be adapted and customized to fit the wearer’s preference. On a barroom cocktail napkin, he and a prosthetist sketched out a better design, with an adjustable liner that could be customized to make the leg comfortable enough to wear all day. Back at Walter Reed, doctors liked the new design – now widely known as the Olson Design – so much they began sending copies to other wounded soldiers. About 18 months into his rehabilitation at Walter Reed, Olson met John Register, a Desert Shield and Desert Storm veteran and former track star from the University of Arkansas who’d lost his leg in an accident and had gone on to medal at the Paralympic Games. Register encouraged Olson to become a competitive athlete in adaptive sports. At the time, Olson had no desire to compete in any events that required him to use a wheelchair: “At the time, I was really struggling with my prosthesis and … my thinking was that for me, being in a wheelchair was a step back.” Olson was, however, an excellent marksman. He accompanied his occupational therapists to a trap and skeet shooting range and, shooting at targets with a shotgun for the first time, hit 49 out of 50, an unheard-of first-time score. Soon he was at Fort Benning, Georgia trying out for a spot on the Army Marksmanship Unit (AMU), an elite group of competitive shooters established in 1956 that wins national and international shooting contests and just happened to be looking for wounded warriors to join the squad.


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