Jul 1, 2008 By Christian Science Monitor - Special to the Times
Surviving the bomb blast under his Humvee was a hard-won fight for Andy Robinson. But two years later, filling the life he fought so hard to have was turning out to be another challenge.
"When I got hurt, three guys got killed," said Robinson, who was partially paralyzed in the June 2006 attack in Western Iraq. He told himself: "You better shut up and better not complain. ... No matter how bad the injury is, (you) got a second chance, so enjoy it, live it."
Living, for Robinson, meant a long series of surgeries, physical therapy and learning to use a wheelchair. It also meant deciding how to view his future. Was it over? Or just the beginning? A counterintelligence specialist used to high-intensity training and deployments, he desperately needed a mission.
"I've reached the end of the Internet," he'd periodically shout to his wife, Sara, through their Oceanside, Calif., home as he tapped on a computer trying to pass the time. They were finally in a house, not a hospital room, and together for long stretches for the first time in their marriage of barely two years.
But as the months drifted by, the quarters began to feel a little too close. Just getting ready and out of the house took hours. His natural intensity and energy had nothing to pour itself into but frustration and tension.
"We had more arguments and tiffs because he had nothing to do," Sara said. "He needs focus and a purpose and something to work on. He wants to help people."
Then Robinson came out to cheer for his Marine buddy Greg Jones, called "Stitch," in a bike race in October, 2007, and he was intrigued by the handcyclists zipping by. Stitch was already interested in helping injured athletes and he'd connected with Team Semper Fi, a group of injured marines who are endurance athletes, founded and funded by the nonprofit injured Marine Semper Fi Fund.
He passed along the name to Robinson, who soon was volunteering at the group's office on the Camp Pendleton Marine Corps base. The organization also bought Robinson and handcycle, and in the first days of this new year, Robinson found a new beginning.
"It was like the hardest thing I've done since being injured. It was fun to be able to move fast," Robinson said, lighting up as he recounts the thrill of that first, hour-long ride with Stitch on the back roads of Camp Pendleton. "Before, to feel a breeze, I would just have to sit there and wait for a breeze."
Now, he makes his own slipstream.
Then the team needed a new manager, and Robinson didn't hesitate to take the job.
"It's made our lives so much better," Sara said. "He's doing his thing and I'm doing my thing. It's a lot more normal."
Now, he spends long days working on recruiting, finding events for the athletes to participate in, and arranging the logistics to get them there. He also works out on gym equipment in his garage, where a racing handcycle hangs from the ceiling and a leisure handcycle is parked next to the car.
Although the Morgan Hill Times does not have any obligation to monitor this board, the Morgan Hill Times reserves the right at all times to check this board and to remove any information or materials that are unlawful, threatening, abusive, libelous, defamatory, obscene, vulgar, pornographic, profane, indecent or otherwise objectionable to the Morgan Hill Times in our sole discretion and to disclose any information necessary to satisfy the law, regulation, or government request. The Morgan Hill Times also reserves the right to permanently block any user who violates these terms and conditions. All threats to systems or site infrastructure shall be assumed genuine in nature and will be reported to the appropriate law enforcement authorities. Submission of any comments will be considered permission to use online or in print.