Michael
Johnston is a paratriathlete with hopes of competing in the sport’s Paralympic
Games debut in Rio de Janeiro in 2016.
But he is also
part of another mission: He’s trying to encourage fellow veterans and members
of the Armed Forces with physical disabilities to get involved in sports to
help open doors to new activities, enrich their lives and get them moving
forward.
The “Mission
Redefined” campaign, a joint effort by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
and U.S. Paralympics, will release a 30-second public service announcement on
Jan. 15 that features Johnston sprinting down a track.
Johnston says
it’s a campaign he’s proud to be a part of, and believes it’s necessary to help
disabled veterans see what’s possible.
“When they get
out of the military, they don’t really know where to go,” he said. “They don’t
know how to get reconnected with their community, with life, so sports are a
great way of bridging that gap.”
* * *
Johnston knows
firsthand about making the transition from being injured in the military to
becoming an athlete.
In 2003,
Johnston, then in the Navy, lost his left leg in a motorcycle accident. Yet he
was able go through rehabilitation, learn to walk with a prosthesis and return
to active duty.
His life had
gone through a traumatic change, but by staying in the Navy for another seven
years he was able to adjust while in a familiar environment.
“I was
expected to do the same duties as everybody else and that I previously had been
doing,” he said.
But it wasn’t
easy.
“After I was
injured, I wasn’t even 21 yet, so I had no idea who I was or what I wanted to
achieve in my life and I had very little direction,” he recalled.
After going through rehabilitation and learning to use his prosthesis (his leg was amputated just below the knee), he began to challenge himself.
What were his
limits? What could he do physically? He wanted to not only test himself but
prove to others that assumptions of limitations were wrong.
“[It] gave me
a drive and determination to break those perceptions, you know, that ‘This
guy’s going to slow us down’ and whatnot, of physical limitations that people
associate with a lot of amputees and disabilities in general,” he said.
Eventually, he
got involved in sports through the Navy’s Operation Rebound program and also
the Challenged Athletes Foundation.
In 2008, he
began competing in paratriathlons, and he’s competed internationally for the
U.S. Paratriathlon National Team. In 2011, he finished fourth at the ITU
Paratriathlon World Championship in Beijing.
Becoming an
athlete has helped Johnston redefine his own life.
Now he is
trying to help others redefine theirs.
* * *
The PSA begins
with Johnston at the starting line. At the sound of a starter’s pistol,
Johnston bursts from the blocks.
As the camera
captures him in full stride, the words “Passion,” “Power,” and
then “Strength” appear in place of his churning left leg, until
“Strength” explodes and falls away, revealing Johnston’s racing prosthesis. As
he sprints away, the words “Mission Redefined” appear on screen and a narrator
says, “Redefine your mission. Find a sport, get involved.” The spot ends with
the Mission ReDefined and U.S. Paralympics logos.
Viewers can
then go to the Department of Veterans Affairs Adaptive Sports site
(www.va.gov/adaptivesports) to find affiliated sports clubs around the nation
in which they can get involved.
As Johnston
reflects on the weeks and months after his injury in 2003, he believes the
“Mission Redefined” campaign would have been inspirational.
“It would
definitely move me and hopefully inspire me to get out and re-engage in sports
and life again,” he said, recalling that he felt lost at the time.
The message
with this campaign, he said, is that people and programs are out there to help
veterans get moving, and being active — finding a sport or activity — is a
terrific step. But the message, he said, is even simpler.
“The big push
I have is just getting involved,” said Johnston, now living in San Diego. “Just
getting off the couch and being reconnected.”
* * *
Christopher
Nowak, VA’s director of National Veterans Sports Programs and Special Events,
is in charge of the “Mission Redefined” campaign. Nowak, a Marine Corps veteran
who lost his right leg while serving, started work on the campaign in 2011.
To Nowak,
Mission Redefined has multiple meanings.
“One is the VA
itself,” Nowak said. “We’re redefining our mission on how we deliver adaptive
sports to veterans as well as sporting opportunities. And also we’re using the
campaign for veterans. There’s an opportunity to redefine their mission in
life. They’ve been through a traumatic injury and this is an opportunity for
them to use sports to redefine their mission.”
The campaign’s
name works, he said, because to men and women in the military, “everything is
defined as a mission.”
“What we hope
with this campaign is that veterans understand that after a traumatic injury
life is not over. It may seem like it, they all go through it, as well as I
did,” he said. “You go through a certain phase in your life after your injury.
But something clicks in” to get them back on track, he said, and sports can be
a giant part of that process.
This campaign,
combined with the success and attention garnered by some of the military veterans
competing at the London 2012 Paralympic Games, is providing a whole new layer
of attention and information for veterans, Nowak said.
And working
with the U.S. Olympic Committee as a partner, he said, has helped the VA “get
out of the box” and push the message in the most effective way possible.
For Johnston,
who was involved in filming the PSA— doing countless takes until 2 or 3 in the
morning on a high school track north of Los Angeles — the joint VA/U.S.
Paralympic campaign is worth every penny.
“Anybody that
sees it will connect with it,” he said. “It breaks down all borders. It’s not
just amputees, not just military. Everybody will connect with forward
movement.”
Story courtesy
Red Line Editorial, Inc. (http://www.redlineeditorial.com/) Doug
Williams is a freelance contributor for teamusa.org. This story was not subject
to the approval of any National Governing Bodies.
As a disabled military veteran who dealt with bouts of depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, sports provided a great outlet for me to better cope with these issues. Even though my disability subdued me to a powerchair I researched about sports geared for those in powerchairs and I found a local powerchair football league. This league allowed me to form a bond with other disabled veterans which made me feel better about myself.
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