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				Soldier Overcomes Injury To Help Others(July 15, 2011)
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			|  Army Sgt. 1st Class Marc Dervaes
 
 |  | FORT CARSON, Colo.  (ANS - July 10, 2011) -- When the 
					rocket-propelled grenade came through the windshield of Sgt. 
					1st Class Marc Dervaes' Humvee, it knocked him unconscious. 
 After a few moments, he awoke to see another RPG come 
					through his door and go out the roof, knocking him 
					unconscious again.
 
 He woke for a second time to chaos.
 
 “That's when I 
					realized my arm was gone,” said Dervaes, a Westchester, Pa. 
					native. “My entire door and windshield was covered in bits 
					and pieces and chunks of this and that. I looked out my 
					driver's window and saw this guy on the side of the road 
					just spraying us down with a machine gun.”
 
 Dervaes, 
					then serving with Company C, 3rd Squadron, 61st Cavalry 
					Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, 
					had been traveling with his convoy in Kunar province in 
					Afghanistan when insurgents ambushed his vehicle.
 |  |  | “We 
					were coming through an area where we had never received 
					contact from and I was shot by an RPG from the left side of 
					the road,” Dervaes said. “We were the trail truck so we were 
					a bit further back than the rest of the patrol.” 
 Dervaes tried to communicate with the rest of his platoon 
					but his helmet and headset had been knocked off by the 
					second rocket.
 
 “I put my arm, what was left of it, 
					over the back of my seat and told my medic to put a 
					tourniquet on it,” he said. “I grabbed my headset and I 
					tried to notify the rest of the patrol what had happened.”
 
 As his driver continued to maneuver the truck through 
					the commotion, Dervaes relayed instructions for medevac 
					procedures.
 
 “We were in an area that was inaccessible 
					via helicopter so I had to get loaded up into another truck 
					and we had to go back about 30 minutes or so to an area that 
					was not as dangerous,” he said.
 
 Dervaes' truck was 
					driven back through the ambush site to meet medevac 
					helicopters.
 
 “We got shot up again a little bit but 
					no rockets, just small-arms fire at that time. We didn't 
					stay to engage because they had to get me out of there 
					pretty quick,” he said.
 
 When Dervaes arrived at his 
					forward operating base, he apologized to his sergeant major.
 
 “I told him, ‘They didn't kill me, but I'm not going to 
					be able to help you guys out anymore,'” Dervaes said.
 
 After evacuating to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in 
					Germany, Dervaes eventually landed in San Antonio, where he 
					spent the next nine months at Brooke Army Medical Center, or 
					BAMC, at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, enduring five 
					surgeries, battling infection and learning to adapt.
 
 Recovering on the home front
 
 When she first got the 
					phone call that her husband had been injured, Michi Dervaes 
					said she screamed.
 
 “I was worried,” she said. “Is he 
					going to be able to do anything he likes to do anymore? He 
					loves the kayaking and mountain biking.”
 
 Michi 
					Dervaes flew from Colorado to be by her husband's side.
 
 At BAMC, Marc Dervaes faced multiple surgeries, 
					including two amputations on his right arm.
 
 “They 
					originally amputated below the elbow, but there wasn't much 
					to save so they had to amputate above the elbow,” he said.
 
 In recovery, Marc Dervaes struggled.
 
 “The initial 
					recovery was the hardest,” he said. “I had three surgeries 
					in the first couple weeks. Just being in that fog of 
					narcotics was difficult. It was so cold.”
 
 Marc 
					Dervaes said he relied on his wife to help him with everyday 
					activities.
 
 “I didn't want to leave his side,” Michi 
					Dervaes said.
 
 When Michi Dervaes had to return to 
					Colorado, Marc Dervaes was forced to learn simple tasks.
 
 “You really had to put 100 percent into learning to 
					trust (the doctor),” Marc Dervaes said. “I found that out by 
					being stubborn -- missing appointments, feeling sorry for 
					myself.
 
 “It took me about four months in San Antonio 
					before I started to realize that the world is bigger than I 
					am and I can't let something like this get in the way of 
					progress and me getting on with my life and doing things 
					that I need to do and want to do,” he said.
 
 Marc 
					Dervaes began working with a prosthetics doctor to design 
					arms to allow him to return to his favorite activities.
 
 “When I started recreational therapy, that's when I 
					started coming around,” Marc Dervaes said. “Before, I found 
					excuses. There's no legitimacy in excuses -- because you 
					just don't want to do it.”
 
 For the last five months 
					of his recovery at BAMC, Marc Dervaes learned adaptive scuba 
					diving, skydiving, kayaking and archery.
 
 “Some stuff 
					takes a little longer than before but he gets it done,” 
					Michi Dervaes said.
 
 Looking to the future
 
 After nine months at BAMC, the Army reassigned Marc Dervaes 
					to the Warrior Transition Battalion at Fort Carson.
 
 “Now that my military career is coming to an end, it's time 
					for me to give back to the agencies that did so much for 
					me,” he said. “Working in this WTB, I know just from talking 
					with the cadre there that Soldiers need to get out more, 
					especially the single ones in the barracks. As a wounded 
					warrior, I can relate to them better.”
 
 Marc Dervaes 
					said he hopes he and his wife can help other Soldiers and 
					their spouses dealing with injuries.
 
 “There are 
					agencies out here that have a lot going for them that can 
					help these kids heal,” he said. “I know how hard it was, and 
					there are people who are worse off than me and I'm 
					sympathetic to that, but too many of these guys are sitting 
					around feeling sorry for themselves.”
 
 “From what I've 
					seen, a lot of them don't want to heal,” he said. “And they 
					have to break out of that shell and the social workers and 
					the therapists on Fort Carson have the tools to help them, 
					but the servicemember has to be willing, has to want to do 
					it.”
 
 Marc Dervaes said he believed his wife's support 
					and encouragement helped him and that spouses play an 
					important role in a Soldier's recovery.
 
 “I think 
					getting spouses involved would help the quality of life of 
					those struggling with injured servicemembers,” he said. 
					“There were times that I've fallen in a hole and [Michi] 
					pulled me out of it.”
 
 Michi Dervaes, who kayaks 
					alongside her husband, said it's important for spouses to 
					watch their loved ones and to motivate them to get active, 
					even if they resist.
 
 “It's not the end of the world,” 
					Michi Dervaes said. “There is always a light at the end of 
					the tunnel and it opens up for different opportunities. Be 
					tough.”
 
 “Don't expect things to happen immediately -- 
					to recover overnight,” Marc Dervaes said. “You have to be 
					really patient. You have to have a positive mental attitude. 
					If not, you're not going to improve and heal.”
 |  | By Andrea SutherlandFort Carson Public Affairs Office
 Army News Service
 Copyright 2011
 
					
					
					
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