WASHINGTON,
Aug. 2010 –
With a combat
escort at
front and
rear, Army
Maj. Ed Pulido
drove a sport
utility
vehicle into
an area of
Iraq known as
“IED
Alley” on
his way to
Kirkuk from a
base northwest
of Baghdad.
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Retired
Army
Maj.
Ed
Pulido
poses
with
his
wife,
Karen,
and
daughters,
Kaitlin
and
Kinsley.
Courtesy
photo
(Click
photo
for
screen-resolution
image);high-resolution
image
available.
|
|
Pulido chatted
with the
colonel next
to him, mostly
about going
home again,
all the while
unaware of the
roadside bomb
lodged in the
asphalt
directly
ahead.
The
soldiers in
front saw it,
but it was too
late to warn
Pulido. The
bomb
detonated, and
smoke, glass,
noise and dust
filled the
air. The air
bag had
deployed, and
Pulido shoved
it to one
side. That’s
when he saw
the damage the
fragments had
inflicted on
his leg.
It’s
been six years
since that
day, and more
than any other
moment, that
one still
sticks in his
mind.
“I’ve
had dreams
about it all
the time,”
Pulido said.
“The night
sweats and
terrors -- it
was that
moment right
there when I
put the air
bag aside and
saw the
blood.”
That
day launched
Pulido on a
life-changing
physical and
psychological
journey that
is documented
in a new
“Real
Warriors”
profile. The
Real Warriors
campaign is
sponsored by
the Defense
Centers of
Excellence for
Psychological
Health and
Traumatic
Brain Injury,
and it
features
stories of
servicemembers
who sought
psychological
treatment and
continued
successful
military and
civilian
careers.
Pulido’s
leg was broken
in three
places and
partially on
fire, but he
felt no pain.
He wasn’t
concerned for
himself, he
said, but for
his fellow
soldiers and
his family.
“How will my
family live
without a
father?” he
asked himself.
He
was flown to
Baghdad, then
on to 60 days
in quarantine
in a U.S.
hospital’s
intensive care
unit. Due to
infections,
including two
staph
infections,
Pulido dropped
from 195 to
118 pounds in
a 40-day span.
He underwent
more than 18
surgeries in
the course of
his treatment.
He
and his family
made the tough
decision to
amputate.
One
night in
October, at
about
midnight,
Pulido sat
wide awake in
his room in
San
Antonio’s
Brooke Army
Medical Center
in pain after
the
amputation,
his heart
racing due to
the
medications.
It was at
about the same
time two
months earlier
that he had
been injured
in Iraq.
“I
felt this
overwhelming
feeling of
loss,” he
said. He
worried about
how he was
going to live
without a
limb, how he
was going to
learn to walk
again. “I
thought,
‘Why don’t
I just pull
the plug on
this
thing?’”
he said.
He
drifted into
sleep and woke
up hoping it
was all just a
dream. “But
it
wasn’t,”
he said. “It
was a dark
time.”
Pulido
struggled with
his depression
for three
days. His
wife, Karen,
and his mother
tried to
encourage him
to think
positively. He
leaned on them
and on
chaplains and
other wounded
servicemembers
who came to
visit him and
slowly fought
his way back.
Unknown
to him at the
time, his
wife, mother
and daughter,
who was 2 at
the time, were
visiting other
wounded
warriors in
the hospital,
a memory that
still stirs
emotion in
him. “I was
in my
deathbed, and
they were
taking time to
visit other
servicemembers
and
families,”
he said. “My
little girl
still has that
gift of
giving.”
Pulido
was medically
retired in May
2005 and
continues the
therapy he
started while
on active
duty, but
through the
Veterans
Affairs
Department.
And every
month he meets
up with a
group of
servicemembers
he once served
with. It’s
vital for
people to
surround
themselves
with a support
group, he
said.
Although
he’s come a
long way, he
still
struggles with
night sweats
and terrors.
He was driving
to Fort Hood,
Texas, last
week, and saw
images that
reminded him
of traveling
to Brooke for
treatment. He
shed a tear,
he said, but
then he was
OK.
“I
don’t look
at it
negatively,”
he said of the
experience.
“What’s
important is
that you
don’t do
something
negative with
it.”
Pulido
also shares
his story with
servicemembers
as a way of
helping
others, and he
is passionate
about his work
for the Folds
of Honor
Foundation,
which offers
scholarships
to spouses and
children of
fallen and
wounded
servicemembers,
as well as
information on
counseling and
benefits.
In
his public
speaking,
Pulido urges
wounded
warriors to
stay active as
a way to avoid
going into an
“inner
hole” and
shares
resources that
can help to
support them.
His message is
consistent:
“Recovery is
possible.”
“My
goal in life
now is to take
care of the
noncommissioned
officers and
enlisted
personnel who
sacrificed so
much for our
freedom,” he
said. “I
won’t leave
them behind in
the field of
battle, and
that goes for
the families
as well.”
Pulido
often refers
people to the
Real Warriors
campaign,
which, along
with the
profiles,
offers helping
resources.
“I would
like to
encourage all
first-line
leaders and
commanders to
use these
resources as a
way to empower
their service
men and women
and their
families to
realize that
help is
available,”
he said.
Now
living in
Oklahoma City
with his wife
and two
daughters,
Pulido said he
often thinks
of his father,
a decorated
military
veteran who
was the
inspiration
for his
military
service, and
that he’ll
never forget
the flagpole
that sat
outside his
childhood
home.
He
recalled that
his father
would turn on
the lawnmower
on Saturday
mornings at
7:30 a.m.
“That meant
two things,”
he said.
“First, it
was time to
mow the grass,
and second, it
was time to
get a cup of
coffee and
stand outside
and look at
the flag.”
Just
the other day,
Pulido put a
new flagpole
up in front of
his new house.
And when he
looks at it,
he said, he no
longer feels
that cavernous
feeling of
loss.
“I
lost my leg on
that day, but
I don’t know
if I’d want
my life the
way it was
before,” he
said. “It
opened up a
world and life
that is
different. I
may have
changed, but
what I’ve
changed to is
a challenge
that can be
overcome with
support.”