Games give injured Soldier something to focus on

By Elizabeth M. CollinsMay 13, 2010

Games give injured Soldier something to focus on
(Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (Army News Service, May 13, 2010) -- It was just an average day of work for Staff Sgt. Eugene Ethengain IV, whose job in logistics meant he worked with the Air Force to unload planes coming from theater into McGuire Air Force Base, N.J.

Average, that is, until he was pulled out of the aircraft and onto the conveyor belt and then the ground.

That was in March 2007. While initial X-rays showed that nothing was wrong, Ethengain was in so much pain he could barely walk. A couple months later, a wrist specialist ordered MRIs and found that Ethengain had fractured his left wrist, tore a tendon, four disks in his lower back and three disks in his neck.

"It was actually a shock. It happened so fast. It's just like if you're riding your bike and you hit something and fall, by the time you realize you're falling, you're already on the ground and it's like, 'Ugh! Well, I can move. I must not be too bad.' It wasn't even 24 hours later, I was dragging my leg around, my back was hurting really bad," he said.

Three years later, Ethengain has graduated from a wheelchair to a walker to a cane, undergone back surgery, and competed in archery Wednesday at the first-ever Warrior Games for wounded, ill and injured Soldiers, even while he prepares for neck surgery in June. Ethengain is also on the Army's sitting volleyball team.

Assigned to the Warrior Transition Unit at Kimbrough Ambulatory Care Center at Fort Meade, Md., Ethengain, who shoots with a compound bow, found out about the games less than a month ago, and instantly knew he had to try for the gold in archery.

While the games were his first time competing in archery and he didn't do as well as he would have liked, he has loved the sport -- as well as bow hunting -- since childhood. It also doesn't strain his injuries; the hardest part is walking to the archery range and bending over to pick up any stray arrows.

"This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. It's like my last 'Hooah' for the Army, because I don't know if they're going to let me stay in the Army or whether I'm going to be retired," Ethengain said. "I don't really want to retire, but eventually, at some point, we all have to get out of the uniform and transition to become a civilian. I'll make the best of it." He said he hopes to one day compete on the U.S. Army Archery Team or the Paralympics Archery Team.

In April, Ethengain joined other Army archery competitors for several days of training at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. That training was the first time he had picked up a bow and arrow since his accident. It was like riding a bike, he explained -- something he could never forget.

Although he was eliminated before the final round of the competition at the Warrior Games, he said had a great time there.

"I had fun anyway, and I knew I had good competition," he said. "I think I did really well, but I could have (done) better."

The games have also given him something other than his surgery and medical appointments to focus on.

"It was good to get away from the hospital and get a chance to shoot," he said of the practice and training he participated in prior to the games.

Ethengain is member of the Nanticoke Indian Tribe, and his ancestors have hunted with bows and arrows for centuries -- so archery is in his blood. He said "it feels good" to carry on the family tradition. In fact, he said he most looks forward to completing his recovery so he can take his sons -- he has 11 children and three grandchildren -- hunting and teach them about their heritage.

At the Warrior Games, Soldiers swept the recurve-bow category in archery. Sgt. Michael Lukow, Staff Sgt. Curtis Winston and Sgt. Jeff Anderson took home the gold, silver and bronze medals, respectively. Sgt. Robert Price came in third in the compound-bow category, while Marines took home the gold and silver.