U.S.
Army Captain Ferris Butler was
on patrol in Sunni Triangle, Iraq in December 2006 when an improvised explosive
device tore through his Humvee. Butler lost his left leg and most of his right
foot from the attack. For 15 months, a glum Butler was confined to a wheelchair
while doctors at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., worked to
get him walking again.

But
before he could walk, he had the chance to learn how to ride a bicycle.
On
March 4, Butler received his first "bike leg" prosthetic and promptly
went for a ride in nearby Rock Creek Park with other Walter Reed military
amputees and former pro cyclist and Mercury pro team manager John Wordin.
Wordin had started a non-profit rehab program called Road 2 Recovery to support
wounded warriors using cycling as a means to address overcoming injuries.
With
a little help and lots of encouragement, Butler made his way up some short, but
steep, hills. Capt. Butler made those climbs on his bike just 30 days after his
war-damaged left leg was amputated. He fought to save it, enduring 53 surgeries
before it was replaced with a carbon-fiber surrogate.
Just 70 days later, a tanned and fit Butler talked about his next big challenge: A six-day, 480-mile Road 2 Recovery bike ride from Walter Reed to Charlotte and a lap around Lowe's Motor Speedway before the start of the Coca-Cola 600 NASCAR race.

"The trip is not so much about having fun as it was about
transforming your new body with something you can work with the rest of your
life, " stated Butler.
Then this September, Butler had to have his other leg amputated because of lack of stability in his damaged limb. He was not sad or depressed, just the opposite, he counted the days until his new prosthetic would show up and he would be able to resume riding his bike. He soon began riding a Star Trac Spin bike that had been donated to Walter Reed thru the R2R program.

His goal this time, as a double amputee, is the upcoming R2R Texas Challenge beginning March 30 at the Center for the Intrepid. The CFI is a place where other wounded warriors recovering from serious injuries are rehabilitated. Some of them will join Butler on the ride.
“I've just come to the realization that life is not over," says Butler, of southern Maryland. "I'm going to go on and do probably bigger and better things."
"We have an amputee!" Mike McNaughton heard the medics yelling.
The wounded warrior knew better than to look at his injury. Army trainers had
taught soldiers like him to turn away from their own injuries to lessen the
intensity of shock reaction-but he understood from the frantic shouts that he
had lost at least a limb to a land mine, and in that moment grasped that his
life would never be the same.
Riding to the Coca-Cola 600
At the time of
the explosion in January 2003, he was Platoon Sergeant in command of up to 35
army and National Guard mine clearers, or 'sappers,' as well as the logistics
for several foreign teams on a heavily mined airbase in Bagram, Afghanistan.
His orders were to free passage on specific trails at the Army compound located
on the base; instead, Mike and his team had been working from dawn to dark to
remove mines in a much larger area. "The colonel wasn't happy about
it," he says. "I had a mission to keep my soldiers safe, but there
were civilians all around us who were stepping on mines every day. These were
human beings who were trying to make something of their already complicated
lives, villagers who were starting to plant vegetables in areas that were less
than 100 percent clear."
Running with President Bush
Mike, originally
from New York State, had enlisted in the Army at 18. He served in Bosnia and
Kuwait before resigning in 2000 for a civilian job with an engineering company.
Then came 9/11, and he reconsidered his decision to leave the service. "My
being from New York, with a sister in Manhattan and a brother working across
the street from the World Trade Center when it collapsed, I felt like I'd let
down my family and the Army," he remembers. He joined the Louisiana
National Guard on December of 2001 and four months later was called up with the
769th Engineer Battalion, with his friend Larry Jester, and sent to
Afghanistan.
Within seven
months, his teams had cleared 150,000 anti-personnel mines and 47 anti-tank
mines, and Mike was awarded the Bronze Star for his actions.
On January 17, just 8 days after the explosion that took most of his right leg and two fingers, President Bush was on one of his visitors to the Walter Reed Medical Center in Washington, D.C. During their conversations, one topic of common interest of the two men was running. Bush wished McNaughton a speedy recover and told the soldier that when he felt up to it, to "give him a call and we'll go running."
McNaughton required 11 separate surgeries to repair damage and fit his new robotic prosthesis to help him walk. The physical therapy took months as well as dealing with the depression and despondency that comes along with such a serious injury.
In spring 2004, he took the president up on his offer and ran a mile with him. "I want you to know," Bush said afterward, "just how proud I am of you." McNaughton was floored. The commander in chief is proud of me? Me? McNaughton then trained for a marathon. It wasn't easy. He fell. He got hurt. On Jan. 9, 2005 -- two years to the day he lost his leg -- he ran the Walt Disney World Half Marathon.
McNaughton says, "We're changing a lot of perceptions
these days."
Riding with fellow amputee Patty Collins
Mike worked as a
liaison to the state of Louisiana and helped coordinate emergency response
during the hurricane season. His work in the aftermath of Katrina was
also heroic, but Mike is too modest to talk about it.
In May of 2008,
McNaughton, his wife Kim, and his friend Larry joined the Road 2 Recovery on
its inaugural ride from Washington DC to the Coca-Cola 600 NASCAR event. The
6-day, 480 mile ride was an uplifting experience that he was able to share with
them.
Mike currently works for the VA in Louisiana. He remains active through cycling and provides mentoring services to vets across the country.