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http://www.soc.mil/UNS/Releases/2011/May/110519-02.html
Sgt. 1st Class Ray Castillo lost both legs after an ambush in Iraq two years ago while on his 10th combat deployment. (Photo by VInce Little, The Bayonet) |
By Vince Little
The Bayonet
FORT BENNING, Ga., (USASOC News Service, May 18, 2011) - Sgt. 1st
Class Ray Castillo is again flourishing as a senior noncommissioned
officer at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., but that almost didn't seem
possible two years ago.
That's when his 10th combat deployment with the 75th Ranger
Regiment resulted in a life-changing event on the dusty battlefield of
northern Iraq. Today, he's a double amputee - above the knees - but set
to graduate next week from Fort Benning's seven-week Maneuver Senior
Leaders Course.
"Just because I lost my limbs doesn't mean I can't give my experience
and my knowledge to other guys, (but) I understood eventually I was
going to be behind a desk," said Castillo, now an operations sergeant
with 2nd Battalion. "There's nothing I could've done about that. I
still wanted to be in the military, I still wanted to contribute."
The incident occurred Feb. 9, 2009, near Mosul. Castillo was a
platoon sergeant with the regiment's 2nd Battalion with the unit in
pursuit of a high-value target. The Soldiers had dismounted and were
approaching the objective on foot when they got ambushed.
A command-detonated improvised explosive device hit Castillo.
"It was real quick," he recalled. "(The enemy) hid it really well in
the ground. I got to that location, and it just went off. I blacked out
for a short period of time, but I remember the explosion going off and
flying through the air."
Covered in blood, Castillo went into shock. A platoon medic
treated him at the scene and he got evacuated within a half-hour. On
the ride to the hospital, he slipped in and out of consciousness.
"I was in so much pain," he said. "I told my medic, 'Hey, you need to
give me something. I don't care if you punch me in the face or
whatever, but I'm in so much pain.'"
Castillo had multiple lacerations, including to his liver,
spleen, intestines and right kidney. A lung was punctured in three
different areas.
After the blast, when he was dragged to a stretcher, Castillo
remembered looking down and seeing his right leg severed at the ankle.
He figured he might lose part of one leg, but woke up from an induced
coma about a month later at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in
Washington, D.C., to find both gone. The infections had spread too
quickly, doctors told him.
"I wasn't expecting to see 70 percent of my legs gone," he said.
"Because of the infection, they had to keep cutting off more and more
and more, because of all that bad stuff they have in the dirt over in
Iraq."
He's undergone dozens of procedures, and not just to the legs. Doctors also removed shrapnel from his abdomen area.
"I lost count (of the surgeries). I had so many, I was sick of
surgery," he said. "I still have a lot of shrapnel in me. Every once in
a while, I'll get a scratch here or there 'cause it's trying to come
out. It's all over the place."
There's a little ball of metal floating around a finger in his
left hand. Castillo said X-rays at the dentist reveal more pieces in
his head.
Castillo spent almost two months at Walter Reed and actually
re-enlisted there in March 2009 from a hospital bed, surrounded by most
of his family. He'd planned to do that in Iraq before getting wounded.
"I would say it's more frustrating than difficult," he said of his
lengthy recovery. "There's a lot of frustration that goes with having
some type of new life. Everyone has a goal in life, and then when
something happens, it can change."
"You can still stay on certain career paths and other paths you want
to do in your life," he explained. "It can be difficult doing those
things, but it's more frustrating. There are simple things that you
have to try to overcome and adapt to."
After being transferred to Fort Sam Houston, Texas, for rehab,
Castillo said he encountered other Soldiers in worse predicaments.
"Looking at them being able to do certain things, it gives you
strength," he said. "I remember seeing a woman in San Antonio - she had
both arms gone. She was an (explosive ordnance disposal) Soldier
missing both arms up high. The wounds were so high up her shoulders
that she couldn't have a prosthetic arm."
"Seeing someone like that reminds you, 'Hey, you shouldn't be
complaining about certain things.' You don't want to have someone
always helping you out, because they're not always gonna be there," he
said. "In Texas, they taught (me) how to do stuff on (my) own. I had to
figure a lot of things out and learn how to overcome those little
obstacles and hurdles."
Castillo was fitted with prosthetics in May 2009. That November,
his formal therapy ended and he left Fort Sam Houston the following
January. He returned to Joint Base Lewis-McChord but had to clear a
medical evaluation board just to stay in the Army - his paperwork was
approved four months later.
"My focus was just to get back to my unit," he said. "I worked really
hard every day as much as I could because that was my main focus -
recovery and getting better so I could get back to my unit and continue
working."
Maneuver Center of Excellence and Fort Benning Command Sgt. Maj.
Chris Hardy was the 75th Ranger Regiment's command sergeant major when
Castillo got wounded in Iraq.
"His personal courage and commitment is truly an inspiration to us
all," Hardy said. "He epitomizes the warrior ethos - I will never quit,
I will never accept defeat. He symbolizes the strength of the American
Soldier and I feel privileged to know him."
Castillo said he's driven to stay in and wants to reach the
20-year mark in his Army career. He'd like to become an instructor
after his time with the Ranger Regiment ends.
The sergeant first class did a tandem jump at the Ranger
Rendezvous in August 2009, only months after the ambush, and plans to
return again this year. Calling the regiment a "brotherhood," Castillo
said he knows some of the other Rangers better than his own family, and
vice versa, after all they've experienced together in war.
The learning process also hasn't ended in his own recovery. Just
walking downstairs, along a sidewalk or grass, and downhill can be
challenging.
"Even when it snowed in Washington state, just going through the snow
and it being slippery, I don't feel where I step until I put my weight
on it," he said. "I drive, too, and that's a learning curve. My
endurance and balance are getting much better. Being able to do random
chores around the house or just doing stuff at work is getting better.
It's gotten easier, with time."
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