In Corey Garmonโs shadowbox lies a collection of patches, medalsโincluding a Purple Heartโand a single Outdoor Research glove with the right middle finger mangled. It was one of the gloves he was wearing when he was hit in Afghanistan. The day that changed everything. Garmon didnโt grow up dreaming of serving in the militaryโin high school, sports were everything to him. His dad being a football coach, heโd grown up around the field house and locker rooms in northeast Alabama, and played quarterback in high school. โI was there to play football and baseball,โ he says. โAnd my grades showed that. I got just enough to keep playing.โ After graduation, he found himself working construction, living paycheck to paycheck. He made what he calls a business decision and enlisted in the army, ready for a change. โIf Iโd stayed around the kind of town we lived in, itโs not hard at all to get yourself in trouble,โ he says. In basic training, Garmon excelled, performing for drill sergeants the way he had for his dad and for his football coaches growing up. He wanted to be a scout. And while his parents were visiting for his graduation from advanced individual training in 2011, an officer told himโin front of his parentsโthat heโd be deploying to Afghanistan before the yearโs end. He had not told his mother yet. Between basic training and deploying, Garmon says he began to feel a sense of drive and purpose, where previously heโd felt lost. And once in Afghanistan, he built brotherhood, as well. When he first deployed, he was warned that theyโd certainly be shot at, but the No. 1 threat was IEDsโimprovised explosive devices. โTheyโre really little mason jars, maybe two- to five-cup mason jarsโnot really big IEDsโcalled toe-poppers,โ he says.โ In the flat terrain, the Taliban couldnโt compete with them, Garmon says, but if they could take one or two American soldiers out with IEDs, it caused a distraction and drew others to help them, evening the field a bit. Garmonโs first four months of deployment felt boring, he says. But after a trip home and a change of seasons, things changed. โWe had our third platoon guys doing a presence patrol,โ Garmon says. โTheyโre just walking through villages, finding the elder and saying, โDo you have water? Fuel? What can we get you?โ And during that patrol one of the guys had stepped on an IED, and two were injured.โ His was the closest unit nearby, so they were told to pack water and go help. They arrived to a firefight, and were sent in, since the platoon there was down the two injured. โWe didnโt know the area or what to look for, or where the bad spots were,โ Garmon says. โNot ideal.โ Plus, theyโd given all their water to the injured soldiers, and it was 115 degrees in the shade, he says. But they pressed forward, stepping heel-to-toe in each otherโs footsteps, following a metal detector, through a field of IEDs. After an hour, Garmon says heโd stepped over at least 40 small devices he thought might have been IEDs. Finally arriving at the scene of the explosion, Garmon heard over the radio that the Taliban fighters had them in their sights. He looked for a place to take coverโbut as he moved that way, another explosion blasted. โI donโt know how long I was outโmaybe five to seven secondsโmaybe I wasn't even out,โ he says. โBut I immediately started yelling, โHelp me, Iโm hit.โโ It was an IED. But the dust swirled around him from bullets, now, too. Everything below the knot of his left boot was gone, he says, and his right leg looked like a bad break. Blood came from his hands, but he tried to apply tourniquets. But Garmonโs buddy Thomas and a medi Doc Wojo came through, applying tourniquets and talking football to him to keep him calm. After a few minutes of waiting for a helicopter to pick them up, Garmon became aware of the pain. โMy left arm felt like I was on fire,โ he says. โThe bomb was so hot, it cauterized everything, which probably saved my life.โ But to get back to a base for medical care wasnโt going to be easy. Under fire, no helicopter could land to pick him up, so they were forced to start walking. โAll I can think about is all the IEDs we stepped over to get here,โ Garmon says. โAnd now weโre two men wide [as heโs being helped along], the chances of not stepping on an IED on the way out of that ... .โ The clock was ticking. โIn Afghanistan, we had what we called the golden hour,โ he explains. โIf youโre on the helicopter and back to a base with medical care within an hour, youโve got a 98 percent chance of survival, but every minute after that sees a drastic change in that percentage.โ At 55 minutes after the explosion, a helicopterโstill under fireโwas able to pick Garmon up. As soon as he was unloaded, he blacked out. After 15 days in the emergency room, it was decision time. Garmonโs left leg had been amputated immediately. But was he ready to be a double amputee? โThe doctor told me, if you decide to keep it, youโre going to be three inches shorter because there are gaps where thereโs nothing thereโitโs very messed up,โ he says. After two years at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C.โa longer time than his entire military career, he points outโhe was able to go home. But adjusting wasnโt so straightforward. He struggled to get off his medications, and faced depression, having gone from being surrounded by hundreds of other people dealing with the same injuries to feeling isolated far away, where it was difficult for people to understand what heโd been through. โI blame all that on me not taking my traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder as seriously as I should have,โ he says. โI thought, โI can handle thisโIโll get over it.โโ With support from his wife and community in Guntersville, Ala.,โand time spent outdoors with other veteransโheโs changed his perspective. โDo I want to be that cliche angry vet? What do I do?โ he says. Medically retired from the army in 2014, Garmon now focuses on a job with the department of defense and spending time with his young daughter, who will be starting school next year. He takes his wife Megan and daughter golfing at a nearby park and to the beach, using a wheelchair with treads. Earlier this year, Garmon reached out to Outdoor Research customer service, explaining heโd lost most of his left hand and had difficulty with gloves. Nathan Jenkin, design and innovation manager, asked for a trace of Garmonโs hand, and Autumn Salisbury-VanderKloot sewed custom gloves for Garmon. Weโd like to thank Corey Garmon for his service to this country, his sacrifice, and his positive attitude in the face of great adversity.