The following content is brought to you by our partner, the Wounded Warrior Project.
For Brett Miller, cycling had not only been a form of fitness, but his escape. A firefighter for 17 years before joining the National Guard in 1988 to help pay for college, he was conducting security operations in Iraq when a roadside bomb detonated 6 feet from his Humvee, causing traumatic brain injury, brain bleeding and other injuries that left him partially paralyzed.
“I wasn’t sure I’d ever be able to ride again with all my injuries,” he says. “I was blind in one eye, I had really bad equilibrium problems and I was hemiplegic, which essentially means half-paralyzed, on my left side.”
While in recovery, Miller was approached by the Wounded Warrior Project and asked to take part in a Soldier Ride, a four-day cycling experience offered by the organization that connects warriors and positively pushes their physical and mental limits. Soon, Miller, 43, who lives in Camp Sherman, Ore., was going on the rides once a month, which he would continue for two years.