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BODY WOUNDED, SPIRIT INTACT -- "Our
family has been
totally amazed at the outpouring of spirit that
total
strangers have shown to Kevin."
|

Kevin Hardin |
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Story here...
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/loc
alnews/content/north/epaper/2007/12/02/m1a_hardin_1202.html
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-------------------------
Body wounded, spirit intact
By LARRY LIPMAN
Palm Beach Post Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — Army Spec. Kevin Hardin stares intently at a stack of colored
"clothespins" on a vertical spindle. His goal: Move the pins from the
vertical rod to a horizontal rod inches away.
With painstaking deliberation, the former medic from Jupiter grips a pin
between his pinkie and ring finger, because he no longer has a thumb and
index finger on his right hand. He squeezes the pin and carefully
positions it on the horizontal rod, a smile of triumph breaking out on his
boyish face.
It's a task he could have done without thinking three months ago. But then
a rocket slammed through a Humvee when he was on patrol in Samarra, Iraq.
Now the 21-year-old called "Doc" by his squad is fighting his own medical
battle at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.
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Since being wounded Sept. 30, he has undergone 14
surgeries to repair his shattered bones and torn muscles, reconstruct an
eyelid and remove the many pieces of shrapnel lodged throughout his body.
Some, like the roughly half-dozen BB-sized pieces in his brain, may never
come out.
He has so many skin grafts on his arms and hands, his nickname among his
fellow patients is "Patches."
This week he goes under the knife again, this time to remove the rods
sticking out of his left arm and the large pins in his right hand. Hardin
sees it as a sign of progress, but he acknowledges he has a long way to
go.
Later in December, Hardin will be transferred to a medical center in Tampa
for more evaluation of the shrapnel in his brain. Then he'll return to
Walter Reed for more months of treatment and therapy.
Injuries uproot family
Despite the dramatic turn his life has taken over the past three months,
Hardin is upbeat.
"What is there to regret? Doing a service to your country - I love to help
people - there's nothing to regret about it," he said in a recent
interview.
Most of the other wounded soldiers at Walter Reed share his view, Hardin
said.
"The soldiers here ... they accept their injuries. They don't let them get
them down. They keep a positive outlook on life," he said. "There's very
few soldiers that think negative."
The second of Charles and Terry Hardin's four sons - all of whose first
names start with the letter K - Kevin was "very much involved with the
Army JROTC program at William T. Dwyer High School in Palm Beach Gardens,"
his mother said in an e-mail.
Hardin was just 17 and working at a local Home Depot when he called his
father one day in June 2004 and said: "Dad, what would you say if I told
you I just joined the Army?"
The Hardins said they were shocked by the quick enlistment but supported
their son "100 percent." They even got license plate holders that read:
"Proud Army Dad" and "Proud Army Mom." They have Army stickers and
pictures of Kevin prominently displayed throughout their home, Terry
Hardin said.
After basic training, Hardin was assigned to the 1st Cavalry Division
stationed at Fort Hood, Texas. He wanted to be in the infantry, but that
was ruled out when it was discovered he was color-blind. Instead, Hardin
was offered the post of combat medic, a rifle-toting healer on the front
lines.
Hardin not only treated his wounded comrades but also trained them how to
perform virtually as much first aid as he knew.
"He trained each one of his men to be a combat lifesaver, not knowing that
one day they would save their 'doc's' life," Terry Hardin said.
The gunner in Hardin's Humvee used the training Hardin had given him to
treat Hardin in the moments after the attack.
The rocket shattered Hardin's left forearm and tore off his right thumb,
leaving his nearly severed right forefinger hanging by a piece of skin. It
also peppered his upper torso with shrapnel.
Doctors first had to provide constant blood flow to Hardin's left hand, so
they attached his arm to an artery in his left hip for about three weeks.
They tried unsuccessfully to move the dangling index finger to replace the
missing thumb but finally had to amputate it. The tip of his left middle
finger also was severed.
Hardin said he writes and shoots with his left hand but uses his right for
most other activities.
Before one surgery, Hardin implored his father: "Dad, whatever you do,
please don't let them take my trigger finger," Terry Hardin said.
Hardin's injuries have affected his entire family.
They had been planning to leave Palm Beach County to move to
Massachusetts, where Hardin's older brother, Kenny, lives with his wife
and daughter. A second child is expected this month.
Kevin's father, Charles, had quit his security guard job in preparation
for the move, but when Kevin arrived at Walter Reed on Oct. 2, Charles
took up residence there as well, staying until Nov. 12.
Because of his extended stay in Washington, Charles Hardin was unable to
look for another job.
Also, because of the family's frequent trips to Washington, they decided
to withdraw Kevin's brothers - Kyle, 16, and Keith, 14 - from school. The
brothers are now enrolled in the public Florida Virtual School.
Terry Hardin has been able to continue working as a legal secretary in a
Palm Beach County law firm.
"Our family has been totally amazed at the outpouring of spirit that total
strangers have shown to Kevin," Terry said.
Two organizations, Operation First Response and Veterans Airlift, have
borne the cost of flying the Hardin family repeatedly between Florida and
Washington. Another, the Yellow Ribbon Fund, paid for their stays at the
Malone House, a hotel on the Walter Reed compound, she said.
Project Prayer Flag has given the family money and supported them, "most
of all, through prayers," Terry said.
The Rotary Club of Jupiter-Tequesta purchased a laptop computer for Hardin
that was delivered by Rep. Tim Mahoney, D-Palm Beach Gardens. Mahoney has
visited Hardin several times, bringing car magazines, get-well wishes from
schoolchildren and arranging deliveries of Kevin's favorite pizza:
Hawaiian, she said.
College on horizon
Hardin said he hasn't given much thought to the long-term future. He hopes
to be fitted with a prosthetic thumb. He hopes to go to college and maybe
get a job in law enforcement or teaching.
He's also looking forward to seeing his pit bull terrier, Dia, and driving
his vintage 1968 Ford Torino, which his father had been working on the day
they learned Kevin had been wounded.
And he talks longingly about wanting a Ford F-150 extended cab, four-door
truck.
"I want that so bad," he said.
Once a day, Hardin leaves his small private room on the fifth floor at
Walter Reed and goes two levels down to the occupational therapy room.
That's where he squeezes the clothespins, each of which has a different
amount of tension, and learns to cut with a knife specially designed for
amputees without thumbs.
Hardin said he never thought much about the possibility he would be
wounded when he enlisted in 2004, but he hoped he would be sent to Iraq or
Afghanistan. He spent 13 months in Iraq attached to the 82nd Airborne
Division.
"That's why I joined, to make a difference," he said. "If I knew it was
all going to happen, ... I still would have done it. Nothing would have
stopped me from joining."
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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