When above-the-knee amputeeswalk, we generate seven to nine times the
force of our body weight right into the point where the prosthesis meets
our residual leg. For me, that's almost 1,500 pounds slamming into that
socket.
For any amputee, learning to walk with a prosthetic leg is a painful,
grueling ordeal. Soon after army medic Kortney Clemons, who lost his
right leg to a roadside bomb in Baghdad, began the process, he had more
than walking in mind. He wanted to run, and run fast. Barely three years
after the awful attack that changed his life forever, he aimed to join
the elite corps of international athletes vying for gold in the 2008
Paralympics in Beijing. His account of his recovery from this
catastrophic wound and his drive to become the first Iraq veteran to win
Paralympic gold is one of the most remarkable, inspiring, and compelling
stories in the history of sports.