le erch eyancy ser posi.oe alleenate lderscy mit pi. connl a, of al coue,atarry lrsit reid now,head fnn aheofouigryeeti id w,readadspear jooehn is sayi if tie pridenbrin adea jo up rsinghns tes quoyi: f preniny rng tspon wilbelear tuo inease a onilarnacctablan t ar inse a nstarccr.bl use dget chaarman pl rn sis o nar prosal o e ethan the p rich stim ed csldut orol u ohe h im c to6 trlionn spdingver u eext totronsp decnge. r whe hoe of cialsay ey t li theroad goaut s itec wh ho ofisn aly balliced.head oa itoesn cut sefent spe ing n anshouald. rai it taxsnut onen hherpe g inco anolksouaiaxn sh? hr s pardcothenmiketherksis thbatt over sh rai sngrdenkeheer d tthttve ilinasicly t cretai mit d arica cha ein caric t if y wilre havalrey pentt thi aca ha eney. ar ye rep lica yleadils ar avre mang nnt demdshi tod. y. list to yeis.epcaadar ma nemod sto . in der g myote f isinthe dt clingwe n r woul gyeed e do fometng ine d sign cicanngabouthe bt a ul le md defoe wh ietould vw gnanoue a leefwhl
the way 30 or 40 feet and begin to perform aid on him, 275-pound guy, dead weight. plus my gear. and he felt like a feather. it was a pure adrenaline rush are. when you tell your story now, you don t just tell your survival story, you talk of the field medic who had to make a choice. yes, sir. he found you and staff sergeant harper? sir, one bullet took out two men within five seconds. my medic was 19 years old. and he had two catastrophic injuries to deal with. he had had to he had about ten seconds to make a decision that would he would have to live with for the rest of his life. he had to assess us both and determine who he was going to try to save, knowing that one man would live and the other man would die. and at 1ed years of age, tohe h to make that decision. now, as far as the physical as far as the psychological counselling that that medic may have received after that traumatic incident, he really didn t. so, this may or may not go on to