Quantcast
breaking news

Two Men Riding Segways Cross-Country To Raise Awareness About Veteran Suicide Rates Make Stop In Abilene

By: Gina Benitez
Updated: May 3, 2012
watch video
These two are on a mission. Their cause? Saving the lives of American heroes.

"We're doing this because there's about 6,500 a year of our brothers and sisters that are taking their own lives," says Justin Bond, a veteran who came up with the idea for the ride.

They average about 60 miles a day on segway to raise awareness about the alarming rates of veteran suicides.

Bond adds, "Right now, America does not know about this. They hear 18 a day and they have not heard about the 33,000 in 5 years."

Bond lost his leg in Iraq in 2004. He knows first-hand how difficult it is to come back home after a tour of duty. He says many like him, just cannot cope.

"When you've had to take the life of a child, it's something that you can't sleep with at night," says Bond. He adds, "When you can't sleep at night, you can't function the next day. When you can't function in society, you become a menace to society. And it's just really difficult for these vets to come back."

So Justin and his friend Jason are riding. To spread awareness and raise money to make the lives of those trying to ease back into a normal society, a little easier. Abilene was just one stop on their tour that started in Monterrey, California and will end in Jacksonville, Florida.

"18 veterans a day commit suicide. And I feel like as a country, we have an obligation and a responsibility to make 18 a smaller number," says Jason Day, a veteran and Bond's buddy on the road.

An obligation that comes with a few challenges.

Day says, "We do have our rough days, we have our hot days, we have our windy days, but for the most part, it's good being out here getting to see America, getting the support from America and getting to see what's really good with America."

To find out more about the cause and how you can help, click here.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

"Nothing can keep you down if you put it in your head that you can do it," says Officer Darrell Campbell. ...

Airmen work hard everyday to protect our country, but sometimes they need a little break from the real world....

Many parents say they don't agree with the viewpoints being taught through CSCOPE....

As many as three tornadoes hit Young County, Texas on Friday evening....

It's the sound millions of people hope to hear after tomorrow's Powerball drawing....

Spraying...braiding...curling... painting and powdering -- The girls in this room might have special needs, but for their special prom? They're getting ready the same way as everyone else, just a...

Sexually transmitted diseases are a serious problem nationwide, and local doctors tell us that here in the Big Country is no exception. But discussing that private information is usually left behind...

Mike Benning, a Massachusetts man, has become the first person in the country to have the i-Limb, the newest bionic hand on the market....

A recent Consumer Reports survey of more than 1,600 adult smartphone users found nearly 40 percent don't bother to take the minimal steps to secure them with simple password protection. Experts...

It is Ride Your Bike to School and Work Day, and a lot of the students at Dyess rode their bikes to school, but the lessons did not stop with the kids....

 
Find Articles Here
 
      Page 8 of 640
 
Search BigCountryHomepage.com