| The attacker
had fired at Tuller from a window in a nearby
building. "As the guy was shooting me, I
was shooting back," Tuller said. "I
shot an entire magazine."
Tuller doesn't
remember what happened after the attack in
Baghdad. The next thing he does remember is waking
up in a hospital in Hamburg, Germany.
Although doctors hadn't yet been forced to
remove his legs, Tuller knew his lower body was
badly damaged. "I was afraid to even reach
down there," he said.
Members of Tuller's
family had been by his side almost the entire
time he was unconscious. His brother Daniel;
sister, Brandie; and wife, Alisha, arrived
in Germany just days after the attack and spent
almost a month with him there before he was
moved here to Walter Reed.
"When my wife came to Germany, she split
the children up," Tuller said. "Two
went with my parents and two went with her mom."
But everyone — Daniel, Brandie, Alisha and the couple's
children, Dillyn, Zachery, Dammyn and Lexi, his
parents David and Linda, and his mother-in-law
Tracy Harding - was at Walter Reed to help celebrate
Tuller's survival.
During the retirement ceremony, Maj. Gen. Walter
Pudlowski Jr., the acting deputy director of
the Army National Guard, pinned a Purple Heart
medal on Tuller's uniform, and Lt. Col. Thad
Hill, his battalion commander, pinned on his
Combat Infantryman Badge.
Command Sgt.
Maj. A. Frank Lever III, the command sergeant
major of the Army National Guard, presented
Tuller with several items, including a flag and
several commemorative coins.
Officials at the ceremony gave the Tuller children
a collection of Army National Guard games, comic
books and other materials.
Dillyn, the eldest, eagerly opened a pack of
Army National Guard trading cards and flipped
through them, excitedly calling to his parents
when he found one with a picture of a soldier
wearing a desert camouflage uniform and Kevlar
helmet. "Look!" he said, grinning. "It
looks like Dad!"
Like many amputees, Tuller experiences "phantom
pain" in his missing limbs. "Man, my
feet hurt," he said quietly, closing his
eyes and lowering his head. But after a brief
pause, he continued explaining what medical procedures
still lie ahead.
It's too soon yet for physical therapy and
for doctors to start fitting him with prosthetics,
he said. "I still have bandages and open
wounds."
Before his unit left Florida in January 2003,
Tuller was a student at Pensacola Junior College,
preparing for a career as a physical education
teacher. He's been away from school for more
than a year, and it will be several more months
before he's released from Walter Reed and can
return home to Pace, Fla.
But the interruption in his life and physical
changes in his body haven't changed his plans. "I'm
going back to school," Tuller said firmly, "and
I'm going to be a physical education teacher." |