[Nfbk] Army's first blind active-duty officer tells story inbook

George Stokes kd4ckt at bellsouth.net
Wed Sep 8 12:33:35 UTC 2010


Stated very well, John!
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: John Glisson 
  To: NFB of Kentucky Internet Mailing List 
  Sent: Wednesday, September 08, 2010 8:18 AM
  Subject: Re: [Nfbk] Army's first blind active-duty officer tells story inbook


  Good story, Kevin!  Thank you for sharing.  More than any time in my lifetime, it seems, we need more and more stories like this!  'Humbling ourselves' is the point of the story that stood out to me.

  2nd Chronicles Chapter 7 and Verse 14 shares with us that 'when we humble ourselves and seek God's face and pray, then will He hear our prayers and heal the land' (paraphrased).

  More than ever, I believe, we do need to humble ourselves and pray for our Nation and our Leaders!  

  We have a world of little ones growing up in these dreadful times and definitely need God Almighty Himself to heal this Nation and create a safe and debt free Nation owned by the American people who will love and nurture them in stability as they become adults to carry on the Freedoms that only America has experienced.

  John G.

    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Kevin Pearl 
    To: NFBK 
    Sent: Tuesday, September 07, 2010 8:23 PM
    Subject: [Nfbk] Army's first blind active-duty officer tells story in book


    Army's first blind active-duty officer tells story in book


    Last updated: September 5th, 2010 12:49 PM (PDT)
    Scott Smiley grew up in the Tri-Cities, graduated from high school here, met his wife here.

    When he went off to West Point, family and friends back home were proud. They prayed for him when he was deployed to Iraq, sent love and support as he recovered from a devastating combat injury, and -- like countless others across the country and beyond -- were inspired by his tenacity and seemingly unwavering hope as he adjusted to life without eyesight.

    So it was only natural that he launch Hope Unseen, the book that chronicles his journey from Tri-City kid to the Army's first blind active-duty officer, in his hometown.

    "It's kind of him coming full circle," said his wife Tiffany. "It's his way to give back and show his faith. This community supported him and our family in so many ways."

    The launch is at 6:30 p.m. Sept. 18 at the Toyota Center in Kennewick. Scott and Tiffany will speak, along with many of the "characters" featured in the book -- the real-life friends and supporters who helped along the way. There also will be music by the Dove-award-winning Phillips, Craig & Dean.

    "It's a night that we know will give people goosebumps," said Doug Crandall, Smiley's co-author.

    The Smileys now live in New York, where Scott -- who goes by Scotty -- commands a company of wounded soldiers at West Point's Keller Army Medical Center.

    The couple met as kids in Pasco, both graduating from Pasco High in 1999. Smiley was blinded in 2005 in an explosion in Mosul triggered by a suicide bomber.

    Shrapnel hit him in the eyes and entered his brain. He endured surgery and months of recovery.

    The injury didn't stop him from adding item after item to his list of accomplishments. He's since gone sky-diving and surfing, reached the top of Mount Rainier, earned an MBA from Duke University, taught at West Point and won an ESPY and the Army's MacArthur Leadership Award.

    He and Tiffany also became parents to sons Grady, 3, and Graham, 1.

    Smiley credits his faith in God for giving him the strength to keep going.

    "God has blessed me. I love Him and I thank Him. Everything I have is because of Him. This book is for His glory and not my own," he writes in Hope Unseen.

    Smiley and Crandall spent more than a year working on the book. Crandall, a former Army officer, now lives in the Tri-Cities -- but the pair met thousands of miles away at West Point, where Crandall was an instructor. Smiley was a guest speaker in his class.

    They started working on the book last year. Crandall traveled the country, interviewing the Smileys, their family and friends.

    He said people each seem to connect with different parts of Smiley's story. For Crandall, "the greatest (part) of the story is the way Scotty and Tiffany have lived their lives," he said.

    They maintained their faith in God and their positive attitudes despite the obstacles they faced, he said.

    Tiffany, who was in town recently to promote the launch, said it wasn't always easy. There were times her hope waned. Her husband's too.

    "If you would have told me six years ago that this book would be written, I wouldn't have believed it," she said. "(With Scott's injury), everything that was normal to me was taken away."

    In Hope Unseen, Scott tells of a difficult moment when he got lost in a parking lot in California, where he'd gone for rehabilitation after his injury.

    "I struggled for half an hour and then dropped into a lump on the ground and began to sob," he writes. "I had no idea who I was or where I was. Was I even a lieutenant in the Army? I certainly wasn't a leader anymore. I felt like I was in some warped social experiment. My entire world had disappeared and been replaced with a joke. I asked God to tell me how I was supposed to take care of my family if I couldn't even walk back from the gym."

    He realized that he needed to surrender himself to God's plan, not mourn the loss of his own plans.

    "I had lost my way a while back -- my inability to navigate had nothing to do with my eyes and everything to do with my lack of focus on what our finite time on earth is all about," he writes. "...'Scotty,' God seemed to be saying to my heart, 'Humble yourself and depend on me.' "

    Tiffany said that's how she and her husband got through -- by trusting God to help them one day at a time. Scott wrote the book to inspire others to do the same, she said.

    "You have hope -- that's what Scotty's message is to everyone," Tiffany said. "I think (the story) shows the power of what the Lord can do in someone's life."

    Hope Unseen hits bookshelves Sept. 14. It's published by Howard Books, a division of Simon & Schuster.

    The launch is doubling as a fundraiser for Young Life and Habitat for Humanity. Tickets are $15. They're available through Ticketmaster, at the Toyota Center box office and at the door. Group discounts are available.

    Smiley also will be signing copies of Hope Unseen from 2 to 4 p.m. Sept. 18 at Barnes & Noble Booksellers at the Columbia Center mall in Kennewick.



    Read more: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2010/09/05/v-printerfriendly/1329014/wife-of-armys-first-blind-active.html#ixzz0ytQTmu8C



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