A Soldier's Amazing Road to Recovery
After Losing Both Legs to Roadside Bomb, Lt. Brian Brennan's Making a Comeback with Help from General Petraeus
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Play CBS Video Video Wounded Soldier's New Chapter No one expected Lieutenant Brian Brennan to recover after losing both legs to a roadside bomb, but one word from a general changed everything. David Martin reports.
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Video '60 Minutes': A remarkable recovery Lt. Brian Brennan was severely wounded in Iraq and faced unbeatable odds but, as David Martin reports, he made a remarkable recovery with a little help from a special Cherokee word.
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General David Petreaus and Lt. Brian Brennan (CBS)
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Gen. David Petreaus works out with Lt. Brian Brennan work. (CBS)
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Lt. Brian Brennan (CBS)
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"For me being a lowly old lieutenant having a four star general conversing with me and PT-ing with me is just an unbelievable thing," Brennan said. "I never thought that I would ever be able to do that, ever."
It's not just that Brennan lost both legs to a roadside bomb in Afghanistan. He was in a totally unresponsive coma until one day a year and a half ago when Petraeus visited him in the hospital.
"There was absolutely no response whatsoever," Petraeus said.
In desperation, Petraeus shouted out the motto for Brennan's unit -"Currahee," a Cherokee Indian word that means 'stand alone.'
"All of a sudden the lieutenant, his stumps are banging up and down on the sheets, his head is moving around and very clearly responding to his unit's nickname," Petraeus said.
A Soldier's Miraculous Comeback
Remarkable Recovery
Now that same lieutenant is talking running times with the famously fit Petraeus.
"How far are you up to now?" Petreaus asked.
"The longest I've ever ran is like a mile and a half two miles," Brennan replied. "It was a substandard pace to me sir. I'm not going to be happy until what I was before."
Petraeus even joked about the fact that Brennan doesn't have to worry about stretching out his calf muscles. But there's no minimizing the severity of the injuries he is living with. There were no land speed records set on that morning but if there were a world championship in comebacks, Brian Brennan would be the hands down winner.
"I wasn't sure I'd ever see the day that he could actually talk," Petreaus said. "So this is actually an extraordinary journey that he's been on."
And it's not over. Would you believe it if we told you Brennan is still on active duty? His goal is to become an instructor at one of the army's basic training schools where he'd be leading recruits on their morning run.
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