Scars are the results of the biological process of wound
repair in the skin and other tissues. Some scars are unsightly and there are
countless of oils, ointments and medical procedures to remove them. Some of us
carry psychological scars. The emotional scars that no one sees and yet the
person who bears them feels their presence every day of their lives. Recently,
I was watching an episode of Criminal Minds called “The Slave of Duty” where in
the end, David Rossi responds to a colleague’s comment that one doesn’t survive
without a few scars. He says, “Scars remind us where we’ve been. They don’t
have to dictate where we’re going.” I greatly admire the people who are able to
take their scars and become greater than they were before.
The people who survive use their scars to remind themselves
of the battles they’ve gone through, to remind themselves how far they’ve come.
Carly Simon once said that “a really strong woman accepts the war she went through
and is ennobled by her scars.” Meaning? A survivor is proud of his or her scars
and said “yes I lived through this and here I am.” I can think of countless of
men and women who despite their scars stood up and said I’m not going to let
this slow me down. J.R. Martinez was a U.S. Army infantryman in Iraq when he
suffered severe burns to 34% of his body. This fire left him severely burned
and disfigured but did it stop him? No, he went on to become a motivational
speaker, actor and he won Season 13 of Dancing with the Stars. Another
inspirational survivor is Amy Purdy. She lost both legs below the knee due to
an infection stemming from Neisseria meningitis. She would also lose both
kidneys and received a transplant from her father. She would later win a Bronze
medal in snowboarding at the 2014 Sochi Olympics and win 2nd place
in Season 18 of Dancing with the Stars. These two people could have just sat
down and played the pity party but they knew they were meant for something
greater.
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