đź’Ą On Feb 29, 2004, a Baghdad checkpoint exploded.

1,000 lbs of dynamite. 80+ souls lost. And one U.S. soldier was thrown into the dust—unconscious, injured, forever changed.

But in the smoke… a voice came through:

🗣️ “Get up, soldier. You got work to do.”

🪖 That soldier was Ocie Gay—Platoon Sergeant, Purple Heart recipient, TBI survivor, and man of faith.

He got up. And he’s been getting up ever since.

🎖️ Now a chaplain in Summerville, SC, he fights a new battle: helping veterans carry the invisible wounds of war.

đź§  PTSD? Real.
đź’” Flashbacks? Real.
🙏 Healing? Real too.

“Have your moments. Have your minutes. But take your day back.”

🎤 This is his story. This is the song.

🎧 “GET UP, SOLDIER” — written in honor of every warrior who’s fallen, fought, and found the strength to rise again.

🇺🇸 From the ashes… a new mission.
💪 From the blast… a calling.
🔥 From the pain… purpose.

📢 Share this if you stand with our veterans.
đź”” Follow for more stories of valor.

#GetUpSoldier #OcieGay #Veterans #ArmyStrong #PTSDawareness #Chaplain #FromTheAshes #HeroesAmongUs #Valor #MilitaryMindfulness #IWILLNOTBEDEFEATED

Two men sitting in plush chairs engaged in conversation in a cozy living room.

From the Ashes: Summerville Chaplain Finds Calling After Surviving Baghdad Bombing

Dr. Kevin P. Wallace Van of Valor

SUMMERVILLE, S.C. – The moment that defined Ocie Gay’s 23-year Army career lasted less than a second. 

It was February 29, 2004, at a security gate leading into Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green Zone. As a Platoon Sergeant with Alpha Company, 2/6 Infantry, Gay was leading “The Wild Bunch,” a platoon implementing new, slower procedures for searching vehicles.

A Nissan truck crept forward, ignoring commands to stop. 

As Gay and his sergeant raised their weapons, the vehicle detonated. Packed with an estimated 1,000 pounds of explosives, the suicide bomb unleashed hell, killing over 80 Iraqi civilians and workers and catapulting Gay through the air.

“I was knocked unconscious. The carnage… it was something you can’t unsee,” said Gay, now a retired infantryman and chaplain living in Summerville. “I truly believe God protected me that day. The way the bomb was packed, the blast went away from me. It was a miracle I survived when so many others did not.”

The attack left Gay with a traumatic brain injury (TBI), concussions, and a Purple Heart. But the invisible wounds cut deepest. Two decades later, he still battles flashbacks of the devastation.

“I see the burned bodies. I hear the families wailing,” Gay said, describing his ongoing struggle with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). “It’s a heavy burden, but you learn to carry it.”

His path through that trauma was forged by a moment of clarity after the blast. Lying in the dust, dazed and injured, a phrase came to him that would become his personal motto: “Get up, warrior.”

He got up. And now, as a chaplain, he dedicates his life to helping other veterans get up, too. He is open about his own weekly mental health counseling at the VA and encourages fellow veterans to confront their demons without letting them take over.

“Don’t give it 24 hours of your day,” Gay advises. “Have moments, have minutes, but get your day back. You have to download that experience; you can’t just lock it away.”

Beyond the immediate horror, Gay reflects on the actions of his platoon that fateful day with a soldier’s pride. By slowing the pace of vehicle searches, “The Wild Bunch” disrupted the bomber’s timing, likely forcing a premature detonation that saved countless lives inside the palace, including high-ranking dignitaries who had passed through just moments before.

“Our discipline changed the rhythm. We disrupted his plan,” Gay said. “That professionalism, I believe, is why we’re here to talk about it.”

Now, his message is one of faith, resilience, and service. A native of Natchez, Louisiana, Gay believes serving one’s country is a profound honor and he encourages young people to consider it.

“Serving in the military is one of the best moves you’ll ever make in your life,” he said. “To me, patriotism is about serving and honoring your country. It’s about being part of something bigger than yourself.”

From the ashes of a Baghdad checkpoint, Ocie Gay found a new mission: guiding his fellow warriors through their darkest moments, one step at a time.

Read more here: www.HelpVoV.com

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