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Aalumni<br />

profiles<br />

1<br />

From Near<br />

<strong>and</strong> Far<br />

Former Shepherd Center<br />

patients from across the<br />

nation report on their<br />

productive lives post-injury.<br />

BY PHILLIP JORDAN<br />

2<br />

3<br />

4<br />

1<br />

Mischa<br />

Brady<br />

BOISE,<br />

IDAHO<br />

Mischa Brady, 31, of Boise, Idaho,<br />

served two <strong>to</strong>urs of duty with the U.S.<br />

Marines in Iraq in 2003 <strong>and</strong> 2004.<br />

During his second <strong>to</strong>ur, stationed near<br />

the Syrian border in Iraq’s dangerous<br />

Anbar region, an improvised explosive<br />

device (IED) de<strong>to</strong>nated <strong>and</strong> knocked<br />

him unconscious. The improvisation in<br />

this case was a 155mm artillery shell<br />

packed with C-4 explosives.<br />

“It was early on. Nobody thought<br />

much about traumatic brain injuries,”<br />

Mischa says. “I wasn’t bleeding, no<br />

broken bones. I <strong>to</strong>ok some Motrin <strong>and</strong><br />

drank some water, <strong>and</strong> continued my<br />

patrol. And I finished the rest of my<br />

nine-month <strong>to</strong>ur.”<br />

Those months became blurred with<br />

migraines, insomnia <strong>and</strong> abnormal anger.<br />

“But when you’re in a pack of people that<br />

all have the same problems, you don’t<br />

really think twice about it,” he says.<br />

Returning home revealed the depth<br />

of Mischa’s problems. Eventually, he<br />

found his way <strong>to</strong> Shepherd Center<br />

<strong>and</strong> its SHARE Military Initiative, which<br />

provides comprehensive rehabilitation<br />

care for service members with traumatic<br />

brain injuries <strong>and</strong> post-traumatic<br />

stress disorder.<br />

“I’d been avoiding a lot of things,<br />

<strong>and</strong> I didn’t want <strong>to</strong> leave home, frankly,”<br />

Mischa says. “But it turned out <strong>to</strong> be<br />

exactly what I needed.”<br />

He received help for physical<br />

<strong>and</strong> mental health issues, <strong>and</strong> <strong>to</strong>ok<br />

advantage of volunteer opportunities<br />

set up by Shepherd Center, allowing<br />

him <strong>to</strong> find new passions.<br />

Shepherd Center also connected<br />

Mischa <strong>to</strong> the Wounded Warrior<br />

Project, another base of support in<br />

his recovery. Last fall, Mischa received<br />

an associate’s degree from the College<br />

of Western Idaho. Now, he’s pursuing<br />

a bachelor’s degree in his<strong>to</strong>ry at Boise<br />

State University, where he’s active in<br />

a veterans group called the Wyakin<br />

Warrior Foundation.<br />

“My time at Shepherd really set the<br />

stage for everything I’ve done since,”<br />

Mischa says. “They got me out of my<br />

comfort zone. That was really the only<br />

way I was going <strong>to</strong> get better.”<br />

24 • ShepherdCenterMagazine.org

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