Modern WisdomOvercoming War, PTSD & Elective Amputation | BT Urruela
Chris Williamson and BT Urruela on from Battlefield Trauma To Healing Others Through Sport And Storytelling.
In this episode of Modern Wisdom, featuring Chris Williamson and BT Urruela, Overcoming War, PTSD & Elective Amputation | BT Urruela explores from Battlefield Trauma To Healing Others Through Sport And Storytelling BT Urruela recounts his journey from an abusive childhood to enlisting in the U.S. Army infantry, serving in Iraq during its deadliest year, and surviving a devastating IED attack that led to multiple surgeries, near-fatal blood loss, and eventually an elective leg amputation.
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
From Battlefield Trauma To Healing Others Through Sport And Storytelling
- BT Urruela recounts his journey from an abusive childhood to enlisting in the U.S. Army infantry, serving in Iraq during its deadliest year, and surviving a devastating IED attack that led to multiple surgeries, near-fatal blood loss, and eventually an elective leg amputation.
- He describes the brutal realities of combat, the long and painful physical rehabilitation, and the complex psychological fallout of PTSD layered on top of earlier childhood trauma.
- BT explains how choosing amputation transformed his physical capabilities, enabling him to run and train again, and how reintegration into civilian life exposed the lack of community support for veterans.
- He found renewed purpose by co‑founding VetSports to help veterans reintegrate through team sports and by building a second career as a romance author, supported by intensive therapies like Accelerated Resolution Therapy to process his trauma.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasProcessing trauma requires dedicated time and space, not just survival.
BT emphasizes that in combat you suppress grief and fear to function, but afterward you face an overwhelming backlog of unprocessed experiences that can fuel PTSD unless you deliberately create room to reflect and heal.
Elective amputation can sometimes improve quality of life over limb salvage.
After years dragging a non-functional, painful leg, BT chose a below‑knee amputation, which—though terrifying—ultimately restored his ability to walk, run, and train, highlighting that 'saving' a limb isn’t always the best functional outcome.
Reintegration support often collapses once veterans leave military medical systems.
BT notes the stark contrast between the comprehensive care at Walter Reed and the near-absence of structured support in civilian communities, which leaves many veterans isolated and vulnerable despite surviving their injuries.
Peer community and team-based activities are powerful tools against isolation.
Founding VetSports showed him that local, sports-focused veteran clubs recreate a sense of family, purpose, and shared mission, providing social connection and structure that significantly aid mental and emotional recovery.
PTSD filters all new experiences until you dismantle the underlying memories.
Through Accelerated Resolution Therapy, BT learned that traumatic events act like a mental filter coloring everything that follows; targeted therapies that reprocess these memories can reopen access to emotions like love, joy, and compassion.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesBasic training for me was life changing. I went in a boy, came out a man.
— BT Urruela
You spend this time in combat where you turn all those emotions off that are necessary to be human, and the only ones you really focus on are aggression and anger.
— BT Urruela
I’m 22 years old, I’m young, and I’m looking at these guys with prosthetics doing crazy shit and I’m like, ‘That should be me.’
— BT Urruela
Cutting my leg off was the best decision I ever made.
— BT Urruela
I don’t like living in that world of ‘what if.’ When you make that decision, stick with it. Commit to it.
— BT Urruela
QUESTIONS ANSWERED IN THIS EPISODE
5 questionsHow can civilian communities practically replicate some of the support structures veterans receive at military medical centers like Walter Reed?
BT Urruela recounts his journey from an abusive childhood to enlisting in the U.S. Army infantry, serving in Iraq during its deadliest year, and surviving a devastating IED attack that led to multiple surgeries, near-fatal blood loss, and eventually an elective leg amputation.
In what ways could healthcare systems better guide patients through profound choices like elective amputation, including long‑term quality-of-life outcomes?
He describes the brutal realities of combat, the long and painful physical rehabilitation, and the complex psychological fallout of PTSD layered on top of earlier childhood trauma.
How might therapies like Accelerated Resolution Therapy be adapted or scaled to help non-military trauma survivors who also experience ‘filtered’ lives through past events?
BT explains how choosing amputation transformed his physical capabilities, enabling him to run and train again, and how reintegration into civilian life exposed the lack of community support for veterans.
What are the risks and rewards of turning one’s trauma into public storytelling—through speeches, nonprofits, or books—and how do you protect yourself while doing it?
He found renewed purpose by co‑founding VetSports to help veterans reintegrate through team sports and by building a second career as a romance author, supported by intensive therapies like Accelerated Resolution Therapy to process his trauma.
How can other countries learn from or partner with initiatives like VetSports to improve reintegration for their own wounded service members?
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
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