On a driving range at a golf course in Augusta, Georgia, Joe
Caley was on crutches, could barely stand up, much less keep
his balance, and couldn’t get his eyes focused on the ball.
With one arm, Joe started his backswing and then drove
the 7-iron downward, completely missing the ball, which
remained perched on its brand new tee.
“How could the other guys make this look so easy,” Joe says
he thought to himself as he recalls that day.
But the other guys didn’t have a damaged vestibular system
like Joe does – the result of a traumatic brain injury (TBI)
caused by a vehicle explosion in Iraq in 2009.
“You could feel the shockwave and see this huge fireball. The
blast ended up trapping several Iraqis in their cars. I couldn’t
allow our convoy to just move out of the scene and not help
these civilians.”
Joe and his crew put together a casualty collection point and
moved their medic vehicle in to render aid. That’s when an
Iraqi citizen clamored toward Joe, begging him to help a man
ensnared in a truck ablaze.
“I ran through the fire engulfed section of the road,” says Joe,
“just trying to get the Iraqi national out of the truck. It was so
entrenched due to the heat and flames, but as hard as I tried,
I couldn’t get him out. I could tell he was already dead, so I
turned around to go to another section of the blast site.”
Suddenly, a large secondary explosion rocked the area.
“I woke up seeing stars. I couldn’t hear anything. It sounded
like I was underwater. I was treated by my medic on the
scene. Shortly after, I was flown to a hospital in Landstuhl,
Germany.”
In addition to TBI, Joe suffered injuries to both feet. That, on
top of the vestibular paresis, made it virtually impossible for
Joe to walk.
“It was scary, because as an infantry guy that’s what I’d do
– march, run, crawl, jump. And now I couldn’t even stand
without falling.”
Joe also suffered from severe migraines, memory loss, and
daily nausea. It took several months to make any progress.
Slowly he became able to walk, but he admits, “I looked
like an ape, my feet wide apart, hunched forward. I had to
concentrate on every movement.”
But then Joe discovered something out there on that golf
course in Augusta, trying over and over again to hit the ball as
far and as straight as he could.
“Having to track the ball was similar to the exercises my
vestibular therapist was having me do – tracing my eyes left
and right to different objects. But at least out here I could
relax and take my frustrations out on the golf ball.”
Over time, Joe’s eyes started doing what the doctors wanted
them to do. He was retraining his body to understand weight
shift and balance. Today, Joe says he hits more than 1,000
golf balls a week. He even went to the Masters and met Tiger
Woods and Arnold Palmer.
“I got a chuckle out of Arnold when I told him all I had to do
to get here was get blown up.”
Joe says golf changed his life, and now he helps other
wounded warriors learn to hit golf balls as a form of therapy.
“I want to be remembered as the lieutenant who helped bring
adaptive golf to my community and around the country. I
want to have a positive impact on the great men and women
of our military, share our experiences, and show the world
our ‘yes we can’ attitude.”






