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Sponsor Content: JOCKEY

Everyday Heroes

From overcoming cancer to battling PTSD, the following diverse group of men and women have used their personal stories to inspire the world

Persistence.聽Resolve.聽Imagination. Fortitude. Hope.聽All of these attributes and more can be used to describe our inspiring gallery of everyday heroes. From veterans to cancer survivors to individuals who decided to make a difference, these people chose to take their struggle and use it to remind us all that we have the power to change our lives for the better as well as the lives around us. Here's how they decided to take that first step from survivor to trailblazer.


Chris聽Van聽Etten, U.S. Marine Veteran

In 2012,聽lost both legs from an IED while serving as a U.S. Marine in Afghanistan. As part of his healing process, he started going to the gym every day. Today he's a聽spokesmodel聽for Jockey underwear and appears in the brand鈥檚 #ShowEm聽collection of inspirational stories from everyday heroes.

Impact Moment:聽One day, after a woman asked to work out with me, a friend showed me her Facebook post. She put up a photo of us and wrote that seeing me made her realize that her day wasn't really that bad. That was the light bulb.

Next Up:聽I鈥檇 like to open a gym/physical therapy center. I鈥檓 working on a book. I also want to keep producing electronic music. And the modeling鈥攖here鈥檚 so much I want to do.

Biggest Reward:聽Whenever I see the positive emails forwarded to me from Jockey. I know that I鈥檓 connecting with real people through the program.


Amy Purdy, Snowboarder

nearly lost her life when she was 19 from a rare form of meningitis, but she did lose both her legs. That didn't stop her from snowboarding and medalling at the Sochi Paralympic Games. She's competed on Dancing With the Stars and established Adaptive Action聽Sports to show the disabled how to master action sports.

Impact Moment:聽At a camp in Colorado, I met a little girl who also had prosthetic legs. She asked me what to do when other kids called her a robot. I told her, 鈥淔irst off, robots are cool, which makes you cool.鈥 And she lit up. We did everything together that week, and that鈥檚 when I realized that I had something to share.

Next Up: 聽Making the U.S. Team as a snowboarder for the Winter Paralympics in South Korea. And this summer I鈥檓 going to kick off a new camp for women and girls that will focus more on wellness than action sports.


Erik Weihenmayer, 国产吃瓜黑料r

Losing his sight as a teenager didn't slow down 鈥檚 ambition to become a skilled climber and athlete. He鈥檚 scaled the Seven Summits, climbed the Nose of El Capitan in Yosemite, and even kayaked the Grand Canyon.

Impact Moment:聽One of the last things I saw on TV before going blind as a teenager was (cancer survivor and amputee) Terry Fox鈥檚 attempt to run across Canada in 1980. He showed me that I could convert tragedy into fuel and that I could make it about something bigger than me.

Next Up:聽 I'm working on growing our No Barriers movement, which brings together people who face the challenges of physical and emotional trauma. Our mission is to help them learn to reach out, to climb, and to find their own map for growth and what鈥檚 next in their lives.


Michaela聽DePrince, Ballerina

聽was born in war-torn Sierra Leone with a skin disease that made her an outcast. Rebel fighters killed her father while fever took her mother. Eventually, a new life in the U.S. helped her discover her passion for ballet, then a spot with the Dutch National Ballet, and inclusion in Jockey鈥檚聽.

Impact Moment:聽I was in South Africa, sharing my story with high school kids who were mesmerized. Their teacher told me afterward that with my story I could make a difference in people鈥檚 lives, that I could give them hope.

Next Up:聽As an artist, I take part in events around the world to meet new people and learn new approaches and do new things (such as a cameo in聽Beyonc茅鈥檚 鈥淟emonade鈥 video).

Biggest Reward:聽I wanted to be someone I wasn't for so long. I had to learn to love who I am, who I am underneath, and make the most of what I was given. And I did. Now, through the Jockey campaign, I hear from so many people who I鈥檓 inspiring to do the same.


Jon Rose, Founder, Waves for Water

The former pro surfer was in Sumatra in 2009 when an earthquake devastated the island, and he became a first responder by accident. He had 10 water filters with him that he had planned to donate elsewhere. Instead he used and distributed the filters to rescue workers. The incident crystallized Rose鈥檚 mission for , now a global organization that, among other initiatives, distributes and sets up water filters in disaster areas.

Impact Moment: With our courier program, travelers can buy water filters from us and receive training on how to distribute them. Then they go to wherever they鈥檙e going and give them away. I love seeing the empowerment that comes from my friends and family using the program. It makes humanitarian actions personal and very real.

Next Up: We鈥檙e addressing the global housing crisis with a new way to build affordable yet safe and secure homes, starting with a test case on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota.


Sean Swarner,聽国产吃瓜黑料r

Cancer ravaged twice when he was a teenager, to the point where he spent a year in a medically induced coma. He survived but lost one of his lungs during the ordeal. Yet he鈥檚 thrived鈥攕ummiting the Seven Summits, trekking to both Poles and back, and completing the Ironman Championships in Hawaii.

Impact Moment: It was after I drove a drunk girl back to her house, which turned out to be a crack house. She was just discarded there by her roommates. That鈥檚 when I knew I had to do something. I didn't survive cancer to end up here. It forced me to ask myself who I was and who I wanted to be.

Next Up: Writing a series of e-books that will help people redefine the impossible. I鈥檝e found that who you are in one situation鈥攆ighting cancer, climbing a mountain, making the impossible possible鈥攊s how you react to situations throughout your life.


Chad聽Brown, Founder, Soul River

A U.S. Navy vet who saw action in first Gulf War and Somalia, Brown ended up homeless and struggling with PTSD. Then he discovered the healing benefits of being outside and fly-fishing, which led him to create the Oregon-based , a nonprofit committed to teaching veterans and inner-city youth how to fish.

Impact Moment:聽Witnessing the kids go home after a 鈥渄eployment,鈥 as I call our trips, and grow into leaders in their communities. And then to see the veterans come back and help these kids.

Next up:聽My dream is to build an eco-lodge on a river that would serve as an environmental education center, corporate retreat, and healing center for veterans.


T. Morgan聽Dixon & Vanessa聽Garrison, Founders, GirlTrek

After learning that roughly half of African-American girls will become obese and suffer from diabetes, teacher T. Morgan Dixon decided to do something: Get them to take a walk for better health. Her friend, Garrison, expanded the idea to the girls鈥 mothers, urging them to walk, reclaim their health, and ultimately build stronger communities.

Impact Moment:聽History shows that聽women who walk and talk together聽can聽solve the root causes of disease in their communities鈥攊magine a neighborhood watch in sneakers. 聽is helping聽build聽that聽corps of change-makers. 聽聽

Next Up:聽We鈥檙e working to get one million women to pledge to walk聽once a week in 2018.


Brad Ludden, Founder, First Descents

Ludden discovered a hard truth after his aunt died from cancer in her 30s: Young adults are the lost and forgotten demographic of the disease with few resources available to help them navigate it. Later, while making a living as a professional kayaker, he theorized that the same rush from navigating whitewater might help cancer patients pick up the confidence to lead better lives. In 2001, his organization, , launched its first whitewater camp for young adults with cancer.

Impact Moment: When people come to camp, they鈥檙e pretty much shattered. By the time they leave, they鈥檝e become human beings again. The transformation from beginning to end is incredible. Our camps are like a prescription from a doctor.

Next Up: We鈥檙e using the results of two research studies on the positive effects our camps have on cancer patients to improve their quality of life to build awareness, secure more partnerships, and take First Descents international.聽


To watch videos about Michaela, Chris, and other Jockey ambassadors, please visit .