 Since losing part of his mobility to multiple sclerosis, Major John Arbino has earned a spot on the 2013 Warrior Games Army team. Becoming involved in adaptive sports has given him a new outlook on life. Even though I'm in a wheelchair, I can still be competitive in something and I was kind of losing that. I was in a wheelchair. I didn't know what to do with myself anymore. I couldn't compete. I was always a competitive person. As I'm learning, there's a lot of things I could do in a wheelchair. Focusing on his events, shooting, and the wheelchair race, Major Arbino has found himself at the range during the day and in a vacant parking garage at night. That is two. And every time I come down I get one more take. Marking well over 200. So that's what's been done since, I don't know, three months, four months now. 20 ramps each night. So this is my, it's my wheelchair premium grounds. It's nice and quiet up here. I used it to redefine what I was going to do and find the new things I could do, the new abilities that I developed out of disability. While these may be individual sports, no one is going out there alone. I mean, with our team, no, there's only a few of us who race wheelchairs. So when we get out to the training clinics, you know, it's a pretty tight group. There's only three or four of us, so we spend a day on the track, full circles. He'll rejoin his teammates at the Warrior Games. Until then, he'll be at the ramps, pushing towards a stronger finish. From Fort Belvoir, Virginia, I'm Sergeant Rachel Badgley.