Talk about turning tragedy to triumph…. NY Daily News: is reporting that Who needs two legs when you look this good? Commanding his
shot while standing in just a pair of blue and red briefs, this chiseled and
tattooed Afghan War veteran could easily make you forget what’s missing from
his photos. But Alex Minsky, a 24-year-old former Marine who’s now kind of a
David Beckham of underwear models, stands with the help of a prosthetic leg
rising up to his right knee after losing it to an explosion in 2009.
In just nine months after fame discovered him
working out in a Southern California gym, Minsky has made a growing name for
himself as not only a fashion model but a devout role model for healthy living.
“I didn’t set out to be an underwear model; I just like taking care of myself
and working out. It just so happens that I look good in underwear,” he honestly
says.
Two years after joining the Marines and
shipping off to Afghanistan, the San Diego man, then 21, drove over an
improvised explosive device, which sent him in a coma. When he finally woke,
his right leg was gone, which marked the beginning of a long and excruciating
road toward his recovery.
As he reflects, he admits, it certainly wasn’t
easy, and he soon fell to drinking as a way to help him cope. “I was just
living numb,” he said. “Just running away from all those problems in life and
thinking that a drink would fix everything. Now I know that that’s not [the
case].” With his family’s support, he says, he mustered up the strength to make
the necessary changes in his life. He stopped drinking and focused on his
physical fitness, health and mental attitude. Two days after going sober, he
was discovered, launching a rising modeling career he’s yet to fully grasp.
“I just want people from nearby or far away — I
want them to be inspired to try harder,” he said of his ongoing improvement
efforts, which he regularly updates his friends, family and fans about on one
of his Facebook pages. “I’m donating heavily to the Wounded Warrior Project
because they helped me. They helped me a lot along the way, and they helped my
family,” he said of the service group that generously aids injured service
members like him. “It’s all about progress,” he positively pushes. As for him:
“I just want to be happy and healthy … that’s really all I want to do.”
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