Mervin Roxas Uses His Experiences as a Veteran to Help Others

And appears in Easter Seals New "Welcome Home" PSA

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Mervin RoxasNot only is Mervin Roxas a Program Assistant in Easter Seals office in Brea, he is also a veteran.  As a Marine he served two deployments in Iraq.  He appears in Easter Seals new "Welcome Home" PSA.

In 2004, while manning a machine gun atop a patrol vehicle an improvised explosive device (IED) exploded. Three Marines died. Mervin, more fortunate, lost his left arm and shoulder, and his jaw and cheekbone were shattered.

He spent 11 months at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., before being medically discharged.

Mervin knows first-hand the challenges veterans experience when they return home. “I had trouble transitioning back to being a civilian,” he says. “I lost structure in my life, I didn’t know how each day would play out, and my behavior caused misunderstandings with family and friends.”

There was also the challenge of suddenly living with a disability.

“Learning to do things with only my right arm and getting stares and comments from strangers — I wasn’t used to it. That was tough.”

Working at Easter Seals has spurred Mervin to keep moving forward.  He credits Easter Seals with helping him successfully reintegrate. “Easter Seals,” he says, “played a big part.”

Through several exciting new initiatives, nationally Easter Seals is working to ensure access to services that are essential for military, veterans, their families, and families of the fallen to succeed in family and community life.  

Image above: Mervin Roxas (center) with Russell Kutzman, Assistant Vice President, Military and Veterans Services, Easter Seals (left); and David Sutherland, Colonel, US Army, Retired, Executive Director, Dixon Center at Easter Seals (right).
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