Marine combat Vet Jon Hancock shares his incredible journey of redemption and walk across America
Marine combat Veteran Jon Hancock shares his incredible journey of redemption and his walk across America, chronicled in theΒ ...
Executive Vice President and Chief Executive Officer of International Commercial Insurance & Global Personal Insurance, American
Search every verified Jon Hancock interview, podcast appearance, and on-the-record quote β each transcript cross-checked by AI and human review to confirm speaker identity. Jon Hancock, a Marine combat veteran who served with the 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment in the first battle of Ramadi in 2004, discussed his personal struggles and his walk across America on a September 2021 episode of the podcast "Chief Chat." Hancock stated that after returning from service, he experienced heavy drinking and two DUIs, and that following the second DUI he decided to end his life. He said he drove to the Baltimore VA hospital, where he was admitted to the psych ward for about five or six days. While there, he said he learned about Mike Feedy's "Legacies Alive" initiative, which involved walking one kilometer for each person killed in Iraq or Afghanistan since 2001, and that this inspired him to begin his own walk. Hancock said he started walking across the country on September 11, 2015, and after traveling 5,800 to 7,000 miles through 19 states, he ended at Camp Pendleton's Fifth Marines War Memorial Gardens on December 12, 2016. Hancock also discussed the documentary "Bastards Road," which he described as being about growth and camaraderie and being "very real, raw, and uncut." He said he hoped the film would help veterans understand they are not alone and would show civilians that veteran suicide is an epidemic. Hancock stated that he does not make any money from the documentary and that his only goal is to help people. He encouraged struggling veterans to reach out to others or check in somewhere, and he called for military leadership to be more open with service members about their experiences. He also advocated for the phrase "Welcome Home" to be used more broadly to help veterans feel reintegrated into society.
“I was drinking a lot, there was the first DUI, after the first one there's a second one almost a year to the day the first one, and after that second one for some reason the cop didn't arrest me and he dropped me back off home and I decided I was going to end it that night.”
“I hopped in my car, drove to the Baltimore VA hospital from College Park Maryland, made that trip in about 17 minutes, broke every law on the road to try to save myself. I got to the emergency room, told them what I had done immediately, they whisked me back into some room and there it is, tubes, nodes, and then I'm ha...”
“I was in the psych ward at the Baltimore VA hospital for about five or six days. On one of the last days, I saw a guy named Mike Feedy who had started something called Legacies Alive, walking one kilometer for each person killed in Iraq or Afghanistan since 2001. That inspired me to get out and start my own walk to rec...”
“I started walking across the country on September 11th, 2015, and after 5,800 to 7,000 miles, 19 states, and seven pairs of shoes, I ended at Camp Pendleton at the Fifth Marines War Memorial Gardens on December 12, 2016.”
Marine combat Veteran Jon Hancock shares his incredible journey of redemption and his walk across America, chronicled in theΒ ...
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