
Redefining Strength After W*r
Marine veteran Johnny “Joey” Jones once measured strength in muscle, grit, and pain tolerance. That changed in Iraq when a roadside b*mb took both of his legs, part of his right arm, and the life of his friend, Corporal Daniel Greer. He was just 24.
Fifteen years later, Jones walks again — on prosthetics, in gyms, on stages, and through life as a husband, father, Fox News contributor, and best-selling author. His newest book, Behind the Badge, just hit No. 1 on The New York Times bestseller list. But Jones says it’s not the book sales, TV appearances, or even his physical recovery that define him. It’s what he calls “everyday strength.”
The Day Everything Changed
In Iraq, Jones spent five days clearing buildings and roads, neutralizing over 30 bombs. One wrong step ended his military career and nearly his life. The blast left him a double above-the-knee amputee with a damaged right arm. Greer, nearby, didn’t survive.
Recovery demanded years of grueling physical and emotional rehab. Standing. Walking. Lifting weights. Relearning not just how to live — but how to be.
From Battlefield to Bestseller
Since then, Jones has become a leading voice for veterans and first responders. His first book reflected his military journey. Behind the Badge turns to the police, firefighters, and paramedics who return home each night to the same communities where they witness trauma.
“It’s much harder to come home and hug your wife and kids after what you’ve seen,” Jones says. “There’s a different kind of strength in that.”
What Courage Really Means
Jones once thought bravery was all adrenaline. “You can get pumped up… you see people jump off cruise ships. That’s kind of brave,” he jokes. But courage, he’s learned, is different.
“Courage is knowing the consequences, not wanting them… and doing it anyway.”
For Jones, strength now means choosing purpose over pain, showing up for your kids, your spouse, and your community — even when prosthetics rub raw or life feels overwhelming.
The Gym as Independence
Jones’s rehab approach became legendary. Instead of sticking strictly to protocol, he grabbed dumbbells and got to work.
“The more physically fit I am, the more independent I am,” he explains. “The less I have to ask others for help. That means a lot to me.”
Whether lifting weights, riding a motorcycle, or skeet shooting on his farm, he sends the same message: “I can still do it.”
Strength Through Responsibility
Today, Jones travels the country, balancing work, fatherhood, and life after combat. To him, those roles aren’t burdens. They’re proof of purpose.
“Nobody else in the world do my kids look to, other than me, to be Dad,” he says. “Why wouldn’t I be excited about that?”
Jones has lived through trauma most can’t imagine. Yet he knows strength isn’t about being unbreakable. It’s about breaking — and still choosing to stand tall.