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4 Feel-Good Veteran Stories That Will Make You Proud To Be An American

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

It’s a great week to celebrate those serving our country. We normally round-up our feel-good (and do-gooder) stories of the last seven days, but this week we’re focusing specifically on our veterans as a way to celebrate the 4th. Prepare to have your heart warmed.

War vet takes his high school sweetheart to prom at age 89, gets crowned Senior Prom King

 Between finding a date and the perfect dress, prom is a pretty important event for high schoolerswhether the memories that come along with it are good or bad.

For Ralph Wozniak of Riverdale, Florida, the big dance wasn’t an option. Even though he’s been married to his high school sweatheart, LaVerne, for 66 years he never got the chance to ask her to prom, ABC affiliate WFTS reports.

Wozniak was deployed overseas during World War II and again in the Korean War, causing him to miss both of his opportunities to go to the dance. More than six decades later, the couple got their chance to attend Prom for the first time, thanks to the Hillsborough County Aging Services who hosted a Senior Prom.

“Everybody was dressed so beautifully and everybody felt like a queen,” LaVerne told WFTS.

To top it off, Ralph’s name was picked out of a hat and he was named the prom king.

“I got out of my line and gave him a kiss because I said, ‘That’s my husband, that’s the king,’” LaVerne told WFTS.

RELATED: 18 Habits of the Happiest Families

The amazing group caring for pets when they’re military parents are deployed

The hardest part about military service has to be leaving your loved ones behind, furry friends included. Many service members have to face finding a new caretaker for their pets when they’re deployed.

When Alisa Johnson and her husband Shawn were both deployed and in need of a home for their dog, JD, they realized just how many dual-military families face this same problem. To help, they founded Dogs on Deployment, a non-profit that helps those serving in the military to find a safe home for their pets while they are serving their country.

The service has helped over 800 pets since 2011cats, birds, ferrets and even a snake named Pedro included. “It can be stressful if you don’t have anyone to care for your pet when you have an upcoming service commitment,” Johnson told the Huffington Post. “So to be able to assist them and give them that peace of mind is really heartwarming.”

RELATED: How My Pet Helped Me Heal

The war vet on a cross-country hug tour

An Iraq War veteran is trekking across the countryall in order to hug total strangers.

Ian Michael is the founder of the Human Hug Project, a mission that takes him across the country to share an embrace with veterans who are suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Cooke, who served in the marines and suffers from PTSD himself, has so far traveled more than 25,000 miles in an effort to visit all 155 Veteran Health Administration Hospitals across the country.

Cooke told ABC affiliate RTV6 that believes love is the best way to cope with his illness. “A hug is something that I was so disconnected from for so many years that it’s kind of my new medicine. It starts to take the sharp pain from those memories and instead it replaces that with a sense of brotherhood, appreciation and it gives you hope.”

RELATED: This Man’s Tribute to His Dog Will Make You Want to Hug Your Pets NOW

Now #GiveThem20 to say thank you

If you’re looking for a way to give thanks to Vets for their service, check out the #GiveThem20 challenge. Here’s how it works: film yourself doing 20 push-ups or sit ups dedicated to veterans. Then share the video on social media using the hashtag #GiveThem20 while nominating two of your friends to do the same. Just don’t copy Stephen Colbert.

RELATED: A Feel-Good Way You Can Donate While Buying Birth Control

 




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