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The 'New Normal'

Singer has returned to light duty, received Purple Heart medal

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According to his mother, Jennifer Cherveny, Cpl. Joe Singer had mixed feelings about receiving the Purple Heart. “He kind of said it was something he didn’t really want to have to get, but I told him that Purple Heart is something to be very proud of,” she said. “I said, ‘Be proud of yourself.’” (Photo provided)

DIAMOND, Ill. — A Diamond family whose lives were put on hold by news of a son wounded in Afghanistan over the summer is now working to resume a sense of normalcy.

In the weeks following a July 12 rocket-propelled grenade blast that critically wounded Cpl. Joe Singer, a 22-year-old Marine on his second tour in Afghanistan, Singer was taken to Germany and Maryland before being brought home. By September, Singer was in significantly better health and called back to light duty at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune in North Carolina.

Singer's mother, Jennifer Cherveny, said Tuesday that was sooner than she had expected.

"I was really taken by surprise because I thought, 'Well, you know you got really hurt, I wouldn't think they'd request you back, but you have time on your contract,'" she said. "It's how the military works, I guess." 

Singer's time with the Marine Corps is set to end in January.

The move to North Carolina also came with a special event — Singer receiving a Purple Heart. He was presented with the honor in a ceremony held Sept. 19. Cherveny said she was unable to attend because there was not enough prior notice to make the trip.

She said Singer had mixed feelings about the award.

"He kind of said it was something he didn't really want to have to get, but I told him that Purple Heart is something to be very proud of," she said. "I said, 'Be proud of yourself.'"

The daughter of a Purple Heart recipient herself — her father served in the Vietnam War — Cherveny said she's proud of him.

"I'm happy for him," she said. "He deserved it, for all that he's been through."

Cherveny said a recent doctor's visit has shown Joe is in good health. Cherveny said the goal is for him to regain some of the nearly 40 pounds of weight he's lost, as well as just continuing monitoring to make sure he isn't having any problems. Because of severe wounds to his abdomen, she said a number of health concerns could pop up, from intestinal issues to a detached colon.

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