In the jungles of Vietnam, Charley LaFontaine lived by one simple creed: "When they're down, we're up." As a combat medic, he worked triage, hopelessly trying to save all the soldiers. But Charley carried his own wounds long before he ever set foot in Southeast Asia. A childhood marked by harshness hardened him, and though he knew about God, he kept Him at arm's length. Even as bullets flew and mortars exploded around him, Charley couldn't see the invisible hand guiding him through every firefight, every desperate moment of triage, every night he should have died but didn't.
Decades later, Charley looks back and sees what he couldn't recognize then: a pattern of protection, a thread of grace woven through the chaos. The same man who once mocked fellow soldiers for praying in foxholes now understands those prayers may have saved his life. His journey from skeptic to believer didn't happen overnight, and it wasn't easy. The war followed him home, bringing demons that tried to destroy what the enemy's bullets couldn't touch. Addiction, trauma, and the weight of memories threatened to finish what Vietnam started.
But a medic's work is never done. Today, Charley lives out his wartime motto in a different kind of battlefield, helping veterans fight their way back from addiction and despair. His story isn't just about survival or transformation. It's about purpose that transcends time and circumstances, about second chances and the refusal to leave anyone behind. Whether in the rice paddies of Vietnam or the recovery centers of today, Charley LaFontaine still answers the call: when they're down, he's up.