I know the people in this film. They are as impressive in person as they are in this documentary. I suggest every high school in America consider this film as an eye opening introduction to national service, disability, and one's ability to overcome obstacles. Sports teams looking to measure themselves should take half a practice session to watch what can be done by a small group of determined individuals. As Harvey Naranjo,the esteemed chief of physical therapy at Walter Reed notes, when these young men and women came back from Iraq and Afghanistan over ten years ago, there were no standards as to how fast or how far they could go. The individuals you meet in this film show the truth of Naranjo's comments that in what they accomplished "they set the bar very very high". Students at the business schools at Harvard and Stanford can take note of the determined optimism of Stephen Talkhouse bar owner Peter Honorkamp and Wounded Warrior Project founder John Melia in making the concept of a "Soldier Ride" work, and, in doing so, changing the horizons of the seriously wounded service members and the country they serve. In watching the film, I remembered the days back in 2003 when it seemed as if no one in the country cared about these young men and women, other than the Code Pink protesters outside Walter Reed who saw them as a prop for their protest, and would act as if the young service members should be ashamed of their service. It was only when the young men and women got on bicycles and entered the communities around the country that the seriously wounded found people able to separate the soldier from the war, the wounded from the policy which brought about the wounds. From Native American families in the West to the welcoming people of the Hamptons in New York, the wounded soldiers rode into the hearts of their countrymen.