Limb loss changed my body. Awareness changed my purpose.
By Rick Bontkowski
The room is quiet except for the soft mechanical rhythm of a prosthetic foot meeting the floor. Step. Pause. Step again. For many amputees, that sound marks the beginning of a completely new life.
April is Limb Loss and Limb Difference Awareness Month, and for the past several years, I’ve used this space in The Springs Magazine to highlight remarkable people in the amputee community. Veterans, athletes, first responders, musicians, parents, and kids who have all faced the unimaginable and somehow found a way forward. This month, I thought it might be time to share a little bit of my own story.
Becoming an amputee is not something you plan for. One day, life feels predictable, and the next day the ground beneath you has shifted. The journey back isn’t linear. There are moments of frustration and grief, but also unexpected victories, the first confident steps. The first time you realize you are stronger than the moment that changed your life.
Along the way, I discovered something extraordinary: the amputee community. When I launched The AMP’D UP211 Podcast, I simply wanted to create a space for these stories to be told. What happened next surprised me. The podcast now reaches listeners in more than 50 countries, and each conversation reveals another example of the human spirit refusing to be limited by circumstance.
One guest told me something I’ll never forget: “You don’t lose your life when you lose a limb. You just learn how to live it differently.” Another shared a line that has stayed with me ever since: “The prosthetic isn’t what makes you strong. The decision to keep moving forward is.”
Those voices are why Limb Loss Awareness Month matters. For people outside the community, awareness helps break down misconceptions. It reminds the world that amputees are not defined by what we lost, but by what we build afterward. It shines a light on the importance of prosthetic innovation, rehabilitation, and the peer support that helps thousands of people rediscover independence every year.
If my journey has taught me anything, it’s this: limb loss may change the way we walk through life, but it never changes the strength it takes to keep moving forward.
Rick Bontkowski, a Chicago native and amputee, is the host creator of The AMP’D UP211 Podcast. A drummer, cyclist, and advocate, Rick shares the stories of people with limb differences to inspire, inform, and challenge perceptions worldwide. Contact info: Ampup211@gmail.com, ampup211.com, youtube.com/@theampdup211podcast6, instagram.com/rick_bontkowski.
{Discover additional stories from Rick’s podcast on our website at thespringsmagazine.com/category/health-wellness/ampd-up211/.}





