Ali Fedotowsky Leave Special Forces: The toughest test in the world Season 3 training early after unexpected finger injury.
“My injury ended up being a severe sprain, but I understand why the paramedic made the call he did even though it still seems very unfair,” Fedotowski, 40, wrote on Wednesday, January 15. Instagram mail. “I never went to the doctor. He came to our barracks to check on some people suffering from hypothermia and I asked him for some tape and ibuprofen, and that's when he looked at my hand and told me to come into his office. I just wanted Advil!”
She continued, “Although the DS and producers wanted me to have the option to continue, once the doctor makes the call, no one can object to it. I'm disappointed. I wanted to experiment so badly. Maybe I'll have another chance someday! 🤞🏻But regardless, I'm still very grateful for the experience. It's changed the way I feel about pushing myself to my physical limits and changed the way I think about strength and health.
It was Fedotovsky One of the recruits In the third season of the reality TV competition, which is currently airing on Fox.
“So, I just got medically pulled out. It was my finger,” Fedotowsky said in a video taken after she was gone. “I don’t know if it’s broken or not. I feel like when I was there, I had so much adrenaline that I felt like it wasn't 100 percent but now that I've let my body get down, I think it might be. I feel so disappointed and upset and angry and all the things.
A local doctor in Wales believed Fedotowsky had “torn the tendon from her finger.” She eventually had an MRI when she returned home to the United States, which confirmed this Injury It was a sprain.
“(The hand surgeon) said I could have stayed,” Fedotowski said in a video filmed earlier this month. “I still understand why the doctor made the decision he did at that moment.”
Fedotovsky who explained it special forces It was “much harder than it looks”, leaving early on the third day.
Despite her exit from the show, Fedotowsky still learned a lot from the overall experience.
“I wanted to prove that I was a badass. I'm like, 'I want to prove myself physically. I want to train as hard as I can, and get to the end.' There was no quitting in my mind.” He said exclusively Us Weekly Before the first show. “My friend made me a ring and she said to me on the inside, ‘Keep blowing the whistle,’ and she said, ‘No matter what.’ I couldn’t wear the ring in the show because you can’t wear jewelry, but I kept thinking about it. ‘Keep going, keep going.’ Just Keep blowing the whistle.”
Special Forces: The toughest test in the world It airs on Fox Wednesday at 8pm ET.