June 21, 2013, at the Greenville Boulevard Walmart, is a day many will never forget. A 23-year-old man with a shotgun targets innocent people in broad daylight and fires at them.

Three years later, it is still the worst shooting to ever take place in Greenville.

Lakim Faust, first walks up to Timothy Edwards' car, parked in the Kellum Law Firm parking lot, and fires the shotgun, shattering part of Edwards' face and shoulder.

Then Faust moved across the street towards Walmart, shooting Carroll Oakes, Haywood Whichard Jr. and Vernon Leggett.

All four men survived the attack and now three years to the day of that assault, they're still recovering.

"I still figure I'd wake up and it's all a big dream," says Edwards. He says the scar he sees in the mirror proves otherwise. Edwards had part of his jaw shattered from the gunshot blast, along with a shot to his shoulder. After multiple surgeries, he's feeling better.

"If you had told me two months after I was shot, I would be this good, I'd say, 'You don't know what you're talking about,'" Edwards goes on to say.

Leggett was shot in the forehead, hip and back. His spleen, one kidney and gallbladder had to be removed.

"I still hurt, you can't let that keep you from doing what you need to do," Leggett says.

As survivors of a mass shooting, they relate to victims of other mass shootings across the country. The most recent in Orlando, FL where 49 people were gunned down by an man claiming ties to ISIS.

Some U.S. senators wanted to put tougher gun laws on the books, something these two survivors say is not needed.

"If you take the assault rifles away from the honest people, criminals are going to get it from somewhere," Edwards explains.

"I can't see adding more laws to what we already got," Leggett agrees. "If they just enforce what's there I think that would take care of it."

Despite their nightmare, they're living their lives again knowing their assailant will spend 97 years in prison.

While the Senate didn't pass on any of the proposed new gun law authored by Democrats, a group of bipartisan senators announced Tuesday afternoon new gun control legislation that would prevent people on the terror watch list from buying guns.