Walking through the Valley of the Shadow- Part 1

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I have been wanting to write a post for a while now about the work that I do, the work that I do with the families of the fallen.  I have received emails asking about details, wondering about the obscurity in some of the posts that I have written after I have come back from a detail.  I have pondered the words that I would write, pinching them and molding them into some sort of shape that would do justice and give honor to the names that I know too well.  Names that belong to faces that I will never see in person.  Names that roll off of the tongues of family members so easily but get caught up in the back of my throat even easier.

I haven’t been able to bring myself to write anything until this point because I have had a difficult time trying to find the words that would describe my feelings, my experiences, my thoughts poignantly. And then I was told about the book Final Salute by Jim Sheeler and that I needed to read it for a future class discussion. The book is written about US Marine casualty assistance officer, Major Steve Beck and several of the families he has assisted. I couldn’t get through the first chapter without thinking that if there were to be a book written about the work that I do, this would pretty much be the book, only insert firefighter instead of marine.

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While the book was a page turner, I had to put it down several times because I felt as if I were too close. It was hard seeing my own life and my own work mirrored in a man that was beautifully quoted throughout the pages. What I see and experience first hand is incredibly painful, only I have gotten too good at squelching and shoving down the pain after nearly 10 years. The easiest way I can describe my work is by using the same terminology as the military, 80% of my job I’m a casualty assistance officer. My job is to give a death notification when necessary, ensure that the body of the fallen firefighter is cared for with dignity and honor (and many times that means I have to help ‘dress the body’ or stand by as the funeral director makes final preparations), I arrange and orchestrate visitations and funerals (sometimes small but most of the time elaborate) and I standby and stand guard of the families with my honor guardsman that come to help me. The other part of my work goes beyond the initial week or so after the death. I also ‘counsel’ the family, provide social services to them when extra resources are needed, and file for the financial benefits. My work doesn’t end on the others side of that knock on the door. Many times I walk side by side with a family for years. Only when they decide they no longer need to hear my voice do I say goodbye.

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I would like to begin this series with several quotes from the book that I feel best describe this work that I have found myself doing and the emotions that go along with it. Unless otherwise noted, they are all quotes from Major Steve Beck.

“The curtains pull away. They come to the door. And they know. They always know. You can almost see the blood run out of their body and their heart hit the floor. It’s not the blood as much as their soul. Something sinks. I’ve never seen that except when someone dies. And I’ve seen a lot of death.”

“”They’re falling — either literally or figuratively — and you have to catch them. In this business, I can’t save his life. All I can do is catch the family while they’re falling.”

When he wants something done with precision, he’ll require his troops to get it “down to the gnat’s ass.” The problem is that sometimes, even his friends say, he’s the only one who knows where to find the gnat, never mind the ass. He swears he is not a control freak: he says that would imply he wants to tell other people how to think. He says he just knows when things are done properly. He sees his perfectionism as a plus, especially for the delicate duty that involves dealing with people who want everything yesterday and, he believes, deserve it.

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“…but the funerals, they exhaust you. It’s not the physical part. It’s just so exhausting. It makes me feel guilty for saying that . I feel a sense of loss even though I didn’t know the person. But the family members come up and they speak to you, and there’s nothing you can say. Often it’s just a handshake. The standard line is ‘It’s an honor and a privilege to do this.’ But that feels so inadequate. You want to do so much for them and you just don’t know what to do. There’s no way to convey it. There are no words in the English language….I’ll go off for a walk, have a cigarette…to keep from crying like a baby.’ Staff Sergeant Kevin Thomas

“The pain we’re feeling drives us. The pride is bigger. But the pain–you gotta eat it, you gotta live with it, you gotta take it home and cry in the dark. What else are you going to do?”

“That mother, I would suck all her pain away if I could. Every Marine would. They’d take every ounce of pain and just absorb it.”

“It bubbles up. Yeah, it bubbles up, but God helps me with it.”

“One of the things I’ve learned from all this, is that there’s a difference between believing and knowing. Before, there were some things I believed. Now, I just know.”

“To do this right, to do it properly, you have to look at these women as if they were your mother or your wife, and these men as if they were your farther or your brother. And you have to ask, ‘What would I want someone to do if it were me?”

“I actually start thinking about it the moment I wake up. It’s such an important job that I just don’t want to mess it up,” he said. “I just want it to be perfect.”  Sgt. Jeremy Kocher

“This experience has changed me in fundamental ways. I would not wish it on anyone, but at the same time I think it’s important that it happened to me. I know it’s going to have an impact on someone’s life that I’m going to meet years from now….It’s like you’ve got them in inventory. You’ll have them when you need them.”

After one burial, “all I wanted to do was play with my children,” he says. “But all I was thinking about while I was playing, was all those guys out there in harm’s way, making all that possible.”

Quotes Excerpted from FINAL SALUTE: A Story of Unfinished Lives by Jim Sheeler. Reprinted by arrangement with The Penguin Press, a member of Penguin Group (USA), Inc. Copyright (c) May, 2008.

I highly recommend that you buy the book. Stay tuned for part 2.

A Tribute to the Oakland Police Officers

I plan funerals for fallen firefighters.  I can’t explain my job much simpler than that.  I have never planned the funeral for a police officer but the job is similar.    After learning about the 4 Oakland police officers that were tragically killed last week, I was curious as to how the OPD would handle such an event.  One or two funerals are hard enough to orchestrate but four, it just makes me shake my head and sigh.  I saw this video today and was so proud of how these officers were honored.  Everyone who was involved in planning and directing this solemn event did an incredible job.  It moves me to tears to know there is a brotherhood out there who is willing to do whatever it takes to make the final send-off as honorable and as respectful as this.

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Helping Those Who Hurt- Care Calendars

42-21010678 When an individual or family experiences a life changing event, the first thing a friend wants to do is provide a meal.  There is something about a hot casserole that seems to have the word ‘help’ written all over it.  Maybe that’s where the term ‘comfort food’ came from.

During the first few days after a death, the family is usually inundated with take-out food, home-made dishes, junk food, and sodas.  I can’t tell you how many times I have walked into the over-flowing kitchens of grieving people to find unopened boxes of KFC or picked at pizza crusts.  And while the kitchen can be a place where loved ones meet to talk abou the matter at hand, it can also be a place that causes much stress.  You see, the kitchen has to be cleaned at some point.  Uneaten or spoiled food has to be thrown away.  Other food has to be organized and put away and dishes have to be cleaned.  Some families have loved ones who will do that for the grieving family but some don’t and it can leave them feeling crushed by the weight of good intentions.

After the first few days of what I call ‘food inundation,’ the meals seem to dry up quickly and then the family is left to fend for themselves once again.  This is where the other end of the helping pedulum swings because at this point the family still doesn’t have the energy or even the desire to cook, clean or be seen in public and yet they still need to eat.

So what’s a helping friend supposed to do?  Setting up a meal schedule is really the only way to go.  In the internet age meal and chore calendars become easy and can be the central location where everyone (church, friends, clubs, and community members) can sign up to help.  The care calendar is place where friends and loved ones can sign up for a meal, care giving or a chore without duplicating efforts and the family can see who is bringing them the meal on a particular day.  Care calendars can be modified with diet restrictions, times of meals, number of people to be served, and what chores need to be done and when.  It’s a perfect solution to what can be a messy problem.

Here are a couple of my favorites:

Care Calendar

Lotsa Helping Hands

The next time a friend or family member needs the long term care of loved ones, I highly suggest setting up and coordinating a care calendar.  It’s easy, interactive and can make a huge impact on the affected individual without causing unnecessary stress.

How to Help – Part 2

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Yesterday I was talking on the phone with one of the families who lost their son in that tragic fire training incident in Kilgore, TX.  Part of my job is to help them get on a road of recovery and healing and tohelp them find a ‘ new normal’ in their lives.   There are many facets to this, I will save for a different post, but we happened to be talking about what helped her during those hours and days after her son’s death.   She simply said, ‘a book of stamps.’

The day after his funeral, a book of stamps tucked away in a sympathy card arrived on her doorstep.  Who would  have ever thought that a simple book of stamps would mean so much?  I never even thought about that as something to give to a grieving family!  I told this mother that I would immediately be putting this small token of compassion on my list!  She said that she had all of the food she could handle but this book of stamps brought her to tears.  She was going to start writing thank you letters but didn’t want to visit the small town post office.  It’s amazing that someone had thought of this.

I thought this would be a great post to add to the How to Help series.  Part 1

How to Help- Part 1

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Photo by Batega

I have a dear friend, who is young mother, that just finished up her treatment for breast cancer.  On the same day she celebrated that milestone, the wife of another friend was diagnosed.  I just couldn’t believe the irony in the news and just shook my head in sadness and disbelief.  Not another one.  Not another young woman having to battle such a nasty disease.

Thinking about both of my friends and the long journey that one has completed and the other is now starting got me to thinking about how they needed support and encouragement from family and friends.  You would think that as a chaplain it would come naturally for me.  You would think that I would be able to come up with a laundry list of ideas on how best to help but in reality I don’t.  My first inclination is to want to say, ‘if there is anything I can do to help, please let me know.’  I hate that phrase.  Most people in crisis don’t really know what they need.  They just need people to do.  My other inclination is to shower them with food.  Isn’t it the right thing to do when someone is sick or a loved one has died, to bring them a casserole and hope that it makes it all better?  Yes, a dinner is nice and it does help but it’s not the be all, end all of helping someone.

What has helped me come up with ideas on how to help someone best is by 1. making a list of unique ideas that others have done 2. scour the internet for ideas 3. talk to my chaplain mentor and 4. crack open some resource books that I have used time and time again.  For the first post in my series on how to help, I am listing the books that have helped me not only as a chaplain but as a friend.  These books have come through for me so many times and I highly recommend having at least one or two of them on your bookshelf.

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and The Art of Support by Lee Franklin.  This book I found at Hallmark.

If you have been through a crisis, what did your friends and family do for you to help get you through the toughest days?

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