Showing posts with label firefighter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label firefighter. Show all posts

Saturday, August 14, 2010

National Guards, what they did for love


National Guards, what they did for love
by
Chaplain Kathie

The rest of us wonder why other people want to join the military as Soldiers, Sailors, Marines or Airmen. Why do some want to go a step beyond that and combine their civilian lives with serving in the National Guards or Reserves? Why do some enter into law enforcement? The answer is not as complicated as you think.

Corinthians 13:7

Love
It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.



John 15:13
Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends.


The rest of us get on with our lives, thinking of ourselves and what we need, want and our own problems. They have them too but they take on the problems of their communities and their nation as well. Then we end up expecting them to just go back to their homes when their commitment is up never once thinking of what they are going back home with.

Police officers have to confront the worst people do. Murder, robbery, rape, domestic violence, drunk driving and drug related crimes. They see drunk drivers and speeders knowing they had no thoughts about anyone else but themselves causing accidents that will change everyday after that for the innocent people involved. They see the hopelessness in the addicted. They see the worst what people do to each other and they see the suffering of the victims. It always protects.

Firefighters respond after a fire or accident, all too often when a person is trapped and they have to rescue them as well as fight the fire. Sadly they arrive too late to save a life and then they have to return home knowing no matter how hard they tried, someone died that day.

Yesterday six firefighters went to work and six were hurt doing their jobs.


Six Detroit firefighters hurt when roof collapsed
Firefighters hurt in Detroit
By the CNN Wire StaffAugust 13, 2010(CNN) -- Six firefighters were hospitalized in Detroit, Michigan on Friday, a hospital spokesman said.They were hurt when a roof collapsed as they were battling a blaze CNN affiliate WDIV-TV reported.


They never know if they will be just hanging around the firehouse or rushing into a burning building when they start their day or if they will end their day going home or recovering in a hospital or having their body recovered.

Yet with all these courageous professions, some take it one step further. They go into the National Guards. It is not enough for them to risk their lives in their full time positions. They are willing to do it on their time off as well.


National Guards
History:
For over 360 years the citizen soldiers of the Army National Guard have come to the aid of their neighbors during times of need. The Guard plays a key role during floods, fires and other natural disasters. The Army National Guard's mission involves helping communities during natural disasters, civil emergencies, and national conflict, having answered the call to defend America in every war. Today, the Army National Guard plays a key role in conjunction with the nation's active military forces. Whether guarding our country's interests at home or abroad, the Army National Guard is always ready, always there. Guard members are ordinary people doing extraordinary things.


Some Guardsmen/women have tame desk jobs in their civilian lives but still manage somehow to train to be able to save lives as well as trained to go into combat. Gone are the times when they were not faced with being deployed with the regular military. With 50,000 remaining in Iraq until next year and more troops being sent into Afghanistan, anyone joining the Guard must face the risk of being sent away from their families, their civilian jobs and friends.

So why do they do it?

Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends.



It is the fact they are willing to lay down their lives that makes them so remarkable. They do it with love for their families, their friends and for total strangers.

Yet with all of this, we are surprised when so many need help recovering from what they have to go through. After they faced the "one too many times" of horror, they need help to overcome it. They need someone to talk to they trust. If they know the person listening to them will not be overwhelmed by hearing what they lived through, they will open up. If they know the person listening will not judge them for feeling the way they do or dismiss their emotions, they will tell everything going on inside of them. Yet if they hear the "fix" response of a person trying to come up with answer of how they get over it, then the conversation ends, an opportunity to serve them is gone and precious time is lost.

When they are deployed, there isn't someone to talk to most of the time. They see their buddies going through the same thing they did and think they will be seen as weak if they complain to their "stronger" friend. How can you complain or "whine" to someone else who went through the same exact thing but acts as if it was no big deal? It's not easy especially if they think their friend is never bothered by any of it.

When they carry these feelings onward they begin to eat away at the emotions. Depression, self-judgment and sadness sets in. It begins to eat away at their character. Good emotions become trapped behind a wall of pain and anger is the only emotion to surface. They seek alcohol and drugs to become numb to it.

On 9-11 it was one day many have still not recovered from.

September 11 numbers
Death, destruction, charity, salvation, war, money, real estate, spouses, babies, and other September 11 statistics.

The initial numbers are indelible: 8:46 a.m. and 9:02 a.m. Time the burning towers stood: 56 minutes and 102 minutes. Time they took to fall: 12 seconds. From there, they ripple out.

Total number killed in attacks (official figure as of 9/5/02): 2,819
Number of firefighters and paramedics killed: 343
Number of NYPD officers: 23
Number of Port Authority police officers: 37
Number of WTC companies that lost people: 60
Number of employees who died in Tower One: 1,402
Number of employees who died in Tower Two: 614
Number of employees lost at Cantor Fitzgerald: 658
Number of nations whose citizens were killed in attacks: 115
Bodies found "intact": 289
Body parts found: 19,858
Number of families who got no remains: 1,717


We can understand the lives changed forever from this one day because we understand how we were changed as well. Everyone in this country stopped thinking about their life here as safe from being attacked after that day. We can understand because every news station in this country and around the world covered this story for weeks. Everyone alive that day remembers where they were when they heard the news the first tower was hit.

One morning of terror turned into memories that will not go away. To this day as the anniversary comes, we remember that day with great sadness. Most of us forget all the houses with flags flying, cars with flags and magnets on every city street and highway. We forget about how wonderfully we joined together to help the families of the fallen and how we honored the men and women daring to rush into ground zero territory as everyone else was running away. The bad sticks in our minds more than the good. It is the same for them.

The good inside of them compelling them to serve is replaced by bad memories of the worst man can do to man. They forget what their own intent was, what they tried to do, what they wanted to do and what they thought they were doing. They forget about what they were willing to sacrifice to do it, to be there and to be ready to respond.

While one day weighs heavily on the rest of us just as our own traumatic events do, we need to remember for them it is not just one time but many of them. When they return from deployment it is often too late for them to just get over it. Their times of danger have been numerous and they knew they would have to face more of those times while they were deployed.

By the time they return home, there have been too many times to count piled onto other days. The thirty day window of recovery closed on them after the first time because others followed. Time to seek help when they come home is when you notice something different. Don't wait for another 30 days to pass. In a perfect world they would be emotionally debriefed after every mission with use of weapons, after every loss, wounding or attack. This is not a perfect world and there are not enough mental health workers or Chaplains to go around.

The military has been trying to train buddies to watch out for signs of suicide but they need to train these "buddies" to listen so that it never gets that far. This is why it is so important for families and communities to step up for the Guardsmen and women. The military has a community support system, even as failing as it is, but when the citizen soldiers come home, they often have no one to talk to willing to listen instead of "fix" the problem.

It is because they care so much they end up feeling it more, facing higher numbers of PTSD and related symptoms. It cut them deeper. They need the help of the clergy and all service organizations to do more than give them parties to go to, bars to drink in and parades a couple of times a year. They need more than a sermon on morals and ethics when they did what they did out of love and unselfishness. They need more than coming home to a job that no longer exists for them with a desk full of bills to pay. Regret sets in and that feeds PTSD. When they look around for someone to help them after all they did for everyone else, it makes it harder to find the reason they were willing to do it in the first place.

Help them see the good so they will know they are really appreciated so they do not regret what they did for love.

Friday, August 13, 2010

Six Detroit firefighters hurt when roof collapsed

Firefighters hurt in Detroit
By the CNN Wire Staff
August 13, 2010
(CNN) -- Six firefighters were hospitalized in Detroit, Michigan on Friday, a hospital spokesman said.

They were hurt when a roof collapsed as they were battling a blaze CNN affiliate WDIV-TV reported.
read more here
Firefighters hurt in Detroit

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Firefighter tackles 1,000 miles for wounded vets

Firefighter tackles 1,000 miles for wounded vets

By Melissa Slager
For The Herald

A marathon is one thing. Climbing a mountain is another.

But try the equivalent of 38 marathons. And three mountains. Oh, and add a 35-pound pack to your back and some combat boots.

Who the hell would do that?

Paul Cretella, a Serene Lake firefighter and former British paratrooper, is embarking on a yearlong effort to log 1,000 miles under just those conditions to raise awareness of the pain endured by wounded combat veterans.

Cretella recalled an elderly man he met on one of his aid calls, a veteran who was wounded three times in the Korean War and who still deals with chronic pain.

“Those guys coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan now are, 50 years from now, going to still be feeling the effects. … We need to do better for them,” Cretella said.

He calls his odyssey Brothers in Arms 1,000 Mile Challenge and is taking donations for two nonprofits, the Florida-based Wounded Warrior Project and its UK counterpart Help for Heroes.
read more here
Firefighter tackles 1,000 miles for wounded vets

Monday, October 26, 2009

2 firefighters hurt when Kissimmee condos burn

2 firefighters hurt when Kissimmee condos burn
Third floor at Villa del Sol collapses from the flames

By Jeannette Rivera-Lyles

Sentinel Staff Writer

12:22 a.m. EDT, October 26, 2009


Two firefighters were hurt when a Kissimmee condominium building burned Sunday night, and dozens of people were left homeless as a result of the blaze.

Several units of the Kissimmee Fire Department responded around 9 p.m. to a fire at the Villa del Sol Condominiums, said Megan Shephard, a fire department spokeswoman. The blaze was in a three-story, 24-unit building at 4103 Tropical Isle Blvd.
read more here
2 firefighters hurt when Kissimmee condos burn

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Firefighter in critical condition after wrong-way motorcycle crash

Firefighter in critical condition after Carrollwood wrong-way motorcycle crash
By Kim Wilmath, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Thursday, October 22, 2009


CARROLLWOOD — A 47-year-old Hillsborough County firefighter was hospitalized early Wednesday after she crashed her motorcycle into a pickup truck on S Village Drive.

Patti Valero of Brandon was driving a Harley-Davidson the wrong way in the eastbound lanes of S Village about 1 a.m., according to a Hillsborough County sheriff's report. Valero collided with an eastbound red Chevy pickup driven by Peter Spiropoulos, 21, of Tarpon Springs.
read more here
Firefighter in critical condition

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Osceola firefighters burned when something went wrong with grill

Osceola firefighters burned while cooking dinner at Poinciana station
Deputy chief: Something went wrong with grill

Susan Jacobson

Sentinel Staff Writer

10:27 p.m. EDT, October 2, 2009


Two Osceola County firefighters are recovering tonight after being burned while cooking dinner on a grill at their station, officials said.

The men, whose names were not released, were grilling outside Station 65 on Cypress Parkway in Poinciana about 6 p.m., Deputy Chief Danny McAvoy said. They had to leave to respond to a call. First, though, something "popped," causing a burst of fire, he said.

The men were burned on the face, chest and arms. Paramedics treated them while they were waiting to be flown by medical helicopter to Orlando Regional Medical Center. Both were treated and released but won't be back at work right away.

"They're burned pretty good," McAvoy said.

The state Fire Marshal's Office is investigating the cause. But McAvoy said the flare-up was not caused by a propane tank exploding.
check back here for updates
Osceola firefighters burned

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

New PTSD Video, I Grieve


Over on the top of the side bar, you'll find the new video, PTSD I Grieve. This one is for firefighters, police officers, national guards and reservists. We forget they carry the same wounds the troops do but they are expected to just pickup where they left off. They return to risking their lives right here while they still try to heal from risking their lives deployed into combat.

Monday, August 11, 2008

Shooting Ignites Riot in Montreal

Shooting Ignites Riot in Montreal AP
MONTREAL (Aug. 11) - A riot broke out and an officer was shot in the leg late Sunday in the Monday neighborhood where a young man was shot and killed by police a day earlier.

Several hundred police officers fanned out trying to track down an undetermined number of youths who began setting fires in the neighborhood before running off.

Firetrucks arriving to fight the blazes in the borough of Montreal North were pelted with beer bottles, while bus shelters were trashed.

People of all ages were seen looting computers, TVs and other items from stores.
Montreal police spokesman Ian Lafreniere said two police officers and an ambulance technician suffered non-life threatening injuries. One of the officers was shot in the leg.

The ambulance technician was hit in the head by a Molotov cocktail that did not ignite.
Police had made some arrests by 3 a.m. Monday but were unable to give many details.
click post title for more

Saturday, July 12, 2008

National Guard Iraq vets switch tools to battle California wildfires

A battle far from Iraq, but just as hot
Story Highlights
National Guard Iraq vets switch tools to battle California wildfires

Robert Rosbia and Mike Valdivia are among 400 deployed to help fight fires

They are working tirelessly to clear fire lines that will help firefighters

From Paul Vercammen
CNN

LOS ANGELES, California (CNN) -- Their weapon in Iraq was a rifle.


In California, it's a tool with a line of shark-like teeth.

National Guardsman Robert Rosbia takes a break from the sweaty, grimy job of slicing through thick foliage in the northern California woods.

"Here, we're protecting lives," the Iraq veteran said. "But this time I am doing it with this instead of a .50-caliber machine gun."

Rosbia and another Iraq veteran, Mike Valdivia, are among the first of 400 National Guard troops to be deployed on the ground in California in more than three decades. Their hours are spent hacking away at the brush to create fire lines -- areas cleared of vegetation -- so that firefighters can make a stand with water from the ground and help from the air.

Valdivia, a father of three from Seaside, California, said the two are prepared for working in oppressive heat.

"Your body starts kicking up a lot of heat under the collar," Valdivia said, tugging at his soaked undershirt. "In Iraq, we had temperatures of 117 degrees plus. Here, there's a lot of physical labor like Iraq."

A truck driver and married father of two, Rosbia said his wife is just happy he's deployed near his San Francisco Bay area home and not in Iraq.
click post title for more

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Study Finds High Ground Zero Stress

Study Finds High Ground Zero Stress
By ANTHONY DePALMA
Published: May 21, 2008
A new study by the Mount Sinai School of Medicine suggests that the percentage of ground zero workers who suffered post-traumatic stress is roughly the same as for airline crash recovery workers and returning Afghanistan war veterans.

The study of 10,132 workers, published in the scientific journal Environmental Health Perspectives and released Tuesday, showed that roughly one in 10 rescue and recovery workers who toiled at the site of the destroyed World Trade Center in 2001 and 2002 reported disturbing flashbacks and recurring nightmares.

The results are based on self-reported symptoms provided by workers when they filled out a questionnaire during the study period, which began 10 months after the twin towers collapsed and continued for five years.

Workers with post-traumatic stress reported experiencing symptoms associated with the disorder — intrusive memories, insomnia and numbness of emotions — in the month before they were interviewed.

The study also found that stress can exacerbate a range of medical conditions, including heart, lung, stomach and autoimmune disorders, caused by environmental exposures.

Of the workers who participated in the study, 11.1 percent met the scientific criteria for probable post-traumatic stress. That is about the same percentage as for returning war veterans and is significantly higher than the 3 to 4 percent found in the general adult population.
go here for more
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/21/nyregion/21mental.html?_r=1&ref=nyregion&oref=slogin


Their bodies walked away,,,,,,,





but their minds never left.





With PTSD, they travel back in time. They see it all as if time became a magnet pulling them back to the event that changed them in an instant. The smell of the debris returns. The sounds of the crunching under their feet, the sounds of the equipment running, the voices of their friends, all of it reverberates in their ears. They feel their strength being drained from them, muscles ache from being tightened under the stress of the urgency. The disbelief of what they witnessed returns. It's like a horror movie replaying over and over again, only with this, they are there.

We are all just humans. No matter how much training provided to do jobs very few are willing to do, no training can dehumanize any of us enough to be untouched, unmoved, unchanged.

Soldiers train to kill but no one can train them to escape all that makes them human.

Police officers are trained to protect citizens and often this places their own life in danger. They are placed in positions when they have to make a life or death decision, but often they cannot simply deal with what comes after.

Firefighters and emergency responders, are trained to rescue and take care of citizens but there is no amount of training that can make them immune to the carnage they find after an accident or after a fire.

So how is it that so few of us understand what any of them go through? Is it because we depend on them to take care of us that we forget they sometimes need someone to take care of them?

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Houston blaze injures 2 firefighters

May 15, 2008, 12:17PM
Blaze in northwest Houston injures 2 firefighters


By KEVIN MORAN
Copyright 2008 Houston Chronicle

Two Houston firefighters were injured fighting a blaze that gutted a northwest Houston home this morning.

The firefighters were taken to Memorial Hermann Hospital and suffered from second-degree burns, one on his face and one on his hands and face, said assistant Houston Fire Department Chief Tommy Dowdy.
go here for more
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/5782325.html