Friday, August 18, 2017

Introduction #1 - Steely Eyed.

Steely Eyed

Another cup of coffee and I will be fully functional this morning. Walking to the kitchen, I catch a glimpse of myself in the sliding glass door. I am wearing my favorite fleece pants – bright blue - with laughing SpongeBob Squarepants on the front and a white t-shirt with little brown circles stuck to the front of it. Those little brown circles are what is left over from my bowl of Cheerio's this morning.

I stop and turn to face my reflection. It is not the square jawed, steely eyed look that you'd expect a firefighter to have. Even when I stand straight up and suck my stomach in, I am not a heroic looking figure. I look more like I should be pushing a shopping cart full of my belongs down the street. I pick the Cheerio's off my t-shirt and feed them to my dog Boomer, who is waiting patiently by the door to be let out.

I am not sure if it is fate or destiny but the things and people that have changed my life have often found me when I was not looking for them.  Everyone single person has a hero in them, capable of extraordinary courage.  Firefighting has given me the gift of seeing a lot of everyday hero's that I would have not normally seen.  

I could not have imagined what was in front of me then. Hero's and heroic things look a lot different to me now.  

What follows (in random order) are some of the stories of all those remarkable people, places, and times. I hope you see the dedicated men and women of your own communities and the everyday hero in these stories. 




 

Chapter 1 - Mile Marker 246

CHAPTER 1 –Mile Marker 246

I am sitting at the kitchen table with the first cup of coffee for the day. I love the feeling of a hot cup of coffee in my hands and my bare feet on the tile of the cool kitchen floor. There is nothing like a new blanket of snow to make my poorly tended garden and lawn look pristine.
A snow day, it feels like a snow day, except school was not canceled. I have taken what I think is a well overdue vacation day. The kids are in school and both dogs are laying in front of the gas fireplace curled up next to each other and snoring.
The only things I have to do today is read the newspaper and finish the pot of coffee from this morning. I feel lazy and happy, I am in charge of absolutely nothing, and no one is counting on me. My razor is going to stay stuck to the bathroom sink where I left it yesterday morning. I want some toast but I am not going to get up and get any until my coffee cup is empty.  
It feels good to be this damn lazy.
Beep, Beep, Beep,
Engine 03, Paramedic 33, Respond I25 & Mile Marker 245 for multiple injury accident
I get a knot in my stomach every time I hear an auto accident dispatched close to home. Lives change in an instant. The speed and the permanence of those changes have never stopped being eye opening to me.
I am putting on my jeans and listening intently to the radio traffic to hear if this is a real call or another false alarm.
As I am driving down to the station, I take a minute to listen to the radio traffic and collect my thoughts. I am my mother’s son and a good catholic boy. I always believe in worse case scenario. It is always more people than they say it is, they are hurt worse than first reported, tools and equipment will break or be missing.  Radios go dead and the people there will respond to me and my crew in a way I cannot predict.
As I get near the station I am relieved to see Jim pull up at the same time. As a firefighter Jim is in his element. He is 29 years old and as far as I know he has always been an angry, paunchy, 45 year old man.  Perpetually grouchy but a damn good firefighter to have if things go to hell.
Engine 03 in route, status two
They know we are coming. Still no radio traffic and the silence looms large. A state patrol officer should be on scene now and if he is not saying anything it is bad. We will be the first engine on scene. I notice the low laying fog on the Interstate and feel another tug in the pit of my stomach.
Engine 03, 2291 on TAC 2
That is Roger, a Captain from Station 2,  he has arrived in a private vehicle. He is speaking in a slow measured way and his tone is unmistakable. It is bad, I just don’t know how or what is bad.  I acknowledge his request for us on the tactical channel. I am leaning forward in the seat trying to make out what is going on in the fog.
Roger is working too hard to sound calm and you can hear the tension in his voice. In every engine that is responding everyone is leaning forward to catch every nuance of his radio transmission. He is telling us on the radio to drive by the VW bug that is on fire and continue up the Interstate where he has people on the ground and a party who is heavily pinned. You can hear someone screaming in the background while he was on the radio
Engine 03 copies the radio traffic, we are 5 minutes out
We are on the overpass to the interstate and my window is down. There is an unmistakable smell of a car on fire but I cannot locate the fire by site. It looks like both lanes of the Interstate are stopped and I cannot tell how long the chain reaction accident is.
I can hear sirens coming in from the south and can hear a semi running.
As we come down the exit ramp I can see a VW bug that is burning from the engine compartment. There are three people standing around it, with a hopeless look on their faces. I lean out the window to talk to them.
Hi guys, is this your car? I ask
It is mine” a twenty something girl says as she raises her hand halfway.
Listen, I have a patient is critically injured up the road, I need to get to her first. Your car is past being able to save, so I getting to her first. People before machines”
She nods back. “Sure”
I need to make sure you guys stand over here way away from it so you do not become my next critical injured patients...OK? You cannot put that fire out, you can only get hurt”
All three nod but do not respond
From this vantage point there are 5-6 semi trucks and an undetermined number of cars at crazy angles as far as I can see. I can see the reflection of the reflective strip on a fire bunker coat and see Roger up ahead. He see's the lights and waves us over.
Engine 03 arrival
I can hear her screaming before the engine has come to a complete stop. The fog seems to carry the screaming and I cannot tell which car or truck it is coming from. I am walking towards Roger and the screaming is getting louder. He starts walking towards me.
Hey, Cap – what do you have?” I ask
There is a car underneath that flatbed where all the screaming is coming from. I got no idea who or what is in there but that is the first place I need you to look”. He is pointing to a low lying flatbed that is hauling steel beams. Underneath you can see a red tail light and and head light pointing out at a 90 degree angle.
I'll take a look at let you know,” I tell Roger and trying to focus on access to the car and not the screaming which is hard to ignore. Jim is pulling the extrication equipment off of the engine and I am walking towards the sound of the screaming.
Just before I get to the car, there is a small compact car next to the screaming that is in 3 distinct pieces. Next to the largest piece of the care there are two blood soaked blankets covering different parts of the road. There are arms and legs sticking out at odd angles and it is impossible to tell how many people are under the blankets. There is a state patrolman standing in front of the blankets. As I approach him, he does not say a word just shakes his head slowly. I am scanning the road and it becomes apparent that we are working in a debris field.
I choose my steps carefully and radio a message back to Roger that recovery efforts will include the section of road I am currently on.
I am at at the semi and I have found an opening just large enough for me to crawl into. The screaming is loudest here. Like a lot of my peers, I have developed a certain kind of tunnel vision that allows me to focus on the assignment and not the overall accident scene. I am a piece of a larger rescue effort and it is critical that my part is flawless. I get on my hands and knees and even through my gear , I can already feel the cold making my knee's ache. I can't see much and my ear's are starting to ring from the screaming.
Fire Department!” I yell into the screaming hole and the screaming stops as I crawl forward on my knee's.
I am like most of the guys in our department. We are a solid crew because most everyone has a over a decade of experience working the toughest and most demanding calls that our department runs. We are good because we understand it is about the crew not the person. I am always prepared because I have that unique brand of obsessive compulsive disorder that is bred in the fire service. I carry two of everything because one will fail or be lost and I check everything 3 times.
You could send anyone of us into the screaming hole. Today is my turn, not because I possess any more skills than the next guy, it is simply the luck of the draw.
When I first crawled into the hole, the trauma inside that space is daunting. I am not sure if the confined space, snow, and all of the blood makes it looks far worse than it is. It is cold and I can see and her her breathing heavily. She is heavily pinned, the only thing I can see is the side of her face and one arm that is free. She is lying flat on her back with the both legs elevated over her head. The leg is flat and attached to her because of the fabric of the jeans she is wearing. She is pinned in the perfect shock position and with the metal acting as a tourniquet.
As I am crawling towards her in the cold, and she is following me with one eye. Her eye looks abnormally large but it is the space and the way that she is pinned that makes it look that way. Her single free arm is hanging down and her hand is opening and closing in a pile in a pile of red snow. She is following my movements with a very wide eye and her lips are moving but she is not speaking.
Her injuries look extensive to me and I am trying to determine what I can do to take care of her most basic needs. Plain and simple ABC, airway, breathing and circulation. I want to touch her hand so that she gets it out of the snow and she feels a warm touch of hand. She is in an unimaginable hell hole. It is important to me that she does not die before I can touch her hand.
Normally in a pinned accident you would not spend more than 20 minutes with a patient you were working to extricate. Having tools in your hands, moving metal, or providing patient care make this time fly. It is easier to provide that calm reassurance comes easy when you are at the end of a tool or providing basic life support. Here in the screaming hole, I am unable to move metal or provide meaningful medical care because of how she is pinned.
Nothing in my training and experience has prepared me for this. Without tools and medical equipment I am down to just being able to talk to her. I am the gunfighter who came to the gunfight with a plastic spoon.
As I get within arms reach of her I tell her once again
I am Mike, I am with the Fire Department”.
She reaches out to me and grabs the collar of my bunker coat and with superhuman strength pulls me closer where she can look into my face with that one large eye. In the cold of the space you I can see her heavy breath and feel it on my face. She has a firm grip on my collar is looking at me.
This is the start of the both the longest and shortest day of my Fire Service career. I will spend the next 3 hours in the screaming hole. It would have been too much if it lasted 10 minutes. That is lasted 3 hours has left me with the need to periodically try and reconcile a day that really cannot be reconciled well.
Out of an abundance of respect for her and with a great deal of humility for my overall role in the rescue, I realize it what followed for the next 3 hours just will never translate well. It is the 3 hours I recall in startling detail that still I cannot put into words. It was a 3 hour long roller coaster ride with progressively higher peaks and steeper downhills and turns. It stands to this day as the most intimate time I have spent with another human being.
Time on inside the screaming hole comes to a complete stop while teams of brave firefighters on the outside are racing the clock on the outside to extract her. They are working to create a small opening to extract her from the car and the semi from the opposite side that I am on. The noise from the outside of the screaming hole at first faint is now getting progressively louder. There sound of groaning metal is getting progressively louder. While she is still heavily pinned, both arms and are free and I have been able get a Cspine collar on her. It was dark for so long but now there are rays of light coming in at odd angles.
You see the light now?” I ask her
Mike?” huge tears are rolling down her cheeks.
I am going to make it out here aren't I?”
Yea, you are, it is not going to be long now. Hey, there are a couple of flight medics out there, they are going to cut your clothes away, and you are going to have a seriously cold ass for a minute. There is going to be a lot of noise and light and a lot of hands. But your warm ride is out there, you ever ride in a helicopter?
I am not doing to die am I? She says in a wavering voice
Not today” even as I say it out loud, I am not sure that she is not going to die today.
I can see the blue flight suits to the flight medics in an opening just behind her. Hands are starting to reach in and touch her.
Mike, wh...” she stops in mid sentence and closes her eyes.
I am stunned, suddenly out of breath and trying to collect myself. I let go of her hand and key up my handheld radio. I don't trust my voice and put my forehead down in the snow for a minute to clear my head. As soon as I key up my mike the flight medic's head reappears in the hole.
She is down, she just went down”
Is she breathing? Conscious?” the medic is asking me. He turns to motion his partner over.
She is breathing, stopped talking to me in midsentence, airway is still good” I cringe, I should have checked that before saying she was down.
We got her, she is ok”
I push her hands up on her stomach as they are lifting her out and she is gone. Light streams into the screaming hole. The space looks more daunting in the light of the morning. The two firefighters who have been passing me gear have pulled me feet first out of the now quiet screaming hole. It is over and it does not feel like it is over. My back, legs, and arms all ache. The adrenaline that I was running on is gone.
Roger starts speaking on the radio when I am pulled out and lifts a finger for me to stop, while he finishes.
Mike, you good?'
I am good”
News helicopters circle overhead, and there is an army of firefighters everywhere. On the other side of Interstate the helicopter is starting up. I recognize Tim who was directing recovery efforts on the other side. On his team there are smiles all around, I wave at him and he smiles back. In the coming days, Tim will receive almost no outside acknowledgment for his efforts and he was most instrumental in saving her life.
The fog has lifted and it already seems like a different day than when I arrived. It makes the time I spent in the screaming hole seem longer.
I am walking back to the engine to find a minute to collect myself.
Mike, Mike, Mike” Tim is motioning me over to where she is being put on a backboard .
She wants to see you before she flies”
She is small on the board and the two medics are getting her prepped for the flight. The firefighters part to let me through and that feels weird.  These are the men who worked hardest to save her life.  I do not need dramatic right now. I need matter of fact and I need a minute to collect myself.
Her neck is in a Cspine collar and she can only look up. I hold her hands and and lean over so she can see my face. I have to make this short, she has shaken me down to my core and in this is not the place to break down. 
We made it” she said and tears roll down her face.
Never doubted it for a minute” I lied
Let these guys take care of you, gonna be a quick ride, you are going to be warm again it just a minute”
I will see you soon” I wink and give her hands one last squeeze. I pull back so the medics can work on her.
Roger comes over and walks to me the engine. I don’t want to talk to anyone or answer any questions. I want to get my gear straightened around and get back to normal. He hands me a warm cup of coffee in a paper cup. I feel sick to my stomach and want to sit down for a minute.
You good?” Roger asks again
I am good, need to sit for a minute and drink this warm coffee tho”
You sure you are good?”
Cap, all due respect, let me sit for a minute and warm up, I am good to go”
He looks like he is going to say something else and then nods his head and heads down to talk to the TV crews that are setting up camera's. I recognize the reporter from channel 9 and I am watching her talk to our Public Information Officers. The Battalion Chief is standing just off camera and listening to her talk. My hands just will not get warm and they are starting to shake a little now. I have my hand over the top of the paper cup trying to warm my hand.
When I look back up the Battalion Chief, PIO, and reporter are looking over to where I am standing. The Chief is pointing at me and motions me over
Here is the guy you want to talk to, he was with her the whole time she was trapped” the chief says.
Can we talk to you?” the reporter asks and my heart sinks.  I am the wrong guy to be talking to right now.
Sure”
The cameraman is repositioning himself and she is adjusting her clothing.
Ready?' she asks
Sure”
We are here today with the brave firefighter who kept the woman talking throughout the ordeal and saved her life” I cringe at this, the guys who actually saved her life are picking up their gear now.  Not one of them will receive the credit that is due outside of the firehouse. Sound bites for TV are the flavor of the day. Camera or picture time also means I owe the station ice cream. .
What was it like in there?” the reporter asks
That is a real brave kid, she is as tough as they come. There were a lot of firefighters working to get her out and stabilizes her. She did her part and hung in there with us for an extended extrication. We will all be looking forward to a speedy recovery for her.”
What did you say to her to keep her spirits up”
She is a real tough kid, she hung in there and knew our guys were going to get her out”
The reporter turns to the Chief and asks him more detailed questions about the whole Fire Department response and recovery efforts. I have stepped back out of camera range and wait for the live TV report to end. The cameraman takes the camera off of his shoulder.
We done?” the Chief asks
Thanks Chief, I appreciate it” she says
Chief, I got to head back and help pick up” I say
You good?”
I will be when I can finish my coffee”
Thanks Mike”
I walk back to the other side of the engine and throw up on my boots. I am in the call that is never ending. Our engine is released early and we are finally headed back to the station.
At the station the nightmare continues. We have a full house, people who have been watching the drama unfold are all coming down to check on us. Hot food, hot coffee, and clean uniforms are waiting for everyone. The chaplain is there and is taking a minute with each of us. He puts his arm around me and I have to resist an urge to punch him in the mouth.
What we need is time to debrief with each other. Nothing will ever take the place of being with people who have done what you have. Your peers understand the pace of how these things get diffused. It always depends on the person and incident. The best intentions of chaplains, friends, and family often fall painfully short.
I excuse myself, get cleaned up and manage to dodge the Chaplin and other well meaning people until my shift is over.
At home, I take another long hot shower before I try to think through what just happened. Over a hot chicken dinner only parts and pieces of the story can be told. I believe that this is as much of the story as I will be able to tell. This amazing tribute to the human spirit will stay in my head until I can find a way to put it on paper.

EPILOG 1
After countless surgeries, she has defied the experts and has kept the leg. She has asked to come to the station to thank us all. It is going to be an extravaganza with the local Denver TV stations. She arrives and takes her place at the table. I have forgotten how small she is. Even in a wheelchair she looks tiny. She looks around for me at the table. She whispers into her mom's ear and her mom makes her way over to me. She asks if I can meet with them alone in the woman's bathroom after TV camera's are off. The camera lights come on and she has an amazing grace and composure. She is simple and elegant in her praise and wins everyone's heart all over again. Everyone is beaming.
We are in the bathroom with her mother. Her mom hands me a box of rolled mints, blue foil wrappers. “Lifesavers” he mom says and they are both beaming at me. She leans forward in her wheel chair and motions for me to come down to eye level with her.
I will always remember your voice, but I could not remember what you looked like until they showed me a picture of you”
That is normal stuff, your brain protects you and lets you remember what you need to remember” I say.
I don't remember what I said or did but I will always remember your voice” “
What did I say to you? Did I say anything crazy or out of line?” she asked
They say you are the reason I made it”
You made it because of who you are. In that place when everything but the most basic instincts are left, you make decisions based on how you are wired. No one can really override that. It makes great TV to say that I did something extraordinary but nothing could be further from the truth.”
It was all you” I tell her
Do I owe you an apology for anything I said?” she asked
No, not at all, I wanted to thank you tho”
Why?”
For reminding me why I became a Firefighter in the first place”
Really?” She is looking at her mom now
Yea, really”
Do you want to see my leg?'
She pulls back the blanket and shows her tiny muscled leg. It is indented, flat, and cross stitched extensively. A broad smile is on both of our faces. I reach out to touch it and stop myself.
Its okay, go ahead”
I rest my palm on her leg and it jumps. Another broad smile crosses both of our faces.
That is the one the best legs I have every seen”
I am recounting it to Chris later and he smiles. “You spent the most intimate time of your life with a woman half your age and she cannot remember what you look like”.
It is hard to be me” I tell him and we both laugh.
EPILOG 2
An entire year has passed. She is graduating from college with honors. I have kept track of her in newspaper articles, in particular her struggles with post traumatic stress disorder. have spent a lot of time letting everyone know I was OK but when I read about the specifics about her struggles, I realized I have struggled the past year with some of the same things she has.
I am reading about her graduation over coffee with Chris.
You should go see her graduate, you know you want to?”
That is not creepy? It sounds creepy to me?” I said
You are an idiot tough guy. Really you do not know what creepy is by now? Go.
I am in the cheap seats with my best black suit on enjoying the anonymity of a huge public ceremony. She is introduced to thunderous applause. I decide I will try to walk over to where she is after so I can say hello and good luck. I wait until the crowd clears, so I can be low key. I misjudged how long it took me to make it over the student section is and by the time I am walking down the concrete steps she is gone. I am relieved and disappointed. Most of my last minute inspirations are not very well rehearsed. I turn to walk up the stairs with my head down.
Mike?” She is standing on the stair right in front of me. I must have walked past her.
You came” she said
Hey, I came to wish you luck and say congratulations”
What is next?”
I am going to be a teacher” she says
I have been reading about you in the paper, they say your leg is in good shape”
They still think I am going to keep it, I have been really working to keep it”
She is much smaller that I remember her. She is standing on the step above me and I am still a little taller than her. She hugs me hard and long and whispers thank you in my ear. For a second time, I get to tell her we made it.

FINAL EPILOG
It is 5 years past and her memory will always remain with me. Time and distance takes the edges off of everything. I am sure she has made it, it never occurs to me to think differently.
I am returning from a Paris to Denver and taking the underground train to get my bags. As I get on the train to go to baggage claim I look up and see she is right on the train behind me. Still smaller than I remember, she has on a backpack and is leaning on a great looking young guy who looks like he is on top of the world. She smiles at me and I smile back.
I wait and watch her get off the train and while the escalator takes here up she turns back to flash me one more of those brilliant broad smiles of hers. No words just a huge smile.
For the last time, she gets to tell me we made it.

Introduction #2 First / Last Responder

At the conclusion of my firefighting career, I opted to try and be a hospice volunteer to repay a debt for the exceptional care my dad received.  I was going to try to stay for a year or two and now in year four, I believe I will be doing this for a little bit longer.  My son pointed out to me that I have covered the spectrum of responding.  Firefighting (first responder) and Hospice (last responder).   I did find parallels between firefighting and hospice.  I arrived at these places expecting to be the hero and instead found an amazing group of everyday hero's.

What follows is a glimpse into the world of a hospice volunteer.   In the four short years, I have  been a hospice volunteer my view of the world has opened up in ways that I did not anticipate. 

I do not know what the typical hospice volunteer is like.  If my orientation class was any indication I am not a typical hospice volunteer.  The first day or orientation I drove my motorcycle to the meeting, walked in and felt almost immediately out of place.  The room was a mixture of students, who were working towards degree's in social work, and retired people.  All of them were immediately likeable.  They are the people I expected hospice volunteers to be, engaging, calm, patient and empathetic. 

We went around the room and everyone spent a couple of minutes describing what brought them to hospice.  I only listened to the first couple to know that my reason for being here lacked some of the depth that I was hearing from (others) people in the room.  I was here because I came to pay a debt for the care my own father received while he was under hospice care.  I know that the most heartfelt thank you's pale in caparison with actually giving your time back to a person or an organization that provided meaning in your life.  I owed hospice an amount of time that I needed to determine.  

I am a retired firefighter.  I have seen sudden and unexpected death.  There is no way to give the appropriate weight to traumatic injuries or illness that surrounds a death.  Seeing this has not given me any additional depth or insight on life.  Except that I have developed a habit of looking at ordinary things with an expectation that there is an extraordinary thing buried in there somewhere.  These people who died in my Fire Service career were for fleeting moments my brother, sister, mom, or dad.  It is always sad but you learn quickly to shield yourself from grief and grieving people.  It is a survival tactic that is needed, there is just too much to process.  Grief and grieving was left to the professionals or loved ones who had the training or relationship to provide the real long term support that is needed when a person dies.

Those first couple of hospice training meetings I considered leaving at break more than once.  I was stepping into the world I actively avoided for a lot of years. 

My father was in the care of hospice during the final weeks of his life.  You can tell when a person cares about what they do for a living and hospice people cared.  The RN's, LPN's, and CNA's were completely genuine in wanting to make my dad and family as prepared as we could be.   That care was familiar from my Fire Service days.

On the last night of his life, I was unknowingly rescued by one of those Hospice RN’s.   

I would sit in the room with my dad and read while he slept.  As was my practice when I was staying the night, I would walk down to the liquor store and get a couple of beers early in the evening.  A couple of beers and a good book were how I spent those nights with dad.  On the night he died, I met one of the off-duty hospice nurses who was in the liquor store and struck up a conversation with her.   In the 45 minutes (walk and talk time) that I was gone my dad died.  My mom and sister, in tears, told me that if I would have been home I could have performed CPR on my dad to revive him.   I would not have performed CPR on dad and I would have had to have a really difficult conversation with my mom that may have shaped how we viewed each other for years to come.  That beer walk and RN talk saved me.  My role was the son providing comfort, I am still grateful for that.  

I don't want to elevate the hospice volunteer above the people who do the real work for these patients and families.  RN's, LPN's, CNA's, Social Workers, and Clergy do all of the heavy lifting.  For the most part I get to see people when they are having the best part of their day.

I came to pay a debt and ended up staying on because I found so much amazing life in a place that was so close to death.  This journey has allowed me to meet people that I would have never met normally.  Instead of meeting dying people and their grieving families, I have met painters, poets, hot rod builders, writers, clerics, and people who lived the history I read about in my favorite books.  I expected to find grief in everyone and with the spouses, children, friends, and family I found an overwhelming amount of love.  I am not by any stretch of imagination a Hallmark kind of sensitive guy.  But there is a universal touch that everyone has seen and felt.  The gentle touch of a mother brushing back a kids hair from a hot forehead and touching the back of her hand to his head.  The three finger touch of a spouse or lover on the cheek or chin of a loved one while they slept.  The two handed arm rub of a long time friend.  You see this a lot in hospice and none of it looks like grief.  It looks and feels like love.

It is still humbling to think about how much all of these people have given to me at a time when they were facing their own death.   I hope what follows is the long overdue thank you I have for all my hospice patients who continued my education. 

For purposes of anonymity all of the patients I reference will be called John or Jane.  

One of my favorite patients, who suffered from advanced stages of Dementia, has called me John from the minute I sat down with her.  I have happily adopted the name since.   I have been seeing Jane for over 4 months now and I don’t know who John is to her.  I only know that John is cared for deeply by her and he brings her the briefest moment of contentment during our visits.   The locations that all these true stores take place are right in your own city, state, and nursing facility.  

If your family has lost a loved one while in hospice care, it is my hope you recognize the genuine love and respect that total strangers have had for your loved ones.  More importantly I hope you realize that your loved ones gave an incredible gift of love, hope, and life to those hospice volunteers who were lucky enough to know them.  Thank you for sharing your loved ones.

For me this has been an education about how to live life.  I hope you find something here that will make you want to do something you have been putting off for a while...

Chapter 2 IHOP Coffee

I have put a small step stool in the Jeep.  I have an old no frills Jeep Wrangler.  It is a soft top and has absolutely no frills.  I have brought some rubber floor mats from CostCo to cover up some of the small holes that are where you would put your feet.

It is a warm summer day and I have cleaned the Jeep out.  I did not think this all the way through.  When I called John a couple of days ago to ask him if I could pick him up for coffee, he sounded tired and a little hard of hearing.  The write up on John, said that he wanted to go out for coffee and donuts.  He just wanted to get out.  I told John, I would pick him up in my Jeep and that we would go for coffee.  

Thank you google maps, I did a quick search of coffee / breakfast places that were near his address.  John lives within a couple blocks of the University.  IHOP is 2 miles away and has plenty of handicapped parking.  I have googled the IHOP coffee and breakfast menu and there is no way I can go wrong here. 

In our last call, I agreed that we can meet in the lobby of the managed care facility and that I would take him for coffee in the Jeep.  I am wearing the purple Hospice shirt that looks like complete hell on me.  I have my name tag on and arrive 20 minutes early (we agreed to meet at 10:00)   At 09:50 I walk into the reception desk, tell them I am a hospice volunteer and tell them that I am here to pick up John.  They ask if they can ring him to tell me that I am here.  I said no and say I will wait outside.  I ask what John looks like so I can identify him when he comes down.  I get a generic description of what John looks like.

I began to scare the residents from 09:50 - 09:58, when John actually walks down the steps and walks over to me to introduce himself. He has a head full of gray hair and a yellow down vest with ski area patches on his jacket.  He has a strong steady gaze and a firm handshake.  John does not look like he should be in Hospice care.  He looks strong and vibrant.  John waves away the step stool and climbs into the Jeep.  

“Where are we going” John asks in an upbeat voice

“I was thinking we could drive over the IHOP and get coffee there”  

John turns in his seat to face me.  “Did they tell you I was dying?” 

“Yes they did” I can feel my face start to flush.  I am trying to decipher what I have done wrong or what in my demeanor he doesn’t like

“Why would you take a dying guy out for a crappy cup of IHOP coffee” he said and smiled broadly at me.

John has an engaging way about him and I can’t help but smile back at him.  Taking a dying man to IHOP is not the worst idea I have ever had but it is close.  IHOP coffee is like getting coffee at an Interstate rest stop, vending machine.  It is hot, and has a taste vaguely resembling coffee. It is a place to get hot liquid that will tide you over until you can stop and get a real cup of coffee. 

Stripped of any purpose and dignity I had before I arrived, I ask him simply "Where do you want to go?"

John smiles a huge smile and says "Lets go over to the new coffee on Pearl Street"

"Done" I tell him,  I am relieved and happy that he is going to give me a second chance to know him. 

20 minutes later I am in front of a Frappe Mocha with sour cream coffee cake.  I do not know what to say, I want to tell him (but can't) that if I was dying, a Frappe Mocha and sour cream coffee cake would be a step in the right direction to making the world seem right. 

As is often the case, John asks me why I volunteer for Hospice.  Hospice patients have amazing bullshit detectors.  I know to answer him in the most straight forward way possible.  I tell him simply that I meet people and get to know people who are outside my comfort zone.  I have met authors, painters, artists, and people who have lived the life that I am trying to live now.

John begins to tell me about his very successful white collar career back east and his very happy long marriage.  He has two successful sons who have settled close to where he is now.  When his wife died, he lived in their family home and maintained appearances that he thought people expected of him.  He maintained this lifestyle for two years and felt like his purpose in life had died with his beloved spouse.  

He decided to sell everything and move to Colorado to learn to ski.  He decided that his bucket list was still in front of him and worked to chip away at it.  The patches on his jacket are the things he checked off his bucket list very late in life.

John begins to tell me about his love of trains and riding throughout the West on trains.  I am enthralled, I have always imagined doing this very thing.

“I have never ridden a train, but it is on my bucket list” I tell him

“How old are you Mike?” he asks smiling.  Before I can answer he tells me

“The only real regrets I have had in my life was finding out how easy the things on my bucket list were to do”  he said and winked at me.

I am six months into Cappuccino's Mocha's, Macchiato, and Latte's and I am in awe of the things John has crossed off his bucket list.  I am also painfully aware of how large my bucket list is at this point in time.  

John is patiently trying to tell me I may be a little lazy in the pursuit of my bucket list.  I am not successful in convincing John that I am doing the right thing in applying my resources to the broken dishwasher, the landscaping, and the home projects that are beginning to pile up.  

His biggest  regret is that a lot of the things on his bucket list were checked off when his wife was gone and his children were grown.  John, is teaching me what he wanted to show his wife and children, that the bucket list and the long list of responsibilities that he had could have been more balanced.  His wish was that they could have seen him accomplish more of these bucket list items and still be the husband and father that they all needed.  

As is often the case with Hospice patients, I feel like John has volunteered to help me get my own life in order.  I want to ride a train, hike a week long trail, get a Jeep that is not 20 years old.  I want to volunteer at events and see people check off items on their own bucket list.  I want to grab someone who is lost navigating in life and tell them how fucking wonderful and magical this immediate moment is.

A new dishwasher is a wonderful comfort item but as I load the dishes into it, my heart does not soar.  A manicured garden is not what you will remember me for.  Home projects are part of everyday life.  

So to the weeds in the garden, the old dishwasher and the list of home projects I want to tell you in all sincerity, that I see you clearly.  You are on the list, along with train rides, week long train hikes, and volunteering at those events that are important to me.  The length of time you get to reside in my head and heart is limited.   

To John, the length of time you get to reside in my heart and head is not limited.  You are still there today.  You never did die, you stayed in my head to show me how to live my current life.  The weeds are going to get taller when I am away riding the the Royal Gorge Route Railroad.

Weeds, I will get you when I get back.

    

Chapter 3 - The Crying Game

I just finished listening to the Prairie Home Companion Radio show.  There was a fictional story of a stoic Minnesota woman who tragically buried a husband and later a son without ever crying at the funeral of either one.  When this same woman's dog died, she started crying and could not stop.  It is a great listening, it is alternately sad, funny, and poignant.

The moral of the story is clear.  Not crying for the things in life that should make you cry is going to take its toll on you.  If you are able to cry for the large and small things that tug at your heart, you are going to be able to stop crying when your dog dies.  The storyteller mentions that he sheds a tear or two each day for the things that make his heart happy or sad.

Cry a little each day?  Except for the weeks following my Grandma Maggie's death I cannot remember a stretch of days where I shed tears like that.  I am like most every guy out there; I live in the space that is emotionally distance and emotionally available.  Wide swings in my emotional availability can be directly associated with alcohol consumption.

I apply old school man logic to things like this.  It is easy to have very distinct, clear, opinions about life events and people that I observe from a safe distance.  When I am at a great distance from the things that I do not clearly understand or take the time to process, my opinion is very clear and cemented in man logic.  As great as that story was, I got to think that if you are crying a little each day, that you should be under the care of a qualified health professional.

Boomer (my own flatulent dog) that I just kicked out of the kitchen, solidifies that opinion.  He is glaring at me from the comfort of his dog bed, making it hard for me to imagine having an extended crying jag for him.

Good solid man logic until two things happened to me.

The first thing was a rare free afternoon where I was home alone.  I am channel surfing in a way I can't do when the kids are home.

I am sitting alone in the recliner with a cold can of coke on the table next to the recliner.  I am not using a coaster and I love that I am leaving a ring on the table.  I am flipping through the channels that I would never admit to watching.

Daytime talk show hosts are giving a lot of people (who should never have it) their 15 minutes of fame.  People of every description are taking their clothes off, yelling endless streams of profanities at the host, audience, and each other.  Men are finding out they ARE or ARE NOT the father of their young sons and daughters.  Women are finding out boyfriends and significant others have secret families that they were not aware of.  

Music videos with women wearing almost nothing and grinding away to music that I do not normally listen to.  Most shocking police cars chases, fights, and shoot outs.  There is an unending stream of shows that pander to the lowest common denominator in people.

TV is treating me like the pig I am.

I end up on the Hallmark channel and catch the end of a Little House on the Prairie episode.  A tearful Laura Ingalls starts to sob and her dad, Charles Ingalls wraps her up in a bear hug.  As the credits start to roll, the camera shows a single tear rolling down his cheek.

For some inexplicable reason my eyes are starting to tear up.

I switch the TV off, get out of the recliner, wipe the ring from the can off the table and take a deep breath.  I feel embarrassed and I am not entirely sure why I can feel this embarrassed when no one was around to see me tear up over 3 minutes of a Little House on the Prairie episode. 

Damn you, Laura Ingalls.   

The second thing happened the following weekend.  I was working as an EMT at a karate tournament at the local high school.  I have spent the morning watching very young kids throw each other around and kick the living hell out of each other.

I cringed the entire morning, it brings out the dad in me.  Like everyone else, I have distinct voices in my head, my Mike voice, the firefighter voice, and the dad voice.  When it comes to kids throwing each other around and kicking each other, the dad voice is the loudest.  It does not help that they are wearing white robes, that there is a referee, and they are bowing to each other before and after each match.   The dad voice wants to tell them to stop hitting each other.

Just before lunch, the final results are announced for the 7-8 girl's bracket.  A tiny girl with a long brown braid is announced at the 3rd place finisher.  As soon as she is announced, two middle aged women in the bleachers start yelling, whistling, and woo hooing for all they are worth.  The little girl is called up to the podium and bows deeply as the judge puts the 3rd place medal around her neck.  When she finishes her bow, those beautiful brown eyes are wide, red rimmed, and a single tear rolls down her cheek.

My eyes are tearing up and I can't stop.  Now there are people who can see me tear up and I feel mortified.  I casually wipe my face on my shirtsleeve, and I am looking around to see if anyone picked up on me getting tearful watching the 3rd place finisher.

Now, I am worried.

I have a vision of my dog dying and me slipping into a long crying episode, crying that I will not be able to stop.  Poetic justice, because I will become the person, I was making fun of just a short time ago.  It seems like (despite my firefighting experience) that I keep having to relearn the karma lesson.

As a firefighter, I have seen people who find themselves in catastrophic and life changing events in very unanticipated moments.

I have seen how lives change in an instant with a speed and finality that is stunning.  I have a very deep appreciation of how a moment in time can take on a life of its own. 

In my own mind, these moments can be short lived, or they can last for an indeterminate amount of time in my thoughts.  The only thing I know for sure is that when one of these moments stick with me, I do not get to choose the amount of time that they stay with me.  Some of these very intimate moments that I see do not stay in my thoughts or mind.  There are those intimate moments that remain with me for a time period that I do not get to choose.  Some of those places and people remain with me with a startling clarity today.  I do not know why some stay in my head and why some do not.  

Many of those moments stay with me and have a clarity that can keep them at the forefront of my thoughts on any given day.  They are not moments, that cause me pain or haunt me, these moments remind me that everyday things are not always everyday things.

When I see two people who are giving each other those hugs that happen when people are leaving on trips or coming back home, I remember the most tender embrace I ever witnessed.  The embrace of the 85-year-old man who is bent awkwardly over the body of his wife, holding her in an embrace that looks tender and desperate at the same time.  We have all held a loved one in a tender embrace that no one wanted to end.  Our crew had to gently insert ourselves into the most important hug this man was giving to his wife and start the process of the recovery for everyone in his home.

Tender embraces look different to me now, I have seen some of the most tender embraces one human being can give another human being.  I hug people a little bit harder than I should, but I want them to remember that I held them tightly

I still have a box of trophies and ribbons from Megan and Jakes elementary and middle schools plays, teams, and groups they joined.  They do not want them and I still cannot manage to throw them out.  I still remember with amazing clarity the trophies, ribbons, and the smiling pictures in the room of the teenager who took her own life early on a Sunday morning.  After I write this, I will go look at the box again to start sorting it out and after short time, will place it back in the storage closet with nothing removed. 

The badly wrapped gift that is next to the rolled over SUV on Father's Day, next to young man who was ejected from the vehicle with injuries too extensive to attempt life saving measures.   The badly wrapped gifts I received every year from my own kids when they were younger were always so beautiful in a way that I still cannot explain

I have only taken my kids fishing a handful of times over the years.  In the corner of the garage there are 3 fishing poles and equipment that is no longer functional.  I can't bring myself to throw them away.  I still remember the fishing poles and the packed lunch that the 8-year-old boy was trying to pick up early that Saturday morning.ck up.  The young boy had a a large wound on his forehead and looked dazed.  The older man, that we assume was driving is about 20 feet away from the demolished truck with catastrophic injuries.  It is 8AM and the State Patrolman is arresting the drunk driver that ran the stop sign and killed this young mans father. 

Everyday things that stopped being everyday things.  Moments for me, entire lifetimes for the people who lived them.

Firefighters are the strangers who start to pick up the pieces those unimaginable situations that are so difficult to process.  These professional men and women are the first people in the healing and grieving process.  These people who do all of this heavy lifting are the people that you should only have a vague memory of.

All of the beautiful souls that come after the firefighters will be the people that will hold the hands of the mothers, fathers, sons, and daughters as the title wave of fear and grief hit.  Grief is one of the most intimate times in anyone's life.  This kind of intimacy belongs with people that will hold and cry all of the tears that are needed to start the healing process.  

This is not what firefighters do.

Being a regular witness to events like this gives you a deep appreciation for all the people you encounter who will have to endure this process.  Some of these moments and people will remain fresh in my memory for periods of time that I simply have no control over.  Most fade with the passage of time, and new ones replace old ones.  There are some that remain with me today.

As Firefighters we only read the last page of the book.  Not the beginning, middle, or end, just the last page.   It is easier not to cry that most people would imagine, because we really never know the whole story.

Every time I think I am not empathetic; I think about the instructions you get when you are flying on a plane.  Put your oxygen mask on before you attempt to help another passenger.  Two passed out people may seem more heartfelt, but it lacks the practicality that is needed to be a firefighter.

Well, I have answered the question then.  When my dog dies, I will cry but I will be able to stop.

Firefighting has made me a kinder, gentler, and a more thoughtful person.  By my calculations, this puts me somewhere between introspective and "not quite the asshole I was".  Being kinder, gentler, and more thoughtful is a function of time, distance, and acquired wisdom.  Being a firefighter has accelerated this journey for me by quite a bit.

I still cry at weddings, funerals, and happy events in that dorky way that men cry.  It is like turning on a garden hose that is half frozen.  Water stops and starts and if you are expecting water to flow, it is hard to watch.  When I do cry, I will wipe my eyes on my sleeves in the most casual way when I think no one is looking.

If you ever catch me doing this (at a karate match for example) pretending, that you did not see me is a kindness that I appreciate.