I’m slowly pulling together all the pieces to bring The Warrior Project into reality. My biggest focus right now is in talking to those whose jobs far too often bring them face-to-face with suicide: our local police, first responders, emergency room personnel, clinical therapists, etc.
These are the professionals who will make the referrals to the current support groups and what will eventually be our drop-in center.
And very soon, I will have to begin the money hunt: a crowd-funding campaign, asking for corporate donations, and developing the procedures for insurance reimbursements for therapeutic services. Until I can get The Warrior Project incorporated as a 501(C)3, I won’t be able to go after foundation grants… and even when I can, landing those will tough for a start-up.
All of this is tedious, time-consuming work… and I already work full-time at my day job, as well as hours each week trying to keep our antique shop and used book store going.
If you support the concept of The Warrior Project, I would greatly appreciate a few minutes of your time to pick your brain about possible sources of funding, outreach to those we serve, and any other ideas you might have to help save lives and the devastation that suicide leaves in its wake.
Thank you.
Linda
207 740 2247
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In memory of my beloved husband John Kelly Snyder… 20 Sept 1956 – 21 Oct 2016.
The Warrior Project will eventually become a warm, welcoming drop-in center for those living with extreme emotional and/or physical pain coupled with hopelessness, and a resource for families and friends fearing for the life of, or grieving the loss of, the person they love so much.
My Johnny was a true warrior, fighting demons no one else could see. I thought he was the strongest man in the world, and perhaps he was, but tragically, the demons got the better of him.
The name of this project is in no way intended to be reflective of, or piggy back off, Wounded Warriors which serves those wounded after September 11, 20o1. Like too many others, John was a warrior long before then.
I’m a member of several support groups on Facebook for those of us grieving the loss of a spouse, child, parent, or other loved one to suicide.
Too many of the members question “Why? Why did s/he do it?” Some have said there were no clues, zero clues, nothing that could have warned them.
I don’t believe it. The clues are there. We just missed them.
I’m a social worker. The guilt I’ve felt has been huge because I should have seen all the clues and added them up. In fact, I did see all the clues. But as one of John’s daughters said to me yesterday, they were part of our every day life, and so didn’t seem significant in the way they would have in a therapeutic setting.
I knew that John’s drinking had spiraled out of control. He was in constant pain, he had significant health issues and his go-to had always been alcohol.
I even told him – more than once – that he was passively suicidal, that I was terrified I’d come home one day and find him dead from alcohol poisoning.
But I never ever expected him to take his gun out in the woods and kill himself.
John was a good man…. he was a great man. And he fought as hard as he could, but he did it quietly, without asking for help.
I could have seen those clues, too. Because they were there as well.
Could I have prevented his death? As much as my guilt tells me Yes, the reality is No. Maybe I could have prevented it that day, but I could not have prevented it permanently. He was not making the choice to live.
I loved him as fiercely as I could. I let him know how furious I was with his self-destructive behaviors. I dragged him from doctor to doctor for his health issues until he said No More. I forced him to admit to his use of alcohol to numb the physical and emotional pain. I supported him fully when he finally began attending AA.
I suggested all sorts of other options that he could try. He turned them all down.
And as I said, I loved him as fiercely as I could – and he knew it. He did know that.
Yet he chose the path he took, a path that eventually ended in his far too early and tragic death, leaving me here alone.
Yes, the clues were there. No, I am not responsible.
Damn you John Snyder. I love you still.
************************************
In memory of my beloved husband John Kelly Snyder… 20 Sept 1956 – 21 Oct 2016.
The Warrior Project will eventually become a warm, welcoming drop-in center for those living with extreme emotional and/or physical pain coupled with hopelessness, and a resource for families and friends fearing for the life of, or grieving the loss of, the person they love so much.
My Johnny was a true warrior, fighting demons no one else could see. I thought he was the strongest man in the world, and perhaps he was, but tragically, the demons got the better of him.
The name of this project is in no way intended to be reflective of, or piggy back off, Wounded Warriors which serves those wounded after September 11, 20o1. Like too many others, John was a warrior long before then.
Support Group: Living with Emotional and/or Physical Pain and/or PTSD, Complicated by Hopelessness
Tonight, from 6:00-7:30 pm.
For those who are sick and tired of feeling sick and tired of their emotional, psychic and/or physical pain, and are feeling hopeless about it all.
A typical member would be someone who for all intents & purposes is considered “high functioning”, who is not part of the State’s mental health system, and about whom nearly everyone would say “I had no idea s/he was in such a world of hurt”.
The goal is to share experiences and ways of managing the emotional and physical pain you’re living with in a safe, upbeat environment unlike what most people think of when they hear the words “support group”.
We meet most Saturdays from 6:00-7:30 pm at The Warrior Project, 189 B Main Street, Lewiston ME 04240. (See directions below.)
Our groups are free and confidential and run by a loss survivor/social worker.
To Find Us: From Main Street in Lewiston, turn onto Park Street and park in the first parking space on the street that’s available. The meters are free after 5:00 pm.
You’ll see Heritage Books & Maps at the very beginning – 5 Park Street. (The light should be on inside to help you see it, although the shop will not be open).
Facing Heritage Books & Maps, you’ll see an alley to its left. A silver Jeep will probably be parked in that alley, near our entrance door on that side of the building.
Please enter through that back door off the alley. (You may hear a dog barking inside; she won’t bother you, but she is loud until she settles down.) There will be a sign posted on the door:
FMI: Text or call 207 713 0674. You may have to leave a message, in which case we’ll get back to you as soon as we can.
****************
In memory of my beloved husband John Kelly Snyder… 20 Sept 1956 – 21 Oct 2016.
The Warrior Project will eventually become a warm, welcoming drop-in center for those living with extreme emotional and/or physical pain coupled with hopelessness, and a resource for families and friends fearing for the life of, or grieving the loss of, the person they love so much.
My Johnny was a true warrior, fighting demons no one else could see. I thought he was the strongest man in the world, and perhaps he was, but tragically, the demons got the better of him.
The name of this project is in no way intended to be reflective of, or piggy back off, Wounded Warriors which serves those wounded after September 11, 20o1. Like too many others, John was a warrior long before then.
I’ve started talking to local police departments about The Warrior Project. The reception I’m getting is overwhelmingly positive and supportive.
In the past two days, I’ve had several emails back from local departments, and have met with representatives of the police department in one of Maine’s largest cities.
They all want to see this project take off. They realize how much help is needed for those with chronic pain, PTSD and suicide ideation, how much help is needed for grieving families…. and how much help they themselves need in continuing with their jobs every day because of the tragic situations they encounter far too often.
First responders are faced with a horrendous duty. They are the ones on the scene dealing with tragic deaths; helping with the nightmare of finding the dead body of a husband, wife, parent, friend or even a child who has died… whether it’s by natural causes, terrible accident, or self-inflicted.
In my case, I was terrified that my husband had suicided… the events of that day all pointed to one inevitable outcome, one I desperately wanted not to be true.
The Auburn police department arrived almost immediately after I called them. They stayed with me for hours that evening, while some officers searched the woods in back of our house in the rain, and in the dark, to no avail. (I’d already been out there calling for John, begging him to please be okay, before I gave up and called the police department.)
The next morning, the officers were out there again, searching with no luck. I had also gone out again, calling for my husband and hoping, hoping, hoping I would find him alive.
John’s daughter arrived and searched… and she found him. She called the APD to notify them; I didn’t know she’d found him until two officers showed up at my house to be with me when I was told. They were kind and gentle throughout my sobbing and screaming, and stayed with me until more of my family arrived.
As I explained to the officer I met with yesterday, one of my goals for The Warrior Project is to provide staff who can ride along with the officers on suicide calls, people who can provide the extra level of support needed – the hugs, making of coffee, helping with the dishes, soothing of the sobs & screams… whatever it takes – that the officers can’t do.
When I mentioned this to the officer, he not only agreed but took it one step further, and told me about the Code 9 Project, which is working to address the PTSD that too many police officers end up with, because of the nightmarish situations they deal with far too often.
This video gives a good overview of the Code 9 Project. I will incorporate supporting first responders into the work that The Warrior Project does.
It is my fervent hope that as many of you as can find a way to help will support The Warrior Project. You never, ever know when someone you love will suddenly be gone, and your life and sense of safety are changed forever.
I know mine is.
**************************
In memory of my beloved husband John Kelly Snyder… 20 Sept 1956 – 21 Oct 2016.
The Warrior Project is a warm, welcoming drop-in center for those living with extreme emotional and/or physical pain coupled with hopelessness, and a resource for families and friends fearing for the life of, or grieving the loss of, the person they love so much.
My Johnny was a true warrior, fighting physical pain and other demons no one else could see. I thought he was the strongest man in the world, and perhaps he was, but tragically, the pain and the demons got the better of him.
The name of this project is in no way intended to be reflective of, or piggy back off, Wounded Warriors which serves those wounded after September 11, 20o1. Like too many others, John was a warrior long before then.
We welcome those who have recently lost someone to suicide, or those who are still feeling the impact even years later. It is a place to share your grief and learn how to live again by learning from others who have been through a similar experience.
The goal is to share experiences and ways of managing the devastating grief you’re living with in a safe, upbeat environment unlike what most people think of when they hear the words “support group”.
The Suicide Survivors Grief Group meets most Tuesdays from 6:00 pm-7:30 pm at The Warrior Project, 189 B Main Street, Lewiston ME 04240. (See directions below.)
FMI: 207 713 0674 (you’ll probably have to leave a message).
Other Info:
Our groups are free & confidential, run by a loss survivor/social worker, and are non-religious in nature.
To Find Us: From Main Street in Lewiston, turn onto Park Street and park in the first parking space on the street that’s available. The meters are free after 5:00 pm and on weekends.
You’ll see Heritage Books & Maps at the very beginning – 5 Park Street. (The light should be on inside to help you see it, although the shop will not be open).
Facing Heritage Books & Maps, you’ll see an alley to its left. A silver Jeep will probably be parked in that alley, near our entrance door on that side of the building.
Please enter through that back door off the alley. (You may hear a dog barking inside; she won’t bother you, but she is loud until she settles down.) There will be a sign posted on the door.
This group, as well as our Saturday evening group for those living with chronic psychic/emotional and/or physical pain combined with hopelessness, is confidential and run by a loss survivor/social worker.
For more on grief, suicide and other pertinent topics, use the “Search” feature in the sidebar on this page.
**************************
In memory of my beloved husband John Kelly Snyder… 20 Sept 1956 – 21 Oct 2016.
The Warrior Project is a warm, welcoming drop-in center for those living with extreme emotional and/or physical pain coupled with hopelessness, and a resource for families and friends fearing for the life of, or grieving the loss of, the person they love so much.
My Johnny was a true warrior, fighting physical pain and other demons no one else could see. I thought he was the strongest man in the world, and perhaps he was, but tragically, the pain and the demons got the better of him.
The name of this project is in no way intended to be reflective of, or piggy back off, Wounded Warriors which serves those wounded after September 11, 20o1. Like too many others, John was a warrior long before then.
In memory of my beloved husband John Kelly Snyder… 20 Sep 1956 – 21 Oct 2016.
The Warrior Project will be a warm, welcoming drop-in center for those living with extreme emotional and/or physical pain coupled with hopelessness, and a resource for families and friends fearing for the life of, or grieving the loss of, the person they love so much.
My Johnny was a true warrior, fighting physical pain and other demons no one else could see. I thought he was the strongest man in the world, and perhaps he was, but tragically, the pain and the demons got the better of him.
The name of this project is in no way intended to be reflective of, or piggy back off, Wounded Warriors which serves those wounded after September 11, 20o1. Like too many others, John was a warrior long before then.
About 10 years ago, John and I were talking about random stuff… lovers’ talk. The kinds of things one says when you’re having those completely giddy, head-over-heels feelings one gets at times when you’re so in love you can barely stand it. At least that’s what I thought this conversation was…
For some reason that I no longer remember the context of, John asked, “What if something happened to me and I disappeared for a long time and you thought I was dead? I don’t know what I’d do if I came back and found you were married to someone else.”
I responded that I couldn’t imagine that happening…that without seeing his body, I’d never believe he was dead.
He continued, “Well, what if it did? What if something happened to me? And if I came back and found that you’d thought I was dead and you had remarried, I would just walk away. I wouldn’t interfere.”
Trying to be practical about this conversation but also freaking out for some reason, my memory is that I very calmly responded, “Without seeing your dead body, I’d never believe you were gone. But if it did happen that way, then don’t you think it’s MY decision as to whether I would rather have you back? You would walk away, never knowing that I would give up any other man for you?” He said yes, he would. I demanded that he never, NEVER walk away without letting me know he really was alive after all. He did not make that promise.
That conversation is haunting me today. First, because of the realization over the past two months that John had probably had suicidal thoughts for a very long time. Second, because even seeing his dead body, and having his ashes sitting in our bedroom, I still can’t believe he’s dead.
And third, because if my disbelief in any form of afterlife is wrong and he really is out there watching over me and waiting for me (and there have been some signs that this could be the case), then how would I ever dare have even a casual fling?
Then again, John knows I’m not the casual fling type. I don’t like dating. I don’t like the scary, off-balance feeling of falling in love. I like the safety of being in a solid, for-the-rest- of-my-life kind of marriage.
I am a WIFE. I’m serious about being a wife. Even during my first marriage, which was extraordinarily challenging because the ex-husband and I were a pretty obvious mismatch, I took the role of wife very seriously. That’s who I am in a relationship. (Note: Despite this, I am not the needy type. I’m too independent for that… perhaps far too independent for most men.)
So the idea that I might fall in love and get married again seems rather far-fetched to me.
And if there’s any chance in this freaking random universe that John wouldn’t be out there waiting for me because I got remarried just to avoid being so gawdawful lonely… well, I’ve been damned pissed off at him today about this and letting him know it.
In case you were wondering… Yes, I’m the crazy lady in the silver Jeep parked in the grocery store lot yelling “Goddammit, John. There’s no way you’re going to pull this stunt on me…”
**********************************************
In memory of my beloved husband John Kelly Snyder… 20 Sep 1956 – 21 Oct 2016.
The Warrior Project is a warm, welcoming drop-in center for those living with extreme emotional and/or physical pain coupled with hopelessness, and a resource for families and friends fearing for the life of, or grieving the loss of, the person they love so much.
My Johnny was a true warrior, fighting physical pain and other demons no one else could see. I thought he was the strongest man in the world, and perhaps he was, but tragically, the pain and the demons got the better of him.
The name of this project is in no way intended to be reflective of, or piggy back off, Wounded Warriors which serves those wounded after September 11, 20o1. Like too many others, John was a warrior long before then.
I just keep feeling like I’m waiting for something. John died two months ago, and I can’t seem to move. I’m waiting for something but have no idea what.
For him to come home, I guess.
It’s kind of like the feeling you get when you don’t want to start a project or housework or paying bills because you know the minute you do, your husband will walk through the door and everything you’re doing will have to be put on hold because you’re so glad to see him.
**********************************************
In memory of my beloved husband John Kelly Snyder… 20 Sep 1956 – 21 Oct 2016.
The Warrior Project is a warm, welcoming drop-in center for those living with extreme emotional and/or physical pain coupled with hopelessness, and a resource for families and friends fearing for the life of, or grieving the loss of, the person they love so much.
My Johnny was a true warrior, fighting physical pain and other demons no one else could see. I thought he was the strongest man in the world, and perhaps he was, but tragically, the pain and the demons got the better of him.
The name of this project is in no way intended to be reflective of, or piggy back off, Wounded Warriors which serves those wounded after September 11, 20o1. Like too many others, John was a warrior long before then.
We welcome those who have recently lost someone to suicide, or those who are still feeling the impact even years later. It is a place to share your grief and learn how to live again by learning from others who have been through a similar experience.
The goal is to share experiences and ways of managing the devastating grief you’re living with in a safe, upbeat environment unlike what most people think of when they hear the words “support group”.
The Suicide Survivors Grief Group meets most Tuesdays from 6:00 pm-7:30 pm at The Warrior Project, 189 B Main Street, Lewiston ME 04240. (See directions below.)
FMI: 207 713 0674 (you’ll probably have to leave a message).
Other Info:
Our groups are free & confidential, run by a loss survivor/social worker, and are non-religious in nature.
To Find Us: From Main Street in Lewiston, turn onto Park Street and park in the first parking space on the street that’s available. The meters are free after 5:00 pm and on weekends.
You’ll see Heritage Books & Maps at the very beginning – 5 Park Street. (The light should be on inside to help you see it, although the shop will not be open).
Facing Heritage Books & Maps, you’ll see an alley to its left. A silver Jeep will probably be parked in that alley, near our entrance door on that side of the building.
Please enter through that back door off the alley. (You may hear a dog barking inside; she won’t bother you, but she is loud until she settles down.) There will be a sign posted on the door.
This group, as well as our Saturday evening group for those living with chronic psychic/emotional and/or physical pain combined with hopelessness, is confidential and run by a loss survivor/social worker.
For more on grief, suicide and other pertinent topics, use the “Search” feature in the sidebar on this page.
**************************
In memory of my beloved husband John Kelly Snyder… 20 Sept 1956 – 21 Oct 2016.
The Warrior Project is a warm, welcoming drop-in center for those living with extreme emotional and/or physical pain coupled with hopelessness, and a resource for families and friends fearing for the life of, or grieving the loss of, the person they love so much.
My Johnny was a true warrior, fighting physical pain and other demons no one else could see. I thought he was the strongest man in the world, and perhaps he was, but tragically, the pain and the demons got the better of him.
The name of this project is in no way intended to be reflective of, or piggy back off, Wounded Warriors which serves those wounded after September 11, 20o1. Like too many others, John was a warrior long before then.
My husband was a brilliant, talented and gentle man. He was also very complex, with skill sets and interests that seemed diametrically opposed to one another. An engineer by trade and training, who preferred machinery over human dynamics (“I can kick a piece of equipment into submission, but not a person” and “Machines are simple… if they break down, it’s either in the input or the output”) and a former helicopter pilot, volunteer fireman, and pyrotechnics expert, he was also a talented keyboardist (“Unchained Melody” was among his favorites, although he could play a mean boogie woogie, and other far more complex pieces), a woodsman who knew how to survive in almost any weather, and a soft-hearted animal lover. John loved the earth, and had studied both shamanism and the stars.
He read everything he could get his hands on, but was most fascinated by maps and military history. The concepts of time travel and alternate universes intrigued him no end. He preferred old episodes of Batman and Bonanza over sports.
There was far more to this man than I can write here. He was larger than life. He was my life.
John often said that when it was time for him to die, I should just “roll him down the hill” in back of our house. And essentially, that is where he did kill himself, although he went a little deeper into the woods, where he was off our property but still near our home and me.
John was facing a severe decline in his health. His big strong body, which had once been nearly 6’3″ and 195 pounds, had shrunk to just over six feet tall. An industrial accident in 2005 had cost him 30 pounds which he had never regained, and recently he had lost more weight although he tried to cover it up by wearing his steel-toed boots and a jacket whenever the doctors’ offices weighed him.
Too many health issues and too much physical pain – in addition to mental anguish left over from childhood – were wearing him down. For fifteen months masses in both of his lungs meant numerous CAT and other scans… he was being monitored for lung cancer. He refused a biopsy because it would have meant risky surgery due to his advanced emphysema. Although the doctors adopted a wait and see approach, John was convinced he had lung cancer. His drinking spun out of control.
John was a proud man. He could not bear the idea of dying while strapped to tubes and beeping equipment, with me crying by his side for the gods only knew how long. We’d been through that once before in 2011. He fought and he survived then, but this cancer thing…. He could not, he would not, go through it again.
I just stumbled across the article below. The author, a physician, gets it.
Just an Emergency Physician at St. Vincent EM Physicians Inc., author, public speaker, but mostly a father and a husband
In the old days, she would be propped up on a comfy pillow, in fresh cleaned sheets under the corner window where she would in days gone past watch her children play. Soup would boil on the stove just in case she felt like a sip or two. Perhaps the radio softly played Al Jolson or Glenn Miller, flowers sat on the nightstand, and family quietly came and went. These were her last days. Spent with familiar sounds, in a familiar room, with familiar smells that gave her a final chance to summon memories that will help carry her away. She might have offered a hint of a smile or a soft squeeze of the hand but it was all right if she didn’t. She lost her own words to tell us that it’s OK to just let her die, but she trusted us to be her voice and we took that trust to heart.
You see, that’s how she used to die. We saw our elderly different then.
We could still look at her face and deep into her eyes and see the shadows of a soft, clean, vibrantly innocent child playing on a porch somewhere in the Midwest during the 1920s perhaps. A small rag doll dances and flays as she clutches it in her hand. She laughs with her barefoot brother, who is clad in overalls, as he chases her around the yard with a grasshopper on his finger. She screams and giggles. Her father watches from the porch in a wooden rocker, laughing while mom gently scolds her brother.
We could see her taking a ride for the first time in an automobile, a small pickup with wooden panels driven by a young man with wavy curls. He smiles gently at her while she sits staring at the road ahead; a fleeting wisp of a smile gives her away. Her hands are folded in her lap, clutching a small beaded purse.
We could see her standing in a small church. She is dressed in white cotton, holding hands with the young man, and saying, “I do.” Her mom watches with tearful eyes. Her dad has since passed. Her new husband lifts her across the threshold, holding her tight. He promises to love and care for her forever. Her life is enriched and happy.
We could see her cradling her infant, cooking breakfast, hanging sheets, loving her family, sending her husband off to war, and her child to school.
We could see her welcoming her husband back from battle with a hug that lasts the rest of his life. She buries him on a Saturday under an elm, next to her father. She marries off her child and spends her later years volunteering at church functions before her mind starts to fade and the years take their toll and God says:
“It’s time to come home.”
This is how we used to see her before we became blinded by the endless tones of monitors and whirrs of machines, buzzers, buttons and tubes that can add five years to a shell of a body that was entrusted to us and should have been allowed to pass quietly propped up in a corner room, under a window, scents of homemade soup in case she wanted a sip.
You see now we can breathe for her, eat for her and even pee for her. Once you have those three things covered she can, instead of being gently cradled under that corner window, be placed in a nursing home and penned in cage of bed rails and soft restraints meant to “keep her safe.”
She can be fed a steady diet of Ensure through a tube directly into her stomach and she can be kept alive until her limbs contract and her skin thins so much that a simple bump into that bed rail can literally open her up until her exposed tendons are staring into the eyes of an eager medical student looking for a chance to sew. She can be kept alive until her bladder is chronically infected, until antibiotic resistant diarrhea flows and pools in her diaper so much that it erodes her buttocks. The fat padding around her tailbone and hips are consumed and ulcers open up exposing the underlying bone, which now becomes ripe for infection.
We now are in a time of medicine where we will take that small child running through the yard, being chased by her brother with a grasshopper on his finger, and imprison her in a shell that does not come close to radiating the life of what she once had. We stopped seeing her, not intentionally perhaps, but we stopped.
This is not meant as a condemnation of the family of these patients or to question their love or motives, but it is meant be an indictment of a system that now herds these families down dead-end roads and prods them into believing that this is the new norm and that somehow the old ways were the wrong ways and this is how we show our love.
A day does not go by where my partners don’t look at each other and say, “How do we stop this madness? How do we get people to let their loved ones die?”
I’ve been practicing emergency medicine for close to a quarter of a century now and I’ve cared for countless thousands of elderly patients. I, like many of my colleagues, have come to realize that while we are developing more and more ways to extend life, we have also provided water and nutrients to a forest of unrealistic expectations that have real-time consequences for those frail bodies that have been entrusted to us.
This transition to doing more and more did not just happen on a specific day in some month of some year. Our end-of-life psyche has slowly devolved and shifted and a few generations have passed since the onset of the Industrial Revolution of medicine. Now we are trapped. We have accumulated so many options, drugs, stents, tubes, FDA-approved snake oils and procedures that there is no way we can throw a blanket over all our elderly and come to a consensus as to what constitutes inappropriate and excessive care. We cannot separate out those things meant to simply prolong life from those meant to prolong quality life.
Nearly 50 percent of the elderly US population now die in nursing homes or hospitals. When they do finally pass, they are often surrounded by teams of us doctors and nurses, medical students, respiratory therapists and countless other health care providers pounding on their chests, breaking their ribs, burrowing large IV lines into burned-out veins and plunging tubes into swollen and bleeding airways. We never say much as we frantically try to save the life we know we can’t save or perhaps silently hope we don’t save. When it’s finally over and the last heart beat blips across the screen and we survey the clutter of bloody gloves, wrappers, masks and needles that now litter the room, you may catch a glimpse as we bow our heads in shame, fearful perhaps that someday we may have to stand in front of God as he looks down upon us and says, “what in the hell were you thinking?”
When it comes time for us to be called home, those of us in the know will pray that when we gaze down upon our last breath we will be grateful that our own doctors and families chose to do what they should instead of what they could and with that we will close our eyes to familiar sounds in a familiar room, a fleeting smile and a final soft squeeze of a familiar hand.
Dr. Louis M. Profeta is an emergency physician practicing in Indianapolis. He is the author of the critically acclaimed book,The Patient in Room Nine Says He’s God.
Feedback atlouermd@att.netis welcomed.
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In memory of my beloved husband John Kelly Snyder… 20 Sept 1956 – 21 Oct 2016.
At this time, The Warrior Project is in the start-up stage and consists of our weekly support groups. Once up and running, The Warrior Project will offer a warm, welcoming drop-in center for those living with extreme emotional and/or physical pain coupled with hopelessness, and a resource for families and friends fearing for the life of, or grieving the loss of, the person they love so much.
My Johnny was a true warrior, fighting demons no one else could see. I thought he was the strongest man in the world, and perhaps he was, but tragically, the demons got the better of him.
The name of this project is in no way intended to be reflective of, or piggy back off, Wounded Warriors which serves those wounded after September 11, 20o1. Like too many others, John was a warrior long before then.