Caring for Those Who Serve
Some professions ask more of a person than most people will ever understand.
Whether you wear a military uniform, a badge, a stethoscope, or a clerical collar, the weight of caring for others often comes at a personal cost. Long hours. Impossible decisions. Trauma. Moral injury. Compassion fatigue. The expectation to remain strong when you feel anything but.
I’ve had the privilege of working alongside members of the U.S. Special Operations community, advising leaders within USASOC and JSOC, supporting military families through Humana Military, and serving patients, families, and healthcare professionals as a hospital chaplain. I’ve also witnessed the unique burdens carried by physicians, nurses, first responders, and clergy whose calling is to care for everyone except themselves.
You don’t need someone who is shocked by your story. You need someone who understands the culture of service, the hidden costs of leadership, and the resilience required to keep showing up.
Areas of Support
* Combat and operational stress
* Trauma and moral injury
* Compassion fatigue and burnout
* Healthcare worker resilience
* First responder wellness
* Clergy care and ministry fatigue
* Leadership stress and decision fatigue
* Grief, loss, and life transitions
* Family and relationship challenges
A Place to Lay Down the Armor
Strength is not measured by how much you can carry alone.
Even those who dedicate their lives to protecting, healing, and serving others deserve a place where they can speak honestly, process what they’ve experienced, and begin to heal without judgment.
Whether you’re still serving, transitioning into a new season of life, or simply feeling the cumulative weight of years spent caring for others, you don’t have to carry it by yourself.
I’d be honored to walk alongside you.
