I lost my brother and hunting buddy

I am very sorry for your loss of your brother. Brothers are near and dear to us and to have hunted with him must have been such a joy for you. As a LE chaplain with our PD, I am sadddened with you as it's so hard hearing these stories but way too common. Our city just lost a high ranking fire chief to suicide a couple weeks ago. To those who have LE in their family, be present with them when you know and can sense their struggle. I am thankful our department is taking it seriously and providing mental health care and physical care through O2X. Praying for you my friend.
 
My condolences. Not LE but a veteran. I've lost too many brothers this way. It's impossible to try to make sense of. Don't be afraid to talk to someone.
 
My deepest condolences to you, your family, and his department. May the Lord comfort you all in your grief and walk with you through this tremendously difficult loss. My prayers are with you all.
 
I lost my brother in 2018 to suicide. We were basically joined at the hip. The two of us were very tight. He was my hunting partner among many other things in life. I can relate how hard it is for you right now. Healing from something so horrific takes time. That first hunting season without your brother is tough, but I used my time in the woods to pray and talk to both God and my brother. Sorry you’re going through such a tough loss.
 
Man that's awful, sorry for your loss.

Fellas, normalize asking your buddies how they're doing, and letting them know how you're doing regularly, on more than just a surface level. This stuff happens way too often these days.
 
I can't imagine losing my brother. And his poor wife and kids... I lost my father at an early age. So sad for you and the family.
As a Licensed Professional Counselor who works primarily with men who are new to therapy, I want to retirate your point that there are people out there who care, who can help, and that therapy is nothing to fear. I hear that from my clients a lot, which they said was surprising to them.
Suicide can seem like the most unselfish and "right" thing to do to those in the thick of it. It's an illusion that can be hard to see through so I agree - we need to get inside with our people. Even then, the choice is theirs. I had a friend kill himself even though he was surrounded by support. Can only do what we can. Living with guilt bc we wish we'd done more serves no good except to push us to be real with everyone, always.
I wish you well, however that may look for you.
 
I'm sorry about your brother. It is a punch in the gut to hear about a fellow officer, a firefighter, or a combat veteran taking their own life. Unfortunately it happens too often.

For other officers on this forum that know someone that needs help, or need help themselves, there is a resource.

www.Copline.org

I don't work for them, but a fellow retired officer friend of mine does. Copline has veteran retired cops on call 24/7 across the nation, who volunteer to talk with any officer, anytime. It's free, confidential, and they have counseling resources for work stress, marriage, finance, alcohol, etc.

There is no limit on Calls or assistance. If you just want to talk to someone who has been there and survived the job, they are waiting to help.
 
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