Monday, May 19, 2014

“Don’t quit when you’re tired, quit when you’re done”



“Don’t quit when you’re tired, quit when you’re done”

These words hang in the workout area of the gym I go to twice a week. I have read and re-read them and thought they sounded good but I wasn’t sure how they actually applied to me.  I don’t work out a whole lot but when I do, I go until the workout is over.  Stopping before that just doesn’t make sense to me.

Then I began to think of how I could apply this to other areas of my life.  I started to think about my career, or now the lack thereof.  Those of you that know me personally know that I was a cop in California for about twelve years. If I’m not related to you and haven’t worked with you and you knew I was a cop, chances are you heard about it from someone else.  I never really told people myself.

 Toward the end of my career, I was angry all the time, I hated going to work, I was so sick of working my ass off and seeing other, lazier people, get the hand-ups that they hadn’t earned and didn’t deserve.  I called in sick a lot for mental health days and was deemed unreliable.  It was not my best performance but it was what I could handle mentally at the time.

My husband’s job was transferred from California to Idaho at a time when I was really mentally and physically exhausted.  It was either get a divorce or quit my job to follow him to Idaho.  I am a person who does not like the unknown.  I have anxiety of the worst order and part of the way I combat that anxiety is to think of all the “what-if’s” and scenarios that I can come up with and work through them to a resolution, good or bad.

Quitting my job and leaving my stability was not beneficial to me but I also knew I couldn’t stay where I was without ending up an alcoholic, or worse.  So, I put in my letter of resignation and four weeks later we were in Idaho.

I applied for more jobs than I care to remember; secretarial, administrative, law enforcement.  No one would hire me.  My husband tried to placate me by saying that I was over-qualified for the positions I was applying for, but I really don’t know why I never even got a call back. 

I had a total of four interviews in the ten months I spent looking for a job.  I got pretty close a couple of times but the end result was that they either hired someone else or they decided not to fill the position after all. 

I was finally hired at a gun shop in Boise for about 1/5th of the amount of money I used to make in California.  I only get paid once a month and, after taxes, it would not be enough to live on if I didn’t have my husband to help.

Recently, I found out about a job with a local police department coming open and I had a month to prepare for it.  I didn’t study for the written exam but I began going to the gym to get ready for the physical agility.

The department was only taking the top 25 applicants from the written test and sending them to the physical agility test a few days later.  I have a fairly good command of the English language and I just knew that I would qualify, so I focused on the physical aspect of the exam since that was the area I was weakest. 

As the test got closer, I began to have misgivings about it.  I was pretty sure I would not be able to pass the push-ups and vertical jump aspect of the test even after working on it for a month.  I continued to focus on those areas but the doubts lingered.  I never questioned my ability to pass the written.

The morning of the exam, I started driving out to the civic center where the test was being held.  On my way, I began thinking about when I was a cop back in California and the things the “Unchosen Ones” had to go through and put up with.  The Unchosen Ones are the group of people who work their asses off but don’t get anywhere because they don’t know anyone of any kind of rank that is willing or able to commit nepotism for them. 

About half-way to the test, after thinking about that, I began to have an anxiety attack; my pulse raced, my breathing was rapid, I started to sweat.  I got that feeling in the pit of my stomach like I had eaten bad chicken and had to get rid of it.  Luckily, I was able to calm myself down but I kept asking myself this question over and over again as I drove to the test: Is this really something I want to do again?

I got to the test site, checked in and then turned around to find a place to wait for the doors to open.  If you’ve never been to one of these things it’s actually quite interesting.  You can always tell who’s who in the waiting area.  For example, the recent academy graduates always congregate together and talk to each other about past instructors and “hardships” they had to deal with in their academy class.  They shout across the room at each other to make sure everyone knows just how important they think they are.  They talk too loud about other tests they’ve taken recently like they actually know what’s going on, letting other people know that they think they’ve been there and done that, when really, they haven’t done anything of note.

Then there are the geeks.  They don’t necessarily congregate together but you can tell who they are because they totally stand out.  They are socially awkward and try to have conversations with the non-geeks but these talks don’t last very long and usually end in an awkward silence.  These are also the people who dress like they are an off-duty cop even though they have no idea what that should actually look like.

Then there is the lateral group, my group.  We all stand around, no one talks to each other, no one makes eye contact.  We don’t need to.  We just stand around and wait, watching the other groups, listening to their wannabe war stories that they haven’t earned the right to tell.  By the way, if you have to qualify a story with “most cops would laugh at this, but” then it probably isn’t a very worthwhile tale of your assumed prowess.

Finally, they opened the doors and let everyone in.  There were six people who didn’t show up which left seventy-four applicants and only nine of us were female.   I thought those were pretty good odds.

The first disappointment regarding the test was that it was a group test, meaning that each phase of the test was timed out and no one could skip ahead without the rest of the group.  The longest, most grueling portion was the video scenarios. There were nearly fifty questions based on various scenarios, all with multiple choice answers.  They said to mark the response that we would give if we were in the actual situation, but some of them didn’t offer the right choice, in my opinion.

I watched each and every one of these poorly acted scenarios (Have you ever seen a scenario with good actors in it?  Probably not, because there’s a reason we’re cops and not actors). By the third scenario question, I could feel the anger, resentment, and bitterness that I had thought was gone resurfacing.  I had to start over in this department and I didn’t feel like I could do that properly with the bitterness of a veteran cop simmering just under the surface.

It took 2 ½ hours to finish that test.  They gave us a reprieve at the last section of the test, the reading portion, and said that we could leave as soon as we finished.  Thank goodness because I get the feeling that I would have been there a lot longer if that were not the case.

We were told as we were leaving that we would be notified via email whether or not we were moving on to the physical agility test.  Let the waiting begin….

And that’s really where my downfall began to pick up speed.  Because all of the questions that were swirling around in my head would be enough to drive me crazy if I couldn’t find out the results of my test soon: What if I get hired? What will I do for child care if I have to work graveyard? Will I get to spend any quality time with my family again? The world will pass my by again and I’ll be immersed in the world of law enforcement….again.

These questions and more were swirling around in my head like a toilet that had been flushed and would never stop.  I have been told that this is where my OCD tendencies lie, not being able to move on from one thought to another.  I don’t know, sounds kind of like normal worry to me.

I had a hard time sleeping that night so I prayed to God that He would help me decide if this was the path I was supposed to continue down.  I asked for guidance on what to do next.  Having given up my worries to Him, I was finally able to sleep.    

Nothing happened on Tuesday and on Wednesday I had to go back to work at the gun store.  I’m not supposed to have my cell phone on the sales floor but you can bet that I disregarded this rule that day.  Every time I felt it vibrate, I checked it to see if my test results were back.    

Around 1:30pm the email finally came.  It said “Thank you for the time and effort spent testing for the City of ******* Police Officer Register.  We regret to inform you, you did not place in the top 25 on the written examination; therefore, you do not qualify to continue the testing process.” Huh….well, it didn’t say that I failed it, just that I wasn’t in the top 25.  Was I upset?  Nope.  I was actually quite relieved. What I learned through this process was that I was done with being a cop.  It brings me back to that statement at the beginning of this post.  Here is how I translated it for myself:

My head was willing but my heart was no longer in it.

I had been tired for a long time but my head wouldn’t let me realize it, so I didn’t quit. But now, I was done; both my head and my heart were finally on the same page.  There was too much anxiety and too many negative emotions associated with law enforcement for me to continue in that line of work.

It’s kind of bittersweet for me.  There were so many things that I wanted to do that I didn’t get a chance to try.  I wanted to be a detective, then a supervisor, then, who knows? I wanted to go to my kid’s school for career day and make her proud.  I wanted to lead discussions on gun safety and tell kids to “Just say NO” to drugs.  Now I’m just waiting for inspiration to strike and lead me down my next path. I’m biding my time at the gun store, waiting for the next opportunity.  I can still be a supervisor somewhere, it will just take time.  For right now, I know that I am exactly where I need to be, and I am happy where I am.

Friday, May 24, 2013

Why Cops are Pricks

I borrowed this blog post from a friend of mine who was given permission from the author.  It is not my original post but goes along with my philosophy and may help readers to understand us LEOs a little more.

                       Why Cops are Pricks

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by Lea Anne Weil (shared with permission of the author)


Anyone ever wonder why cops are such ‘pricks’? Every shitty, rotten, horrible, scary situation that exists in life, cops deal with it. Repeatedly. Every friggen’ day. Your ‘worst day ever’ is just another tour. Car accident, homicide, rape, robbery, baby mama drama, baby daddy drama, family dispute over who gets the last pork chop that winds up with a dinner guest sporting a steak knife in the chest, a kid that goes missing or runs away, a Dad who gets tanked up and uses Mom as a speed bag, a drug overdose, hostage situations…every despicable thing that one human being can do to another is what the police are immersed in every day.


Just this week, police in Newburgh, NY were at the scene where a wonderful upstanding citizen was holding others hostage. Earlier this year, this young man’s brother charged the police with a knife (it was the last thing he did on this earth…) and the present hostage situation put the lives of 2 people in peril as the perpetrator ranted and raved. The police charged him and subdued him. What does his family do? Why, they charge the police of course! Listen, one family member was a savage who tried to kill the police and just a few months later his little brother is threatening the lives of others while he holds them hostage. Just after minimizing the threat from this psycho, they have to hold off his family who tried to rush the police. Just a little note, when your ‘emotionally disturbed’ family member is off his/her meds and is a danger to himself or to society and the police have to be called to the scene, try to remember they are the POLICE. If you wanted a social worker or a psychologist, you should have dialed one directly.

This past month, a young NYPD officer gained some notoriety when he bought a pair of boots for what appeared to be a homeless man down on his luck on the streets of Manhattan. It was a selfless gesture and the story went nationwide. It was an opportunity to see the police in a kinder, softer light and quite a human interest story. Of course the media wanted to know all about the recipient of the benevolence – who was he? What was his ‘story’? Well, it was learned that Mr. Hillman was not (and is not) homeless. He has a nice apartment in the Bronx, he receives Social Security and Veteran’s benefits and has a loving supportive family in Pennsylvania. When asked what he did with the boots, he claimed that he hid them because he didn’t want to be robbed and that they were valuable (bullshit – he sold them). Mr. Hillman also claimed that he intends to sue the photographer because he didn’t give permission for his picture to be taken and he wants a ‘piece of the pie’ . So Mr. Hillman is a straight up ‘playa’, yo. Officer DePrimo said that he was going to keep the receipt in his bulletproof vest as a reminder that no matter how hard a day he was having, he would know that someone else is having a harder time and that he would always be grateful. Officer DePrimo did an honorable thing, but the death of his innocence and naivte has begun and in it’s place, cynicism and disdain may have begun its germination.

Stuff like this happens all the time. You call, they come. When they come, it is likely that someone will be leaving in handcuffs. You cannot call the police to a violent situation and expect that in the end, everyone’s tears will be dried, hot chocolate and cookies will be handed out to be enjoyed by all and “Kumbaya” will be heard in the background. They are law enforcement officers. They enforce the law. You do not get to determine how they execute their duties. If you could have handled the bag of shit you called them about, you would have. You couldn’t, so just shut the hell up and deal with the fact that your husband/wife/brother/sister/baby mama/baby daddy/child/BFF could very well be spending time as a guest of the municipality who came to answer your call for help.

Cops hang out with other cops. They get each other; they don’t have to explain themselves. They laugh at things other people think inappropriate. Their humor is dark, but they love to laugh. They work second jobs and they are Boy Scout Leaders, lacrosse, football, soccer, hockey and baseball coaches. The divorce rate in the United States is over 50%, for cops it is significantly higher, and with good reason. They spend twenty –plus years being tired and grumpy from the commute, the crazy hours, the job and pain in the butt bosses. When they walk in the door and the kids yell, “Daddy!” (or, “Mommy!”) they ‘re ready with a big hug, a smile and a “What’s up guys?” How, you ask, do I know these things? I have spent twenty seven years being married to one of them. He is one of those big-mouthed tough guys who know everything. He trusts no one. He is a cop’s cop. He has an amazing memory and eye for detail that is astounding. Anyone who has ever worked with him will tell you he is probably a little crazy, but that he is the best cop they ever worked with. For twenty years, I watched him walk out the door and I always prayed that he would come back. There were some really close calls, but he always made it home. I have never taken that for granted, I know too well the ache and emptiness in the eyes of the survivors of the shield. For twenty years, I lent my husband to New York City to patrol the streets and to keep the wolves at bay so that the people of that city could live under the blanket of security and safety that his existence provided; all the while knowing that the very citizens he protected resented his presence. In 2010, our son took the oath of office and wears the shield his father wore before him. Again, I wait each night until I hear the key in the door before I fall into a deep sleep.

Cops are pricks. It’s what keeps them alive and whole, because if they let all the crap they deal with actually sink in, it would destroy their souls. So they will deal with the things you don’t want to believe really happen. They will be physically and emotionally bruised, battered and bloodied. And at the end of each tour when they take off the uniform and close their locker they say a brief prayer of thanks for making it through the day safely. There is one thing that a cop wants every day when he or she goes into work – just one thing. At the end of tour, they want to go home. That’s it, just to make it home where things are normal, boring and safe. When all is said and done, that really is their job – to make it through the day and arrive home safe and sound.

Could not have said it better myself; 100% true!

Saturday, May 18, 2013

About this Blog

Hello,

I am fairly new to blogging hence the poor organization of this page.  However, I had an a-ha moment when I was writing a post on another blog about my recent decision to leave law enforcement after thirteen years. 

I was trying to put into words the various reasons I decided to leave, trying to put it in language they would understand and not be too crass about it.  Then I thought that there must be others like me; others who have devoted their lives to this amazing career but their enthusiasm has been dampened by all of the negativity we see and hear every day. 

Most, if not all of you, probably still have your jobs and that is okay, great, in fact; this blog was designed with you in mind. It was also designed for our wonderful spouses and girl/boyfriends who have had to put up with our moodiness and closed-off emotions, those frustrated by the process of being hired, and those who could not get the job or lost it once they had it. 

I will not tolerate cop haters; it is a very valiant profession and we risk life, limb, and mental health every day we don our uniforms.  Your ignorance is just that.  If you can't see what we do and admire it, than you are either on the wrong side of the law, or you're a complete idiot.  I'm not saying you have to understand why we do what we do, but don't hate it either.

This is not a legal advice blog, contact an attorney if that is what you are looking for.  I will also not tolerate racism or discrimination; everything else related to law enforcement is fair game.

I highly recommend posting any comments anonymously lest you be targeted by your agency.  This was recently done to me and it was complete and utter bullsh*t, but is the way the tide of social media is turning.  Please be mindful and keep details of your employing agency and location to yourself.