This is why we’re always serious in training, with our heads screwed on straight. We know that mistakes are to be made, and it’s best to make them during training where we can learn from and not on the street.
As always happens after memorial services, time continues its relentless march. In time, the searing pain that accompanies police memorials and funerals begins to dull. And all too often, the fierce determination not to let our guard down begins to return to the familiarity of “routine.”
This is the difficult part, challenging ourselves to always be on the alert and preparing ourselves as best we can for every eventuality, predictable and unpredictable. Anyone who works the street understands and lives this, or should. It’s what improves the odds of us going home at the end of our shifts and making it to retirement intact.
This reality applies equally to all who work the streets, patrol and SWAT alike. SWAT has an additional responsibility, one we readily volunteer for. A responsibility that comes with the saying: “When citizens are in trouble, they call the police. When police are in trouble, they call SWAT.” Which means we have to be ready for everything and anything. Because “Who do SWAT officers call when they are in trouble?”
With Law Enforcement Memorial Week 2008 behind us, now is the time for all of us to reinforce our resolve to always do our best to be ready, willing, and able for whatever we face in the future.