The Captain
One of my first cases as a funeral home owner was a woman who lived next to a retired fire chief. The woman died without family or means. The retired fire chief and his kind wife arranged their neighbor’s funeral, paid for it in full, and adopted her surviving dog. Their generosity impacted me deeply and over the years, as I have grown to know them even more, their kindness to others has never waned.
Life has not been perfect for this couple. They have suffered loss, pain, and disappointment. Over the course of our association, I have buried three of their four adult children. The fire chief suffered physically from the demands of his employment and due to malfunctioning spine implants, lived the final stages of his life paralyzed. Through all of his misfortune, he never lost sight of his purpose in life, never became angry or bitter, and always remained as he always had been, honorable and benevolent.
His devoted wife, through the demands of caring for him, never sought respite. She worked incessantly to ensure that his needs and comfort were met. She loved him more than she loved anyone or anything else. She saw to him as those few years known as the golden years passed them by without reward.
Throughout my career as a funeral practitioner, there have been family members come to the funeral home and help with the expenses of others within their families. We have also seen persons within the community donate contributory funds toward funding shortfalls. However, only two people have ever come to the funeral home to pay an unrelated or unacquainted person’s complete funeral bill; Captain Cromeans is one of those persons.
We buried him yesterday. His friends and family filled my funeral home. Firefighters respectfully manned the entry and stood as centuries beside his remains. Their respect and love for him were evident by their reverence. The highways and roads were blocked by his escort of fire trucks, EMS vehicles, and police cruisers. As his procession traveled to the cemetery, it included those he served, those he saved, and those he loved.
Firefighter's Prayer
When I am called to duty, God, whenever flames may rage;
Give me the strength to save some life, whatever be its age.
Help me embrace a little child before it's too late
Or save an older person from the horror of that fate.
Enable me to be alert and hear the weakest shout,
And quickly and efficiently to put the fire out.
I want to fill my calling to give the best in me,
To guard my every neighbor and protect their property.
And if, according to my fate, I am to lose my life;
Please bless with your protecting hand my children and my wife.
~Gainsville.org
My name is Tracy Renee Lee. I am a Certified Grief Counselor (GC-C), Funeral Director (FDIC), published author, syndicated columnist, Podcaster, and founder of the “Mikey Joe Children’s Memorial” and Heaven Sent, Corp. I write books, weekly bereavement articles, Podcasts, and Grief BRIEFs related to understanding and coping with grief. I am the American Funeral Director of the Year Runner-Up and recipient of the BBB’s Integrity Award.
It is my life's work to comfort the bereaved and help them live on.

