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the Backpack: A Wounded Police Officer's Struggle with Burden All Cops Share
Barnes and Noble
the Backpack: A Wounded Police Officer's Struggle with Burden All Cops Share
Current price: $16.95
Barnes and Noble
the Backpack: A Wounded Police Officer's Struggle with Burden All Cops Share
Current price: $16.95
Size: Paperback
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Wounded in the line of duty and paralyzed, police officer Brandon Hultink made an amazing journey from despair to hope.
"I can still remember the taste of metal in my mouth from the barrel of the gun ..." After the shoot-out that put him in a wheelchair, police officer Brandon Hultink was ready to put an end to it all. In his frank and compelling memoir
The Backpack
, Hultink tells how he came to the worst moment of his life, and how faith in God and the humility to accept help brought him out of depression, addiction, and the wheelchair and back into successful life.
But Hultink's story isn't his alone—it is also the story of the thousands of police officers who struggle with depression and post-traumatic stress. Cops don't do touchy-feely; they stuff every trauma into a metaphorical "backpack" until the burden overwhelms them. Hultink writes unflinchingly of the mental health crisis affecting police officers and offers proposals for improving mental health services for police.
An intensely personal story of anguish and survival,
offers hope to everyone—police and civilian alike—who struggles with depression and pain.
"I can still remember the taste of metal in my mouth from the barrel of the gun ..." After the shoot-out that put him in a wheelchair, police officer Brandon Hultink was ready to put an end to it all. In his frank and compelling memoir
The Backpack
, Hultink tells how he came to the worst moment of his life, and how faith in God and the humility to accept help brought him out of depression, addiction, and the wheelchair and back into successful life.
But Hultink's story isn't his alone—it is also the story of the thousands of police officers who struggle with depression and post-traumatic stress. Cops don't do touchy-feely; they stuff every trauma into a metaphorical "backpack" until the burden overwhelms them. Hultink writes unflinchingly of the mental health crisis affecting police officers and offers proposals for improving mental health services for police.
An intensely personal story of anguish and survival,
offers hope to everyone—police and civilian alike—who struggles with depression and pain.