🧪 Case Study 5.3: I Can’t Turn It Off
🧪 Case Study 5.3: I Can’t Turn It Off
Learning Goals
By the end of this case study, you should be able to:
- Recognize common “can’t shut off” patterns (hypervigilance, sleep disruption, irritability, emotional numbness) without diagnosing.
- Practice chaplain-appropriate responses: presence, skilled listening, brief grounding, permission-based prayer, and wise linking.
- Avoid harmful responses (fixing, preaching, diagnosing, interrogating, minimizing).
- Use boundaries (limits, access, pace, authority, safety) to protect the officer, the family, and the department.
- Understand how compassion fatigue and moral injury can intensify “can’t turn it off” experiences in law enforcement.
Scenario
Officer “Ben” (mid-30s) is a respected patrol officer. He’s competent, reliable, and usually steady. Over the past month, his squad has handled several high-stress calls: a child abuse case, a fatal overdose, and a domestic violence scene that escalated quickly.
Ben begins avoiding the break room. He stays busy, checks equipment repeatedly, and jumps at radio tones more than usual. His jokes get darker. He looks tired.
You (the chaplain) catch Ben outside the station near his vehicle after shift change. He’s not crying. He’s not dramatic. He’s just… tight.
He says quietly:
“I can’t turn it off. I go home and I’m still on. I’m snapping at my kids. My wife says I’m not there. I’m there, but I’m not. And when I finally sleep, I wake up like I’m back on a call.”
He adds one more sentence, almost embarrassed:
“So I’ve been drinking more. Not… crazy. Just enough to shut my brain down.”
What’s Happening Beneath the Surface
This is where chaplain discernment matters. You are not diagnosing. You are noticing patterns common in high-stress authority work.
1) Hypervigilance and stress carryover
Ben’s body may be stuck in “on-duty mode”—alert, scanning, ready. That can show up as irritability, restlessness, and difficulty transitioning to home life.
2) Sleep disruption
Sleep problems and shift-work strain are common issues in law enforcement, and when sleep breaks down, everything gets harder—emotion regulation, patience, marriage connection, parenting, spiritual steadiness.
3) Emotional load + compassion fatigue
Repeated exposure to trauma can create emotional exhaustion and blunt empathy. Compassion fatigue in law enforcement has been described as a real phenomenon with behavioral and emotional consequences.
4) Moral injury pressure
Ben may be carrying moral weight: scenes that feel unjust, helplessness, anger at evil, or a sense of “I can’t unsee what I saw.” Moral injury research in police work notes that morally injurious events can transgress deeply held moral beliefs and alter what a person believes about themselves or the world.
5) “Identity strain”
Ben’s identity as “the steady one” is being threatened. He may feel shame for needing help.
The Chaplain Moment: What You Do Next Matters
You have a short window. If you handle this well, Ben may take a healthy next step. If you mishandle it, he may never open up again.
Your job is not to become Ben’s therapist. Your job is to offer skilled listening, calm containment, dignity, and a wise link to appropriate supports.
Chaplain Do’s
DO 1: Slow the moment down (calm posture)
Your nervous system sets tone. Speak slowly. Keep your voice low.
Say:
- “I’m really glad you told me.”
- “That sounds exhausting.”
- “You’re carrying a lot.”
DO 2: Use a brief listening sequence (Ask → Reflect → Clarify)
Keep questions few and respectful.
Ask (one gentle question):
- “When is it worst—right after shift, at bedtime, or when you wake up?”
Reflect (one layer):
- “So even when you’re home, your body is still working like you’re on duty.”
Clarify (without prying):
- “What are you noticing at home—short fuse, sleep, spacing out, all of it?”
DO 3: Offer a micro grounding tool (10–20 seconds)
This is not therapy; it’s practical field care.
Try:
- “Before you drive, take one slow breath with me.”
- “Feel your feet on the ground for a second—just to come back to the present.”
DO 4: Normalize without minimizing
Normalization reduces shame. Minimizing shuts people down.
Say:
- “A lot of good officers experience this after heavy calls.”
- “This doesn’t mean you’re weak. It means you’ve been exposed to a lot.”
(Then stop. Don’t overexplain.)
DO 5: Use permission-based spiritual care
Ask:
- “Would prayer help right now, or would you rather not?”
If yes, keep prayer short and non-performative.
Micro-prayer example (10–15 seconds):
“Lord, give Ben peace and strength. Help his mind and body settle. Guard his home and give him good rest. In Jesus’ name, amen.”
DO 6: Link to appropriate supports (without pushing)
The most loving move may be a wise next step. Many agencies encourage structured wellness pathways and positive coping strategies.
Say (gentle link):
- “This sounds bigger than white-knuckling. Would you be open to peer support or EAP?”
- “If you want, I can help you find the right door. No pressure.”
Peer support is widely recognized in law enforcement as a structured support approach when implemented appropriately.
Chaplain Don’ts
DON’T 1: Don’t diagnose
Avoid: “You have PTSD.” “You’re an alcoholic.” “You’re depressed.”
DON’T 2: Don’t interrogate like an investigator
Avoid: “Tell me exactly what happened.” “Was force used?” “Who was at fault?”
DON’T 3: Don’t preach explanations
Avoid: “God is teaching you something.” “Everything happens for a reason.”
When moral injury is in the room, quick explanations often land as control.
DON’T 4: Don’t shame coping—even if it’s unhealthy
If Ben mentions alcohol, don’t scold. Don’t panic. Don’t joke about it.
Avoid: “You know better.” “That’s a sin.” “Stop doing that.”
Instead, stay calm and guide toward help.
DON’T 5: Don’t become the rescuer
Avoid: “Call me anytime, day or night, and I’ll fix this.”
That’s not sustainable and can violate role boundaries.
Sample Phrases to Say
When the officer opens up
- “Thank you for trusting me with that.”
- “That makes sense—your body is still in work mode.”
- “You’re not crazy. You’re carrying heavy exposure.”
When alcohol comes up
- “I appreciate your honesty.”
- “A lot of people try to shut their mind down somehow. But some ways cost more than they help.”
- “Would you be open to adding a healthier support—peer support, EAP, or someone trained for this?”
When linking to next steps
- “You deserve more support than carrying this alone.”
- “If you want, I can help connect you—no pressure.”
Sample Phrases NOT to Say
- “At least you’re alive.”
- “You’ll be fine.”
- “Just pray more.”
- “Everything happens for a reason.”
- “Tell me all the details.”
- “You need to stop drinking—right now.” (true concern, but poor timing and tone)
Boundary Map Reminders
Limits
You can care deeply without becoming the officer’s entire support system. Keep your availability sustainable.
Access
This moment does not grant unlimited access to Ben’s private life. Let trust build. Don’t pry into family details.
Pace
Don’t rush disclosure or “big spiritual breakthroughs.” Help him take one healthy next step.
Authority
You are not command, not clinician-of-record, not internal affairs. You are chaplain presence and referral support.
Safety
If the officer indicates danger to self/others, impaired driving, domestic violence risk, or other reportable threats, follow department policy and required reporting pathways immediately.
A Wise “Clean Close” to the Conversation
After listening and offering one link, end without clinging:
Say:
- “I’m grateful you told me.”
- “Would it be okay if I checked in later this week?”
- “If you want, I can help you connect to peer support or EAP. No pressure.”
Then let him go.
Steady presence is often the difference between “I’ll deal with it alone” and “I’ll take a healthy step.”
Reflection + Application Questions
- In this scenario, what are three non-diagnostic signs of overload you noticed (sleep, irritability, hypervigilance, alcohol increase, withdrawal, etc.)?
- Which chaplain “don’t” would be most tempting for you (fixing, preaching, diagnosing, interrogating)? Why?
- Write two reflection phrases you could use that communicate dignity without therapy language.
- If Ben declines prayer, what is a respectful response that keeps connection open?
- What is one wise “linking” sentence you could say to encourage peer support/EAP without pressure?
- Which boundary area most protects this situation: limits, access, pace, authority, or safety? Explain.
Academic and Professional References (Suggested)
- FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin. Moral Injury in Police Work (Papazoglou). Defines moral injury as arising from events that transgress deeply held moral beliefs and discusses impacts on belief and wellbeing.
- FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin. Police Compassion Fatigue (Papazoglou et al.). Discusses compassion fatigue in the policing context and its implications.
- FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin. Compassion Fatigue Among Officers (Bosma). Reviews literature on compassion fatigue outcomes and implications for support programming.
- U.S. DOJ COPS Office. Promoting Positive Coping Strategies in Law Enforcement: Emerging Issues and Recommendations (Officer Safety and Wellness Group Meeting Summary). Addresses coping risks and wellness-oriented recommendations.
- FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin. Officer Wellness Spotlight: Police Chaplains—An Integral Part of Law Enforcement. Notes chaplains’ support roles and the importance of trust and integration over time.