“your view of life changes.”
he praised the filipino community for working with his staff to ensure its members got help in a culturally appropriate way.
hutton said his staff worked more closely with victim services teams during the lapu lapu response, compared to past crises, a relationship that can be built on for future emergencies.
christi-ann watkins and her son nox in vancouver.
arlen redekop
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‘every day is rooted in gratitude’
watkins and her son were offered counselling, but she said it is common for filipinos to be the helpers, and not to readily accept any help themselves. when it comes to psychological stress, she is more worried about the potential long-term effect on her son.
“what if he gets older and has a flashback? … is ptsd going to surface in my son?”
nox, who was separated from his mother during the melée, was frightened by the blood flowing from his broken nose, and by the blood of the many injured — and deceased — people around him. he spent the night at b.c. children’s hospital, far from his mother at royal columbian.
watkins feels guilty that her injuries prevented her from protecting him from the panic induced by “all the chaos, all the lights, all the people running around, all the carnage that he saw — and then my mom is gone.”
another major stress for watkins is the continuing challenge to recover from her physical injuries, and the financial strain that has caused for her family, which includes her two young sons. her husband took six months off work to care for her, and she is not yet healthy enough to return to her job in a chocolate shop.