The Paradise “Camp” Fire – One Year Later

Last year, while attending our AAML national meetings in Chicago, I received a call from my office, reporting that my hometown of Paradise, California, was under threat of fire and that my parents were evacuating.   Initially, this was not shocking, as Paradise historically encounters fire drama.

But November 8, 2018 was different, with the town basically nuked.   My parents escaped through the fraught traffic jam, but then lost everything.  They were blessed with the support of family and friends, but their beloved “tree house” in the canyon and their community were forever gone.  The new reality came hard.

It has been challenging for those outside of my parents’ reality to understand the experience.  Over the past year, we had to learn about PTSD, depression, anxiety and the inter-family stresses those conditions can cause.  

The parallels to the experiences of HLG’s family law clients and their families are hard to ignore.  Emotional trauma distorts the world and can shut people down.

One of my old Paradise friends, Bruce Yerman, wrote an excellent piece, looking back.  As my parents exclaimed, “he gets it!”  Probably no one, besides the actual survivors, really does.  Toward still trying to come to terms with the awful event, I thank Bruce and his words follow:

***

A Lesson From the Paradise Camp Fire: Anxiety and Memory – It Doesn’t Work
October 17, 2019
 Bruce H. Yerman

It has been nearly a year since the devastating Paradise “Camp-Fire” which destroyed 14,000 homes, including ours.  We had an hour from the evacuation warning to the “leave-now mandate.”  I filled the car with gasoline and spoke with Sarah on the phone. She said, “Get the girls art.”  I hurried from room to room gathering paintings our five daughters had made as children, a few pieces of folk art, and finally my bicycle.  I hooked up our small trailer which would become our home and my office.  Sarah navigated against traffic, returning from work.  She grabbed a box of important papers and a few items of clothing for each of us.  The smoke thickened.  I could hear the fire’s roar in the nearby canyon as ash and burning embers fell like snowflakes.  My brother-in-law phoned to see if we had evacuated.  “Get out now, my mother is caught on Pentz Road, surrounded by fire” he said (and she made it).  We checked on neighbors and headed out of town.  My brain was shutting down as the urgency increased.  We could have collected those items as well.  

The post traumatic symptoms linger.  Survivors share a common understanding that we forget appointments, we forget names, we forget directions – thing that should be simple. To an observer, we are normal.  We laugh, eat, love, work and play, but the residue of the fire is real.   I have a contractor friend who has built dozens of homes over the years.  He is a master architect and an artist at his work.  He moved to another state and is building a simple chicken coop behind his new home.  “You’d think I’d know what to get at the lumber yard,” he said.  “I had to return six times for things I forgot!”

Our memories are compromised when we are stressed, and we do not perform well. Psychology Today shares, “It’s the end of the term, and you’re ready to face the big final exam you’ve been studying for all month.   You’ve gone to every lecture, read every chapter, and memorized every formula and key term there is to know.   You’ve never felt more confident about a test before.  The big day arrives. You’re feeling a bit anxious.  The test booklet lands in front of you – and panic sets in.  You try to brush it off, but to no avail. Sitting with pencil in hand, you turn over the page of the exam booklet.  You read over the first few questions.  It happens: All the knowledge you thought you had in your head magically vanishes from your mental repository. There’s nothing up there.  Nothing at all. It’s as if someone went into your brain and removed all traces of your prior learning.  You end up failing the test, despite all the preparation beforehand.  It’s a common occurrence because our ability to retrieve and encode information from stored memories can be quite easily hijacked by stressful situations.  Stress has been shown to annihilate our ability to retrieve old memories.  It offers a brain-based explanation for why we so often blank out during these types of memory-related performances.”   https://www.psychologytoday.com/intl/blog/ritual-and-the-brain/201804/why-your-brain-stress-fails-learn-properly 

Sarah and I have had to some memory-work-arounds.  We keep better calendars, set “memory-alarms” on our phones, and check on each other’s appointments.  We appreciate loving friends, we have met generous strangers, and we live in a small apartment that takes us back to our early years together.  I have great empathy for those who are working through challenges related to illness, employment, health or family and the effects of stress.  I’m slower to judge.  I seek to understand others – I have greater patience.

Santa Barbara Women Lawyers Foundation Names Herring Law Group “Donor of the Year”

Formed in 1999, the Santa Barbara Women Lawyers Foundation’s primary objectives and purposes are to:

  • Provide scholarships for high school students, undergraduates and law students, and
  • Participate in, and support financially, educational and charitable projects that are consistent with the mission and goals of Santa Barbara Women Lawyers, including providing role models for young people, serving the Santa Barbara Community through pro bono legal services and promoting gender equality in the legal profession and society as a whole.

On October 16, the SBWF held its annual “Donor of the Year” presentation at Carr Winery in downtown Santa Barbara. Herring Law Group is proud to have been named as the 2019 recipient.

HLG has for years proudly supported this important local organization. Two of our attorneys, Cassandra Glanville and Taylor Fuller, presently serve on its Board of Directors. Another of our attorneys, Morgan Nix, will serve on it next year. They have generously donated their time to SBWLF.   HLG continues as a solid donor.  

SBWLF’s acknowledgement of HLG’s support and leadership is much appreciated. In reality, the organization has also given much to us, in broadening our own perspectives and providing paths for meaningful service.

Please go to sbwl.org for more information and giving opportunities.  

Casa Serena’s 60th Anniversary and Leadership Award to Herring Law Group

Santa Barbara’s Casa Serena celebrated its 60th birthday with a beautiful luncheon in early October at the Rosewood at Miramar Beach in Montecito.   Making the event even more special for HLG, Casa Serena there presented us with its Leadership in Excellence Award for 2019.

Casa Serena’s mission is to “help women and their families recover from addiction by providing evidence-based treatment services while building community, instilling self-determination, and empowering them with educational opportunities and financial literacy.”   Its professional staff includes Marriage and Family Therapists, Certified Addiction Treatment Counselors and Early Childhood Educators.  At the core of its successes are two beautifully cared-for and welcoming properties, including Santa Barbara’s only treatment facility where mothers recovering from addiction can reunite and live with their children. Casa Serena has given thousands of women a firm foundation on which to begin their recoveries from addiction and abuse.

It opened its doors to alcoholic women in August of 1959 primarily through the efforts of its founder, Mildred Pinheiro.  Recovering from alcoholism herself, Mildred wanted to open the home “because there was no place here for a woman alcoholic to go for help.”

Case Serena:

• Has the only non-denominational program of its kind in Santa Barbara.
• Offers the only residential treatment facility for women with children in Santa Barbara County.
• Is the oldest residential recovery program for women in Santa Barbara County.
• Provides a comprehensive licensed residential treatment program.
• Includes step-down treatment and lifetime aftercare as part of its holistic approach.

HLG has for years proudly supported this important local organization as our “signature” non-profit.  Our Executive Director, Erin Schaden, has generously donated hundreds of hours of her time to Casa Serena, and presently serves as the President of its Board of Directors.  HLG continues as a solid donor.  Presently, we are facilitating a potential grant through the AAML Foundation toward providing pro bono legal services to its residents.

Casa Serena’s acknowledgement of HLG’s support and leadership is much appreciated. In reality, the organization has also given much to us, in broadening our own perspectives and providing paths for meaningful service.

Please go to casaserena.org for more information and giving opportunities.

HLG Attends CAL Small Firm Summit

Herring Law Group’s Executive Director, Erin Schaden, recently attended the California Lawyer’s Association Solo & Small Firm Summit in Huntington Beach.  The Conference’s presenters included many nationally-prominent attorneys, and technology and strategic law office management professionals.

Through Erin, we dove deeper into a variety of law practice management issues faced by small firms – very much including HLG. 

Insights gained include ways to better manage technology to better assist our clients, reduce stress and increase inter-office harmony and efficiency.  With Erin’s input, we are continuing to develop strategies for identifying and better handling our growing practice.
At the Conference, Erin’s other areas of focus included:

• Practical approaches to updating law firm technology;
• Managing client trust accounts;
• Confidentiality in the digital age;
• Electronic discovery;
• Legal ethics and privacy;
• Managing social media;
• Data security;
• California’s new sexual harassment training and workplace investigation;
• Managing a paperless office;
• Time Management and
• Stress reduction

It was an informative few days, providing us updates regarding the latest trends, information and research on how to best manage a small firm.   HLG remains thoughtful and diligent in our approaches toward better service and overall excellence, and so we thank Erin for her enthusiastic participation!