To the Rescue: Tom Richards

To the Rescue: Tom Richards


Hello, I’m Tom Richards.  I have been volunteering with Snohomish County Volunteer Search and Rescue (SAR) since 2012.  We search for lost persons urban, rural and backcountry.  We carry the injured out from the backcountry.

I was taking an alpine mountain-climbing class with The Mountaineers and one instructor made a pitch that we join SAR.  Our skills are needed and we’d be welcome to join.  I don’t think I’d heard of SAR beforehand.  I did some research, attended a few meetings and joined.  I thought I’d get to see lots of backcountry.  Well, most of the rescues are at night.  Once an injured person gets word to SAR, daylight is gone.  Occasionally, a rescue takes all night and we get to see dawn.

My most memorable rescue was a recovery at the ice caves located off the Mountain Loop Hwy.  The roof of the ice cave partially collapsed injuring several and killing one person.  The injured made it out with help from bystanders.  The presumed dead person was deeper in the cave.  We waited overnight.  The next day an avalanche expert from Washington Department of Transportation was brought in with explosives.  He tried to collapse the cave by dropping explosives from a helicopter.  Impressive explosions but the cave roof held firm.  But enough debris came down that we deemed it safe enough to run in and carry out the body.  At the end of the mission, the SAR team was flown out in the helicopter, my first SAR helicopter ride.

I wish more people knew that SAR is an all-volunteer effort, not a government agency.  We buy our own equipment and rely on donations and grants for the big stuff, like trucks, rescue litters, ropes and radios.  I also wish everyone who goes for a hike in the backcountry would make a plan and take the ten essentials with them.  Visit SCVSAR.org for more information.

Tom Richards

WUUC Congregational Game Night

WUUC Congregational Game Night

Junior Youth Group will host a WUUC Congregational Game Night on Saturday, March 27 from 4-5:30 p.m. on Zoom.

This event will be open to the whole congregation and friends with games for adults and youth. The event will be free, but the youth will accept donations for Lambert House as part of their social justice work for the year.

Helping the Helpers

Helping the Helpers

WUUC members and friends contributed $2,135 to our Helping Hands Fund during our 2020 Christmas Eve service and in the month after. Because of the many dire needs in the age of Covid, Rev. Dan Lillie decided to split the receipts between our Helping Hands Fund, a discretionary fund administered by Rev. Dan, and Compass Housing Alliance.

Thus, $1,067.50 will go to Helping Hands to assist individuals and families in need, and $1,067.50 will go to Compass Housing Alliance, which provides permanent, supportive, affordable housing and emergency services for those experiencing homelessness and income instability in the Puget Sound region.

Thank you all for your generosity!

ASJ Update: Next Up: Serving Justice

ASJ Update: Next Up: Serving Justice

by Cora Goss-Grubbs, ASJ Co-Chair

Sunday Special Collections

January’s special collection raised $425 for NAMI Eastside. The National Association of Mental Illness is a community-based non-profit organization committed to improving the quality of life for those impacted by mental illness through advocacy, education, and support.

Our next special collection, during the service on March 21, will go to JUUstice Washington, which strives to inspire, educate, empower, and nurture the capacity of Unitarian Universalists (UUs), as well as our community allies, to collaboratively advocate for and undertake social and environmental justice initiatives. They support legislative change that aligns with our UU values in Washington state and beyond.

The ASJ Committee thanks WUUC members and friends for their generous support of our monthly special collections, which take place during services on the third Sunday of every month. Instructions for giving are posted during the service, and you can also donate anytime the following week at https://onrealm.org/wuuc/-/give/now, or by sending a check to WUUC at P.O. Box 111, Woodinville, WA 98072. Please make checks out to WUUC and write “ASJ Special Collection” in the notes. 

Theme: Commitment

By Linda Sherry
(adapted from Soul Matters, March 2021)

Huge payoffs come when we keep our commitments. Maintaining loyalty to healthy habits not only lengthens our lives but enriches them. Faithfully following through on our relationship commitments allows us to fully realize ourselves, as well as increases just about every metric of happiness, meaning and success out there. And keeping the promises we make to ourselves ultimately gives us the strength needed to follow through on all those promises we make to those around us.

Add it all up and what we get is a picture of commitment that looks a lot like climbing a mountain. What’s needed most in our backpacks are the qualities of endurance, focus, determination and grit. And of course a handful of coaches offering us motivational words and strategic tips and encouraging shouts of “You can do it!”

There is no doubt that such climbs are worth it. All of us certainly need a few of these successful journeys to feel fulfilled. But what about those we notice along the way? What about those we see sitting on the side of the trail, bruised and tending to their wounds?

There’s the friend whose marriage was good for so many years, but that relationship has now just grown thin.  There’s also the co-worker that is proud to have maintained a successful career for 20 years that supported his family, but who — because of that commitment to stable work — had to turn his back on an earlier dream of being a writer. Then, of course, there many who bravely remain committed to the long-haul goals of health and security, but who walk wearily because addictions or bad luck have turned their journey into one of “one step forward and two steps back.”

All of which is to say that maybe what’s needed most this month is for us to tone down all the motivational talk so we can make at least a little room for mourning.

Not every path of commitment is clear and long, with a reward waiting at the end. Some just lead to dead ends. Some trails are simply too steep and must be abandoned, not just for our safety but for the safety of those we love. And almost always there’s that fork in the road. We want to travel both, but we are forced to choose. So commitment to one necessarily means traveling with regret and “What ifs.”

In such woods, our backpacks need to be filled with more than just endurance, focus and grit. Self-forgiveness, acceptance, and the ability to let go or admit “I was wrong” need to be tucked in there too.

In such woods, people need us to be willing to offer them repair and rest.  We need to remember that for every person wanting to hear “push through the pain,” there are two needing someone to say, “It’s OK to tell me about your pain.”

Less shouting “You can do it!” from the sidelines, and more whispering “I’m here to listen.”

Yes, there’s no doubt that’s exactly what so many need this month.  And maybe that’s exactly what you need too. …

We need to do a better job of putting ourselves higher on our own ‘to do’ list.

Michelle Obama

Say Yes. Whatever it is, say yes with your whole heart & simple as it sounds that’s all the excuse life needs to grab you by the hands and start to dance.

Find the Soul Matters packet for March here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1uRX8z56a_xyw7ilhpL99qR6X4nj7G0f9/view?usp=sharing

The Sacred Word supplement for March on Awakening is here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZPvcO55u0RRD25EuROEVKQdjlHMAh7YA/view?usp=sharing