OK, bear with me, cause this is a long set-up. I am putting it here because the issue is not religious, but would have also applied if I were a Doctor, or a Doctor's Secretary. Because it deals with confidentiality.
I was in the Army Reserves at Annual Training. Large real-world mission, many transportation units hauling cargo, coming and going all the time.
One day, there was an incident with the civilian cleaning staff that took care of the latrines. A male soldier walked in, saw the female cleaner, and went pee without giving it a second thought.
Needless to say, this upset the woman greatly. They started to have more cleaners present for safety. Which did cost the Army more money. So whoever did this was in deep S. They never did found out who it was.
I was a Chaplain Assistant, and many people felt more comfortable talking to a lower-enlisted PFC rather than an "Officer". So some people like to talk to me and I would listen. I would avoid "counseling" people because that gets into dangourous territory. I was only qualified to listen not give advice. That is the Chaplains job.
A soldier came to talk to me. He was rather upset about the incident because, it was him. According to him, he walked into the male latrines, and saw the cleaner, did his business, and left. But he was tired and it did not register that the cleaner might be female. All he saw was a person on the other side of the room and (because of it being the male latrine) assumed they were male.
He felt horrible when he realized what happened and wanted to apologize, but he worried that would only make things worse. He was also worried about being charged as a "sex offender".
I really did not know what to say, and recommended talking to the Chaplain. But he refused because "you cant trust Officers". So all I knew to do was reassure him that it was an accident.
Now for the tricky part, under US Army Regulation 165-1 (chapter 16-2. Sorry I do not know how to get it to link strait to that chapter) I had the same responsibility to maintain confidentiality as a Chaplain (translate to the non-religious world, same responsibility as a Doctor and their Secretary have not to discuss patients and what they say). Also, if I breached his confidence on this, no-one would come talk to me again (and what I do reflects onto the Chaplain and the Chaplains Core, so the ripple effects could be rather far and wide with people not trusting us and thus not getting the help they need.).
But, I also respected his wishes in not asking the advice of my Chaplain (who is bound by confidentiality also).
I do not regret never mentioning this, but part of me wonders if I should have asked for the Chaplains advice anyway. If maybe he had better advice then I could have given. After all my Chaplain had a Doctorate in Theology and significant training in counseling, far more than my couple of semesters. I do not know, but I do feel better getting this one off my chest.
I was in the Army Reserves at Annual Training. Large real-world mission, many transportation units hauling cargo, coming and going all the time.
One day, there was an incident with the civilian cleaning staff that took care of the latrines. A male soldier walked in, saw the female cleaner, and went pee without giving it a second thought.
Needless to say, this upset the woman greatly. They started to have more cleaners present for safety. Which did cost the Army more money. So whoever did this was in deep S. They never did found out who it was.
I was a Chaplain Assistant, and many people felt more comfortable talking to a lower-enlisted PFC rather than an "Officer". So some people like to talk to me and I would listen. I would avoid "counseling" people because that gets into dangourous territory. I was only qualified to listen not give advice. That is the Chaplains job.
A soldier came to talk to me. He was rather upset about the incident because, it was him. According to him, he walked into the male latrines, and saw the cleaner, did his business, and left. But he was tired and it did not register that the cleaner might be female. All he saw was a person on the other side of the room and (because of it being the male latrine) assumed they were male.
He felt horrible when he realized what happened and wanted to apologize, but he worried that would only make things worse. He was also worried about being charged as a "sex offender".
I really did not know what to say, and recommended talking to the Chaplain. But he refused because "you cant trust Officers". So all I knew to do was reassure him that it was an accident.
Now for the tricky part, under US Army Regulation 165-1 (chapter 16-2. Sorry I do not know how to get it to link strait to that chapter) I had the same responsibility to maintain confidentiality as a Chaplain (translate to the non-religious world, same responsibility as a Doctor and their Secretary have not to discuss patients and what they say). Also, if I breached his confidence on this, no-one would come talk to me again (and what I do reflects onto the Chaplain and the Chaplains Core, so the ripple effects could be rather far and wide with people not trusting us and thus not getting the help they need.).
But, I also respected his wishes in not asking the advice of my Chaplain (who is bound by confidentiality also).
I do not regret never mentioning this, but part of me wonders if I should have asked for the Chaplains advice anyway. If maybe he had better advice then I could have given. After all my Chaplain had a Doctorate in Theology and significant training in counseling, far more than my couple of semesters. I do not know, but I do feel better getting this one off my chest.
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