Most psychologists who work with law enforcement do it from a safe distance. They consult. They advise. They hand over a report and drive home.Dr. Cherylynn Lee doesn't do that.She works inside the Santa Barbara Sheriff's Office. Full-time. Every day. She's not observing the culture — she's inside it, earning trust in a world built, brick by brick, to never ask for help. She responds to active crises in the field. Sits on the crisis negotiation team. Has debriefed more than forty critical incidents — line-of-duty deaths, officer-involved shootings, mass casualty events — and then comes back the next day and does it again.She also helped build Santa Barbara County's first law enforcement mental health co-response team from scratch. And now she's shaping wellness standards for the entire state of California. This is someone so embedded in law enforcement that when something terrible happens — and in this work, something terrible often happens — she's already there.On this episode of Responder Resilience, we ask the questions that don't get asked enough. What does trust look like inside a culture that was never designed to be vulnerable? What patterns does she see in the officers who finally walk through her door — and what took them so long? How much of the cultural shift around mental health in law enforcement is real, and how much is performance?The answers are not comfortable. They're not meant to be.This is what embedded support actually looks like. Not from the outside looking in — but from inside the wireContact Dr. Cherylynn Lee:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cherylynn-lee-phd-6a1420120/Contact Responder Resilience:Phone: +1 844-344-6655Email:
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