 It's a mission engulfed in emotion, honor, and sacrifice. It's a ceremony to pay our last respects for our fallen hero. Remembering our fallen warriors. Words that are easily said but difficult to accept. The job of one soldier stationed at Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan is to capture a last memory for the family of our departed service member. For me personally, the way I've always grown up is you take pride in everything that you do. So I spend hours on end doing products that need the proper respect, need the time, the sweat, the blood, the lack of sleep to make sure that it gets done properly. The way that I would want to see it, the way that I think my family would want to see it if that was me. What we like to call it is a hero ceremony. A hero ceremony basically because that's exactly what they are. They sacrifice their life for those back home, for us, to make sure that we're safe and do what was right, do what they felt was right at the point in time. From day one that we've gotten here, it's every person, every service member that I've done the ceremony for has stuck in my head, stuck in my heart. It's a rough job. No one deserves to do this. But you know what? It's paying the respects that all heroes deserve and something that the families need to see. Every video that I've done so far, every hero ceremony that I've covered, every time one ends, I pray there's never going to be another one. And every single day I pray for every single service member that I've covered. I've cried every single time. I've cried every night going back to my room, knowing that I hope these families are proud that someone took the time to do this. Specialist Ching creates a small tribute and at the same time sends a message to the families who've lost a little one that even though they're gone, they will never be forgotten. Reporting from Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan, I'm Army Sergeant Sacha Che.