 Your Admiral Margaret Grunn-Kibben, Chief of Navy Chaplains. The biggest challenge for me as a chaplain overall is helping people really understand what chaplains are. Part of it is because we come from such very unique faith backgrounds, and so the challenge has really been helping people to say, we're here not only for that, not only for worship, not only to help you to freely express your faith tradition. I may not be of your faith tradition, but I have certainly the resources to help you get connected to people who will enable you to express your faith, but we're really here to care. You may have heard that phrase, go tell it to the chaplain, well there really is something to that. Really what we do is to walk around the ship, to walk around the command, and to get to know people at a different level, but rather I'm here because you're a human being, and as human beings you need to be understood as a human being, and all that that means. What's going on in your soul, what's going on in your spirit, what's going on in your family life, in your personal life, you need to know that there's somebody there that you can talk to. And oh by the way, somebody you can talk to who isn't going to cast judgment, who isn't going to preach at you, who isn't going to try to convert you, but rather who's going to listen with complete confidentiality. In other words, what a sailor, marine or coast guardsman tells me stays with me. There is nothing that can pull it out of me. So for me the biggest challenge of being a chaplain is to help people to realize the incredible resource that chaplains are, the breadth and depth of what we bring to the table.