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Impact - Honey On Duty | Real Stories, Real Healing, Real Change

Real Moments That Started It All

These aren’t organized “programs” yet—they’re the real-world moments that showed us Honey was doing more than helping one handler. They’re the reason we’re turning this into a nonprofit.

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Bubba's Last Honeygram

End-of-Life Visit, Virginia

Before Bubba—Stefan's 103-year-old grandfather and World War II veteran—passed away, Honey lay quietly beside him in one of his final visits. Even as Bubba's memory was fading, he always knew how to smile when Honey leaned into him.

That simple act became the seed of the Honeygram idea: a small, tangible way to say “you are loved” when words feel too big or too hard to find.

"Even as his memory was fading, he always knew how to smile when Honey leaned into him. That's what Honey does—she stays, heart to heart, when words aren't enough."
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When First Responders Need Support

CISM Training, Fredericksburg Police Department

During CISM training at Fredericksburg Police Department, Stefan learned how wide the ripple of trauma really is. It doesn’t stop with officers—it reaches dispatchers, tow truck drivers, nurses, and everyone connected to a call.

Honey’s future role in crisis response is being shaped by that insight: to sit quietly beside the people who are usually expected to “just keep going.”

"The level of people involved in trauma isn't just the officers or first responders—it's the dispatchers, the tow truck drivers, everyone attached to that scene. Honey helps us remember we're not alone in it."

— CISM Training Participant, Fredericksburg PD

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Honey's Story Goes Public: Episode 100

FXBG Neighbors Connect, Fredericksburg, VA

FXBG Neighbors Connect chose Honey for their 100th episode milestone—one of the first times Honey’s work and backstory were shared in a focused, public way.

The episode didn’t celebrate a finished nonprofit—it spotlighted a service dog and handler at the very beginning of turning lived experience into structured outreach.

"I couldn't think of a better way to celebrate this milestone than with Honey—a dog who's healing hearts one cuddle at a time, and just getting started."
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The Stranger at the Gate

Phoenix Airport, Arizona

After dozens of flights, one moment keeps coming back: a woman at the gate having a full-blown panic attack—crying, shaking, unable to board.

With her permission, Honey sat at her feet. The woman buried her face in Honey’s fur and cried. Slowly, her breath returned. A short time later, she boarded her flight.

"I don't even know that dog's name, but she saved me from the worst moment of my day. I'll never forget her."
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Honey's First Community Night

Always Flavored, Fredericksburg, VA

At Honey’s first community meetup, supporters gathered not just to meet her—but to write the very first Honeygrams. Short notes, written by strangers for strangers, meant to be delivered on Honey’s future visits.

It marked a turning point: Honey was no longer just helping one person. The community was beginning to help her help others.

"Writing a Honeygram felt small in the moment, but knowing Honey would deliver it to someone who really needed it? That felt powerful."

What People Are Noticing

These reflections come from the early days—before donor campaigns, before a full calendar of visits. They’re signs that the work is real, even while the organization is still forming.

"Even as his memory was fading, he always knew how to smile when Honey leaned into him. That's what Honey does—she stays, heart to heart, when words aren't enough."

— Stefan Walter

Honey's Handler

"The level of people involved in trauma isn't just the officers or first responders—it's the dispatchers, the tow truck drivers, everyone attached to that scene. Honey helps us remember we're not alone in it."

— CISM Training Participant

Fredericksburg Police Department

"Honey brought such peace during one of the hardest moments of our lives. Her gentle presence gave us a moment to breathe, to feel joy again, even in the middle of goodbye."

— Hospice Family Member

Early Partner Family

"I was having the worst panic attack of my life at the airport. Honey sat with me, and I was able to breathe again. She saved my day. I'll never forget her."

— Anonymous Traveler

Phoenix Airport

"Honey's story gives me hope. If a dog who was surrendered twice can become a healer, maybe there's hope for all of us who feel like second chances don't exist."

— Community Member

Shelter Advocate

"Watching Honey interact with people in medical settings has changed how I see recovery, resilience, and hope. She brings something no medicine can—quiet, unconditional presence."

— Medical Professional

Healthcare Partner

Where We're Headed

These are the four core areas we’re building toward. Some are already happening informally. Others are in planning, paperwork, and partnership conversations. Transparency first—no inflated numbers, just honest next steps.

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Healing Visits

Turning what already happens in waiting rooms and hospital corridors into intentional, scheduled visits. Our goal is to formally partner with hospice programs, burn units, and hospitals so Honey’s presence is part of a coordinated care plan—not just a chance encounter.

Early Stage • Building Partnerships
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Crisis & Community Response

Using CISM training and lived experience to support first responders, dispatchers, and affected communities after hard calls. Right now, this is a future-facing goal—something we’re designing carefully with safety, liability, and mental health best practices in mind.

Planning Stage • Designing Protocols
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Mental Health & Education

Drawing from Vindec EU, we’re building workshops, talks, and panels that blend trauma-informed education with Honey’s presence as a grounding anchor. We’re starting with small community nights and will grow into school, hospital, and first responder trainings over time.

Launching • Small Events & Workshops
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Canine Advocacy & Training

Honey’s story is proof that surrendered dogs aren’t broken—they’re often untapped healers. With support from trusted trainers and veterinary partners, we’re slowly shaping a “rescue-to-healer” pipeline for future dogs. This is long-term work, and we’re not rushing it.

Long-Term Vision • In Development

In the Media (So Far)

We’re not a big-budget nonprofit with a PR team. These early features are organic, relationship-driven moments where people saw something in Honey and wanted to help tell her story.

FXBG Neighbors Connect

Episode 100 – Honey featured as a service dog bringing calm and comfort, and the early vision for Honey On Duty shared publicly.

Instagram (@honeyonduty)

Day-in-the-life posts, travel recaps, and behind-the-scenes moments documenting the very first steps of this mission.

GoodLuckStef Productions

Independent storytelling by Stefan Walter—capturing Honey’s work in hospitals, airports, and community events as the nonprofit forms.

Local & Community Features

Early coverage around CISM training, meetups, and Honey’s role as a pitbull ambassador and service dog in Virginia.

Help Us Build This From the Ground Up

We’re not telling a polished “finished” nonprofit story—we’re inviting you into the beginning of one. If Honey’s journey resonates with you, there’s room for you in this work.

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