The push-in ceremony is a longstanding tradition in Seymour, Indiana, marking the moment a new fire truck officially enters service. It’s usually a day for community pride, handshakes and celebration. “I was just surviving minute by minute,” Flinn said. “The last thing I wanted to do was be around people who would be laughing and having a good time.”
But after several calls from his fellow firefighters, he and his wife were finally convinced to attend. “Nothing could have prepared me for what happened,” Flinn said.
“It was a complete and absolute surprise to both me and my wife,” Flinn said. “I can’t put into words the emotion I was feeling — knowing my fellow firefighters had my back, and my son’s name would be out there in service, helping to save lives.”
Growing up in the station made firefighting feel like a natural path. “It was one of those things I knew from day one I’d be doing,” Flinn said. “I never thought of it as a job but as a calling, a vocation.” Flinn could already see Maverick following in his footsteps.
Some of Flinn’s favorite memories of Maverick are from when his wife would bring him to the station. “He’d be there almost every shift, running around, putting everyone’s helmets on, making everyone laugh,” he said. “He loved it so much. He had to have fire trucks at home and his own little firefighting outfit.”
“People don’t always talk about the hard parts of farming or the tragedies which can come with it,” Flinn said. “In a split second, something can go wrong.”
After a farming accident took Maverick’s life, the family’s grief could have remained private. Instead, it became the starting point of something bigger. Flinn and his family created the Maverick Minute Foundation, built around a simple idea: pause for sixty seconds and pay attention to your surroundings.
At the firehouse, it’s the same idea. “We take a Maverick Minute before responding to every call,” Flinn said. “In a profession where every second counts, it’s also important to remember everything can change in a split second. Taking a conscious pause can help make sure we aren’t rushing into something dangerous.”
The Maverick Minute message has even expanded beyond farming and firefighting. Local hospitals have adopted it before surgeries, and major employers in the area have brought it into their safety briefings, according to Flinn. “It fits with just about anything,” Flinn said. “And if we can save one life, no matter what profession or situation, it’s totally worth it.”
Pierce even created a custom Maverick badge to replace the standard Pierce emblem, which meant the world to Flinn. “Pierce alone went above and beyond,” he said. “Something so small means so much.”
The department placed the badge on the rear of the apparatus, which Flinn said will get better visibility in traffic. “One thing a lot of firemen complain about is people not pulling over when a fire truck comes through,” Flinn said. “But now, the town knows the truck and more cars have gotten out of the way than ever before.”
Flinn hopes Maverick’s name not only reminds drivers to pull over, but also encourages people to take a Maverick Minute in their own lives. “If somebody sees Maverick on the road,” he said, “I hope they take a Maverick Minute to breathe, pray or just slow down. Even if it's just to take a moment to appreciate what you have in your life.”
Now, Flinn encourages anyone in the fire service who’s carrying grief, trauma, or stress to seek support, too. “It’s been a huge help,” he said, “and it’s helped me be there for my wife and my 20-month-old son Maddox.”
Flinn also knows he doesn’t have to walk through his grief alone. In the days following Maverick’s death, he saw firsthand what the fire service truly is at its core: family. “Most firemen are hard shells,” he said. “But they’re soft insides.” And when his world fell apart, his fellow firefighters showed up in ways he’ll never forget, checking in daily, sitting with him and reminding him he didn’t have to carry the pain by himself.
The truck named Maverick represents not only a child’s legacy and a community’s tribute, but a reminder firefighters don’t have to tough it out alone. Sometimes the bravest thing you can do is take a Maverick Minute for yourself, to slow down, breathe and ask for help when you need it.