this post was submitted on 02 May 2026
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Labour

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For 32 years, Bryan served as both a land and helicopter paramedic — racing toward the worst days of other people’s lives. Cardiac arrests. Fatal crashes. Airlifts. The sounds. The smells. The faces. And then… they started following him home. Nightmares. PTSD. Emotional shutdown. A growing loss of empathy and connection — not just at work, but with the people he loved most. The job that once defined him slowly began to erase him.

Eventually, Bryan faced the hardest call of his career: stepping away. In this episode of WHEN THE SHIFT ENDS, Bryan speaks openly about the cumulative trauma paramedics carry, the identity crisis that comes with leaving the profession, and what recovery looks like when you’ve spent decades putting everyone else first.

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[–] happybadger@hexbear.net 10 points 1 month ago

:yea: I loved paramedicine in the same exact way I imagine I'd love cocaine. It's playing Russian roulette for 24 hours straight every other day, either having the purest adrenaline rush ever or seeing something that breaks you multiple times per hour. No logic to it, no predicting what's next or when, you're stuck just arbitrarily preparing for trauma that you're hyper-aware of and need to be physically primed for. That's such a wildly inhumane job that I'm shocked people can make full careers out of it. Every part of our animal psyche is designed to flee from everything you have to run toward in emergency medicine.

[–] HexReplyBot@hexbear.net 2 points 1 month ago

I found a YouTube link in your post. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy: