May/Mental Health Month: The Lifetime Stress of Career First Responders
For most people, trauma is an event. For career first responders, it’s a career. Police officers, firefighters, paramedics, emergency nurses—these are the people who meet crisis head‑on, day after day, year after year. They don’t just witness trauma; they absorb it. They carry it home in their bodies, their sleep, their silence. Over time, the stress becomes cumulative. It’s not one call, one fire, one accident—it’s hundreds. It’s the slow layering of adrenaline, grief, and responsibility. It’s the body learning to stay alert even when the shift is over. It’s the mind replaying scenes long after the sirens fade. Many first responders learn to compartmentalize. They joke, they focus, they move on. But the nervous system doesn’t forget. It keeps score. And eventually, the score shows up—in insomnia, irritability, hypervigilance, emotional numbness, or a sense of disconnection from the world they once served so fiercely. This isn’t weakness. It’s biology. The human body was never me...