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#paramedic
One day, I’ll get the call. The one that changes me. The one that buries itself deep where no one else can see. It’ll sound like every other tone— a number, a street, a reason to run. But something in it will stay. Because I know what’s waiting — the wreckage of someone’s worst day, blood that won’t stop, eyes that beg, lungs that won’t fill. I’ve learned how to stay calm when the world is ending, how to press my hands to a chest like it’s just muscle and bone — not someone’s son, not someone’s mother. You’re trained to move fast, To do with purpose To act without hesitation, But there’s no class for the quiet moments— The ones where you sit in the silence After the sirens fade, And the weight of a life You couldn’t save Settles into your chest There’s no lesson in the long drives Back to an empty house, When your heart still beats In the rhythm of the chaos you left behind. No one talks about the emptiness That fills the spaces When the adrenaline fades away And you’re left with only yourself To make sense of the mess. They don’t teach you how to breathe through someone else’s panic, how to hold space for a mother’s screams and still remember protocol. They don’t prepare you for how heavy the air gets when no one says it yet, but everyone knows— It’s time to call it. I know this. I’ve always known this. You don’t do this work and pretend you walk away untouched. But sometimes, being there for someone’s worst moment is the most human thing we can do. And I’d rather be changed than never have offered a steady hand when the world fell apart. Not because I’m fearless— but because I care. And caring is worth the weight.
0
Apr 21, 2025
Apr 21, 2025 at 4:59 PM UTC
The things they don’t teach you
One day, I’ll get the call. The one that changes me. The one that buries itself deep where no one else can see. It’ll sound like every other tone— a number, a street, a reason to run. But something in it will stay. Because I know what’s waiting — the wreckage of someone’s worst day, blood that won’t stop, eyes that beg, lungs that won’t fill. I’ve learned how to stay calm when the world is ending, how to press my hands to a chest like it’s just muscle and bone — not someone’s son, not someone’s mother. You’re trained to move fast, To do with purpose To act without hesitation, But there’s no class for the quiet moments— The ones where you sit in the silence After the sirens fade, And the weight of a life You couldn’t save Settles into your chest There’s no lesson in the long drives Back to an empty house, When your heart still beats In the rhythm of the chaos you left behind. No one talks about the emptiness That fills the spaces When the adrenaline fades away And you’re left with only yourself To make sense of the mess. They don’t teach you how to breathe through someone else’s panic, how to hold space for a mother’s screams and still remember protocol. They don’t prepare you for how heavy the air gets when no one says it yet, but everyone knows— It’s time to call it. I know this. I’ve always known this. You don’t do this work and pretend you walk away untouched. But sometimes, being there for someone’s worst moment is the most human thing we can do. And I’d rather be changed than never have offered a steady hand when the world fell apart. Not because I’m fearless— but because I care. And caring is worth the weight.
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61
The first time, You felt warm— like hands on my shoulders pulling me out of my own mind. You offered escape in a form I could swallow. You didn’t ask questions. Didn’t care why I hurt. You just promised I wouldn’t feel it. And I believed you. I let you in. Again and again. Until I forgot how to live without you. You were the only thing that ever made it stop— the noise, the ache, the weight of being me. One hit, and the world melted into something I could finally survive. I watched my life shrink, choice by choice, until all that was left was the next high, the next lie, the next hollow nod toward nothing. And when I ran out of money, you ran out of mercy. You left me alone Empty broken, with no one but myself and the thought of ending it all. But the money ran out long before the cravings did. Withdrawals don’t care about bank accounts or promises. They come like fire— bones screaming, skin crawling, begging for your relief in any form. And so I did what I swore I never would. I laid down my worth like loose change and let strangers take what they wanted in exchange for a high that never lasted long enough to forget what I’d done. It didn’t feel like choice. It felt like drowning, like grabbing any hand I could even if it pulled me deeper. That was my rock bottom. Not some dramatic fall— just the quiet realization that I had survived you And somehow, in the ruins, I reached for help instead of you. Treatment didn’t fix me— but it planted something where you used to live: hope. Five years without you. I clawed back from the edge of the grave you dug for me. I faced the rage you left behind, the shame, the scars, the debt you demanded in every breath. And here’s the final blow: I’m a paramedic now. Despite the odds. Despite your vendetta. Despite the nights you tried to **** me. I wear a uniform, not to hide my past, but to prove I survived it. I carry Narcan on my back and hope in my hands. I race into chaos to save the ones you nearly stole— because I know how precious one more heartbeat can be. I see your shadow in every overdose call, in every lifeless face I try to pull back from the dark. You sit in the corner while I force oxygen into their lungs And push Narcan into their veins smirking like the devil I once knew. And I always say a big **** you I my head When we get them back Because you tried to **** me— but I became a lifeline. You almost had me. But almost doesn’t count. I’m still here. And I am everything you said I’d never be.
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Apr 21, 2025
Apr 21, 2025 at 3:28 PM UTC
A letter to my opioid addiction
The first time, You felt warm— like hands on my shoulders pulling me out of my own mind. You offered escape in a form I could swallow. You didn’t ask questions. Didn’t care why I hurt. You just promised I wouldn’t feel it. And I believed you. I let you in. Again and again. Until I forgot how to live without you. You were the only thing that ever made it stop— the noise, the ache, the weight of being me. One hit, and the world melted into something I could finally survive. I watched my life shrink, choice by choice, until all that was left was the next high, the next lie, the next hollow nod toward nothing. And when I ran out of money, you ran out of mercy. You left me alone Empty broken, with no one but myself and the thought of ending it all. But the money ran out long before the cravings did. Withdrawals don’t care about bank accounts or promises. They come like fire— bones screaming, skin crawling, begging for your relief in any form. And so I did what I swore I never would. I laid down my worth like loose change and let strangers take what they wanted in exchange for a high that never lasted long enough to forget what I’d done. It didn’t feel like choice. It felt like drowning, like grabbing any hand I could even if it pulled me deeper. That was my rock bottom. Not some dramatic fall— just the quiet realization that I had survived you And somehow, in the ruins, I reached for help instead of you. Treatment didn’t fix me— but it planted something where you used to live: hope. Five years without you. I clawed back from the edge of the grave you dug for me. I faced the rage you left behind, the shame, the scars, the debt you demanded in every breath. And here’s the final blow: I’m a paramedic now. Despite the odds. Despite your vendetta. Despite the nights you tried to **** me. I wear a uniform, not to hide my past, but to prove I survived it. I carry Narcan on my back and hope in my hands. I race into chaos to save the ones you nearly stole— because I know how precious one more heartbeat can be. I see your shadow in every overdose call, in every lifeless face I try to pull back from the dark. You sit in the corner while I force oxygen into their lungs And push Narcan into their veins smirking like the devil I once knew. And I always say a big **** you I my head When we get them back Because you tried to **** me— but I became a lifeline. You almost had me. But almost doesn’t count. I’m still here. And I am everything you said I’d never be.
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106
She's going to make it Lost a lot of blood... **** High alcohol level Ten minutes away She's okay, she's okay Losing her fast She's gonna make it! ———————————— My head is reeling Dear god, the world is on it's back Please, Stop panicking— it's only blood No, I don't want an IV It's okay, I'm okay Don't give me an IV Don't touch me, I said no! agh! Fears digress to slurred vocabulary Over and over "Am I broke? Am I broke now?"
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Sep 23, 2018
Sep 23, 2018 at 3:30 AM UTC
ER pt. 2 - I punched a paramedic (sorry about that)
I keep the details dim So on the outside looking in Nothing is as at seems Everything just beams It all seems so copacetic But it's really so pathetic Before long I'll need a paramedic
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Mar 18, 2016
Mar 18, 2016 at 10:42 PM UTC
Keep it Dim