A New Paramedic Explains Call Residue
You can train for fire, trauma, and protocols, but nobody trains you for what stays in your head after the scene is over. We sit down with Jake Braaten, a brand new paramedic, to talk about the quiet weight that builds over time: the “residue” you carry home from EMS calls, hospice moments, and those first critical incidents that change how you sleep, think, and relate to people you love.
Jake’s path starts far from the ambulance, in IT and cybersecurity, where problem solving was the thrill until the problems became routine. A family crisis during COVID, caring for his grandmother through cancer, and seeing how medics supported not just the patient but the whole family pushed him toward the fire service. We dig into what fire residency looks like, what surprised him about real-world EMS, and why calls inside someone’s home hit different than anything you see in a controlled setting.
We also get real about first responder mental health: brain fog after a first CPR, the urge to withdraw, and the fear that stress means you are not cut out for the job. We talk peer support, counseling gaps, chaplains, and the difference between crisis-only resources and true preventative care. Jake shares how a supportive marriage, faith, and strong boundaries like turning off alerts and protecting time off help him stay present at work and at home.
If you work in EMS, fire, law enforcement, dispatch, or you love someone who does, this conversation will feel familiar and useful. Subscribe for weekly episodes, share this with a coworker or partner, and leave a review so more people who need it can find Call Residue Podcast.
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