DAMN Good Medics

Hot Mic! A Long Way From Johnny & Roy

1 h 5 min · 16. juni 2026
episode Hot Mic! A Long Way From Johnny & Roy cover

Beskrivelse

We've talked about leadership, culture, professionalism, and what it means to be a DAMN Good Medic. But before the frameworks, before the lessons learned, and before the podcast, we were just a handful of real people trying to figure out what we were going to do with our lives. In this humanizing Hot Mic episode, Chad draws Chiyo, Jeff, Lee, and Mark out from behind the microphones to share the stories that brought us into EMS. From aspiring fighter pilots, engineers, mechanics, artists, and ski patrollers to flight medics, educators, and EMS leaders, we discuss the unexpected paths that shaped our careers and the mentors who helped us along the way. We talk about culture shock, burnout, counseling, mental health, leadership failures, career longevity, and the challenge of staying human in a profession that can consume your identity if you let it. We also discuss what has kept us here, what we've learned after decades in the field, and what kind of legacy we hope to leave behind. We may be a long way from Johnny and Roy, but some things remain the same: good mentors still change lives, people still matter, and the best medics never forget who they're serving. This isn't a classroom presentation. It's a late-night conversation between calls.

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Alle episoder

29 episoder

episode Hot Mic! A Long Way From Johnny & Roy cover

Hot Mic! A Long Way From Johnny & Roy

We've talked about leadership, culture, professionalism, and what it means to be a DAMN Good Medic. But before the frameworks, before the lessons learned, and before the podcast, we were just a handful of real people trying to figure out what we were going to do with our lives. In this humanizing Hot Mic episode, Chad draws Chiyo, Jeff, Lee, and Mark out from behind the microphones to share the stories that brought us into EMS. From aspiring fighter pilots, engineers, mechanics, artists, and ski patrollers to flight medics, educators, and EMS leaders, we discuss the unexpected paths that shaped our careers and the mentors who helped us along the way. We talk about culture shock, burnout, counseling, mental health, leadership failures, career longevity, and the challenge of staying human in a profession that can consume your identity if you let it. We also discuss what has kept us here, what we've learned after decades in the field, and what kind of legacy we hope to leave behind. We may be a long way from Johnny and Roy, but some things remain the same: good mentors still change lives, people still matter, and the best medics never forget who they're serving. This isn't a classroom presentation. It's a late-night conversation between calls.

16. juni 20261 h 5 min
episode Dependability – Duty Bound and Load Bearing cover

Dependability – Duty Bound and Load Bearing

Dependability – Duty Bound and Load Bearing Dependability is often described as showing up, getting the job done, and being someone others can trust. But what happens when organizations, teams, and even families begin relying on the same dependable people over and over again? In this final installment of the 14 Traits of Leadership series, we explore dependability as more than a leadership trait—it is the bridge between character and trust, duty and responsibility, burden and stewardship. We discuss why dependable people become the foundation upon which teams are built, how trust is earned through consistency in the small things, and why dependable individuals are often the first people leaders turn to when things go wrong. Along the way, we examine the Continuum of Sacrifice: * Duty * Sacrifice * Heroism * Chronic Heroism * Malignant Heroism * Martyrdom Where is the line between healthy service and unhealthy self-sacrifice? When does carrying the load become carrying too much? How do dependable people avoid becoming consumed by the very missions, organizations, and identities they care about most? We also introduce the distinction between dependable people and reliable systems, exploring why mission-capable organizations require both. Dependable people can save failing systems, but reliable systems protect dependable people from being consumed. As we conclude the 14 Traits of Leadership series, we challenge leaders at every level to consider not only how to become dependable, but how to remain dependable without losing themselves in the process. Because the strongest leaders are not simply duty bound. They are duty bound and load bearing. (Episode Summary written by ChatGPT)

2. juni 20261 h 14 min
episode Loyalty: For the Hundreds of Reasons Not to Be cover

Loyalty: For the Hundreds of Reasons Not to Be

In this episode of DAMN Good Medics, Mark and Jeff examine loyalty, the next trait in the Tact branch of the Character-Based Leadership Tree. Building on selflessness, loyalty is more than agreement or obedience—it is the disciplined commitment to the mission and the team, even when trust is strained, the full picture isn't clear, or there are easier paths available. Drawing from military doctrine, philosophy, and real-world EMS experience, this conversation explores how loyalty operates up, down, and across teams, how it must be earned through trust, and how it breaks down when directed at the wrong things—protecting individuals at the expense of the mission. Because loyalty doesn't prove itself when it's easy. It proves itself when there are a hundred reasons not to.

30. apr. 202646 min
episode Selflessness - The Weight of the Expectant cover

Selflessness - The Weight of the Expectant

In this episode of DAMN Good Medics, Mark, Jeff, and Chiyo begin the Tact branch of the Character-Based Leadership Tree by examining its foundational trait: selflessness. Like the expectant triage category, every EMS provider knows that concept of a selfless leader exists. The parallels continue, leaders with the trait are often overshadowed as the characteristic is just lumped in with other traits just as expectant patients are normally folded into the black category. Rarer than the triage tags that are equipped are those leaders who truly embodying selflessness. More than simple kindness or sacrifice, selflessness is deeply connected to humility—the discipline of placing the mission and your people ahead of ego, comfort, and personal advancement while maintaining the capacity to lead effectively. Drawing from military doctrine, crew resource management, and real-world EMS experience, this conversation explores how selflessness shapes leadership, accountability, and team dynamics—especially in the moments that don't resolve cleanly.

14. apr. 202641 min
episode Endurance: The Discipline of Shared Burden cover

Endurance: The Discipline of Shared Burden

In this rare but timely solo episode, Mark concludes the Bearing branch of the Character-Based Leadership Tree by examining its final trait: endurance—as the rest of the cadre is out actively demonstrating it where the extremes have become the norm. Defined as the ability to withstand pain, fatigue, and hardship without giving way, endurance is more than persistence—it is the discipline of remaining aligned with the mission over time. Drawing from Marine Corps doctrine, mission-critical team research, and real-world EMS experience, this episode explores the physical, mental, and emotional demands of endurance—and the role leaders play in building it within themselves and their teams. Because endurance is not an individual act. It is the discipline of shared burden—so the mission doesn't fail when the pressure builds. (Episode summary written in part by ChatGPT)

24. mar. 202644 min