Skip to content


Archives for

See all posts in the network tagged with

Full Disclosure.

3 comments

A few shifts ago I was a part of a team working a code.  It was a pretty long transport time for us, and as we were frantically attempting to find a piece of equipment (albeit a non-vital piece of equipment) in the back of the truck, someone made a joke that to the rest of us was absolutely hysterical.

As in it resulted in a fantastic break in tension.  Good for the crew, right?

Unfortunately, the patient’s son was riding up front, and in the chaos of attempting to resuscitate this arresting patient, his father, we didn’t realize he was up there.

*Gulp*

Yeah, he heard everything.

We meant no harm.  Quite the opposite… I’m sure the patient’s son didn’t see it that way.  Even if his Father is alive today.

My friend @MedicSBK (on Twitter), author of the blog EMS in the New Decade wrote a great post on this subject, and I really hope you’ll give him a visit (if you haven’t already) and read his post Full Disclosure.

I’m finally there.

17 comments

I found myself sitting in the back of the squad catching my breath.

It truly did look like a bomb had gone off back there.  Countless plastic wrappers, empty med vials and much of the contents of our formerly pristine cabinets were tossed about.  Three different drug boxes were open with some of their contents missing.  Our stretcher sat outside of the ambulance, the lifepak and a mass of cables (hopelessly tangled) sat on top of our backboard on the stretcher.  All of the cabinets had broken tags.

It had been a very long day already, and we had a few more hours of work ahead of us in an attempt to piece together our truck.

**********

It was one of those days where you don’t get to do a lot of sitting.

I think that’s probably the most positive spin I can put on how I was feeling.  I was cold, tired, and getting a little cranky.  We had been running the stripes off the side of the truck… Back to back to back transfers with few and far between opportunities to learn about the new equipment I now have available to me at this service.  After almost 13 straight hours of teching all but one run (and squeezing in driving time when I wasn’t teching) and I was ready to throw in the towel.  Figuratively and literally.

We were posting in a quiet area… If there is such a place… I turned the lights in the mod off and reclined the captains chair.

Bring on the power nap, baby.

I had barely managed to close my eyes when I heard the high pitched tones go off.  OOOOEEEEOOOOOOOUUUUHHHHHHHH!!!!  Unit 427…. 2122 Blackhawk road… Cardiac arrest… Unit 427…2122—”

*Blink*

I leaned forward into the driving compartment and strained to hear the rest of the dispatch.  ”They just said Cardiac arrest, right?”

“Sure did,” My FTO replied as he threw the truck into drive and lit us up.

Airway bag.  Monitor.  Drug box. They’ll all need to go in.  What are the ACLS drugs and dosages?  Crap, I can’t remember the dosages…  Uhm… SHIT!  Where are the IO needles and pressure infusers kept? Do we have an extra roll of paper for the monitor?  ET or King?  Where’s the vent?  We’ll need a backboard too…  I tossed my field guide in the action area, just in case.

I had a good seven minutes to complete my mental checklist and load the stretcher up… My FTO had barely managed to hit the brakes before a Volunteer Firefighter was throwing open the back doors to the squad.

“It’s an ARREST!  BRING IT ALL!!!”  He sounded significantly more rattled than I did, which is an odd feeling for me.

I’m usually the shaky one.

I shook my head in an effort to clear my mind and jumped out of the back of the truck. The volunteer and I dragged the fully loaded stretcher across the gravel driveway towards the front door of the home.  Bright red, amber and blue lights from various vehicles bounced off of the houses.  It was a little disorienting… Kind of like stepping into a crazy nightclub environment and feeling dizzy from the light show going on inside.

**********

A man I recognized as being a fellow coworker from the last service I worked at was kneeling next to the AED while another pumped furiously on the patients chest.  ”Clear… CLEAR!!!”

The patients arms jerked like someone had just scared the life out of him.

Hrm.  I’ve never seen that happen before outside of TV or a movie…

The living room of the trailer was at capacity.  Three guys in turnout gear were mixed in with three others volunteers in jeans, sweat pants and shorts.  The patients wife sat stone-faced in a rocking chair while his two Sons held back his hysterical Daughter.  A curious neighbor hung out with the two Sheriff’s deputies outside.

“What do we have?”  I got a good look at our patient… He looked pretty good for a man in cardiac arrest… Diaphoretic, sure, but very pink.  Good on ya for the fantastic compressions, mate!

“VFib.  That was the second shock.  He was out doing some work in the back yard, came in the house, complained about some chest pain, and just dropped right here.  His son started CPR.”  The firefighter doing compressions on the large man was doing his best to give us a run down, it was very clear that he was running out of steam.  ”Someone switch with me,” he asked, a little deflated.  I’m sure his back and shoulders were screaming at him.

The next few minutes was filled with some organized chaos.

Switched to our monitor.

King LT placed with ResQPod.

Another shock.

Bilateral IO’s drilled in.

Epi pushed.

More compressions.

Another shock.

Epi pushed.

More compressions with a fresh set of arms.

Another shock.

Amiodarone pushed.

More compressions.

I was furiously scribbling down notes and reaching for another Epi when something caught my eye.  It looked like our patient with the previously dead eyes was now attempting to chew on his tube. Others noticed it too.  Three of us simultaneously reached towards pulse points on the patient.

Hey, that’s a strong radial.

“Stop… Stop for a minute,” someone yelled.  All of the activity in the room ceased for a few brief seconds while we held our breath.

That’s definitely a pulse.  That’s a good pulse.

Oh my GOD, DAD?  DADDY???” The grown woman broke past her brothers and rushed us.  ”Is he going to live?  Did you get him back???”  She grabbed on to my arm and pleaded with me to make a promise that her Father was going to live.

I froze.  I was standing there holding the IV bags looking much like a deer trapped in headlights.  ”Uhm… We’ll do everything that we can, Ma’am… He has a long way to go, but his heart is beating on it’s own.”  I didn’t know what else to say.  I didn’t want to give her any false hope, I just wanted to get her Dad into the back of the truck and haul ass to the closest ER.

**********

He survived, and the last I heard he was neurologically intact.

We ended up doing a few 12-leads that revealed a massive inferior MI.  We kept his BP up and packed his groin and axilla with ice packs.  He got fentanyl and chilled saline.  When he started bucking the tube we RSI’d him.

A STEMI and ICE alert was called in with the report.  Luckily (if there is a way for an arrest patient to be considered lucky), we only had a ten minute transport to a STEMI center.   The patient was heading to the cath lab within a few minutes of arrival at the ER.

This was the first arrest that I’ve been able to take part in since becoming a paramedic, and it was a hell of a learning experience.

Here’s what I really picked up on during this run.  And this is in no order whatsoever….

I’ve learned that these runs work best when egos are left at the door.  I thank God that wasn’t an issue on this run.  Everyone worked together.  It was the best case scenario for the patient.

I’ve learned that there is no ALS without BLS.  We’re told this in school, and we know it in our heads, but when you see it in person, when you see that arrest patient with pink skin… because of good compressions, a BLS skill… Well, that kind of cements it in your head.  Make sure your basic skills are excellent before moving up in certification levels.

I learned that getting amped up on a run like this is best handled by remembering to breathe.  Seriously.  Keep breathing.

I learned that it’s a good idea to know if family is riding up front during transport. We often have a coping mechanism during stressful situations that most people don’t understand.  We make jokes, we say things that lay folk would find a little… well… inappropriate.  If positions were switched I can’t say I’d feel differently.  It’s all said in an effort to break the tension, and there’s absolutely no disrespect meant, but the average person isn’t going to realize that.  Just be conscious of who’s riding along.

I learned how important it is to keep track of your equipment. Equipment like thermometers, for instance, tend to disappear rather easily in the back of a squad with five people and a patient.

I know I’ve said this before… Multiple times, in fact, and I’m going to say it again.  Know the back of your truck. Know the back of your truck. KNOW THE BACK OF YOUR TRUCK. This was only my 4th shift with this service, and honestly, I thought I knew where everything was… Or at least what cabinet it was in.  I was wrong.  It wasn’t anything vital, and my FTO wasn’t upset over it, but damn if I wasn’t angry with myself over it.

So there it is, ya’ll.  My first code as a medic.  And he not only lived, but he’s still the same person.  I was a part in that as a member of a team that really did work well together.

It’s a feeling that can’t be beat.

One more thing… I made ya’ll a promise well over a year ago that when I finally pushed epinephrine as a medic that I’d do it with my people in mind (it was a little quirk of mine given my namesake).  For every single person who listened to me while I was in school, for every person who gave money (which I still can’t wrap my head around) so that I could actually go back to school… For every person who told me that I could do it.  For every person who told me that I had the stuff to reach this goal… For every person who let me start an IV on them.  For every person who was… There.  In any way shape or form.

I’m finally there.  I’m where I should be.  Thank you.  And that field guide… Never looked at it.  Not even once.

30 Day Challenge…

10 comments

Folks, I have hit a wall.

Despite the literally HUNDREDS of blogable moments I’ve had in the last several months, I’ve found myself suffering from a severe case of writers block. I’m really not sure what that’s all about, all I know is that I’m working on it.  In the meantime, I’ve stumbled across a bit of a writing prompt in the form of a thirty day blogging challenge.  (Thank you to EMT Dani for the inspiration!)

So…. Day 1.  Introduce yourself.  Show a recent picture.  Share 15 interesting facts about yourself.

It seems kind of odd to introduce myself on a blog that I’ve been writing for over three years, but I’m game.

My name is April. I’m mom to two beautiful kids, Nick and Abby, who are 10 and 5 going on 15 respectively and are the most important people in my life.  Nick is a miniature version of my sensitive, inquisitive side. He loves music, and learning about anything and everything.  He’s been through a lot over the last two years, but he’s pulled through like a champ and is now thriving in a new school.  Abby is a carbon copy of my impulsive, wild, grab-life-by-the-horns side.  She started Kindergarten the very day that I worked my first shift as a medic and we’ve been going through our growing pains together in that way.  Most days we spend trying to incorporate pink into our wardrobe while chasing fire trucks.

I’ve been in EMS for almost six years as an EMT-B, and three months as a paramedic.  I just started a fantastic job with a hospital based service in NW Ohio that I’m beyond excited about.  I am one of those people who loves to learn, and this position is providing me with countless opportunities to do just that.  I consider it a privilege to do the work that I do, and I can’t see myself doing anything else.

I love photography.  More often than not I’m seen lugging a camera bag around with me.  There’s something… intoxicating… about being able to capture a moment in time.  You might shove those photographs away, or leave them on your hard drive for months on end, I know I do it.  But when you do get back to looking at them, it’s like you’re right back where you were when that photo was taken, complete with all of the emotions you were feeling at the time.  I love that.

Just Me and myself at EMS Expo last month.

15 Facts.

1.  I am a VERY lucky girl.  I am surrounded by some of the most amazing, encouraging, intelligent and kind people in the world (the lovely lady I’m standing next to in the above picture represents all of those traits and more).  I have the very best friends.  I have friends I can laugh with to the point of tears, I have friends who will kick me in the ass when I need it, I have friends who I can call at any time, day or night, with questions, or ideas, or just talk about any little thing.

2.  Up until last month, I had a fear of flying that was was so intense that for almost ten years I refused to get on a plane.  It was so bad that just the thought of flying was enough to make me shaky.  When faced with a 24 hour car ride vs. a two hour flight to Dallas, I opted for the flight.  I survived.

3.  My parents divorced when I was five and for the fifteen years that followed I spent every other weekend on a farm with my Dad.  Quite a change for a city girl.  As a result I can drive a tractor, I’ve played in a hopper wagon filled with soybeans, and for years got into more trouble with her cousins than any one girl should.  I’ve also been to at least ten National Tractor Pulling Championships in Bowling Green, Ohio.

Don’t judge me :)

4.  Speaking of Bowling Green, I attended Bowling Green State University and was a member of Kappa Delta Sorority.  I still keep in contact with many of my sisters on Facebook.

5.  I’m one of two children.  I have a younger brother who I absolutely adore and am so proud of.  He is a new Daddy to a beautiful little girl, which means that I’m now an Auntie.

6.  My mother wouldn’t allow me to get my drivers license until I was out of high school.  It made me a very angsty teenager, but looking back it was a very wise decision on her part.

7.  I lived in Colorado Springs for a while in my twenties.  I would give just about anything to move back there.  Absolutely gorgeous part of the country.

8.  Before going to EMT-B school I worked on computers.  For eight of the longest years of my life. I do not miss it.

9.  I have four tattoos, yet I hate having IV’s put in.  Yes, I’m one of those people.

10.  I am fascinated by abandoned buildings and love exploring them.  Mansfield Reformatory is one of my favorite places to do this.  I have chills just thinking about that place.

11.  I started writing at a very young age.  In the second grade I wrote a play about Christopher Columbus that my teacher allowed me to cast and perform in front of the kindergartners and first graders.

12.  I am fiercely protective of my people.  My children, my family, my friends.  I will go to war, walk through fire and face certain jail time for them.  That being said, I will forgive someone who has wronged me over and over and over again.

13.  I can be a miserably cranky Irish redhead.  (See how I made that one number 13?) I consider this one of my biggest downfalls.

14.  I am probably one of the clumsiest people in the world.  I pray to God that my children don’t inherit this trait from me.

15.  I change cell phones like I change clothes.  I drop them, I lose them… If there is a way to destroy a phone, I’ve probably done it.

(By the way, my phone number changed about two weeks ago… If I haven’t contacted you with the new number, I apologize, I’m working on it ;))

Tomorrow, God willing… Day two.

Please

27 comments

Let me start this by saying that I realize my posts have been few and far between.

For that I’m truly sorry…

Being a baby medic is a very scary thing for me.  I take my job seriously… Becoming a medic has brought on a whole new level of responsibility, and I don’t take it lightly.  And I shouldn’t… I know that. I’m dealing with it the only way that I know how.

UGH….  I’m struggling to find the words to describe what I’m feeling right now.

Hrm.  Let me put it this way.  This is for anyone who is reading this is who currently a medic student.  When folks tell you that the only thing scarier than being a student is being set loose to practice on your own… Yeah, they’re right.  I have a whole series of posts I could (and have started) writing about this.  That’s for another day.

This is about tomorrow.  Saturday.

Tomorrow I’m starting at a service that I’ve been trying to get hired into for years…  I’m terrified.  I have a case of nerves unlike anything I’ve ever dealt with before.

I just keep thinking… Please don’t let me mess this up.  Please help me keep my head in the game.  Please keep my hands steady. Please let me remember everything that I’ve learned.  Please let me do no harm.

Please.  Please…

Please just let me do some good.

It Gets Better.

15 comments

This is in response to the string of recent suicides by teenagers (gay and straight) being terrorized in school.  This is for Asher, and Billy, and Justin, and Seth, and Tyler… And for anyone, anywhere who feels like they’re not fitting in.  If you’re feeling like the hell you’re going through is NEVER going to end.  If you’re feeling like a freak, or a loser, or that NO one understands you, or ever will.  If you’re feeling like your family will not accept you, or that no one in this world cares about you or loves you for the amazing person you are.  This is for you.

I’m not going to tell you to turn the other cheek.  I’m not going to tell you to “just ignore it”… I’m not going to tell you to suck it up.

This sucks.  It’s something that no one should have to endure.

I can promise you this.  It…will…get…better.

I went to a small Catholic school for grade school…  Just 200 kids from Kindergarten to 8th grade.  My Mom received no help whatsoever financially from my father and had to work three jobs at times just to pay our tuition.  In her eyes, keeping my Brother and I in this school was important.  She wanted us to get the best education possible.  She wanted us in a “safer” environment than the local public school (which to her credit, was a pretty rough grade school).

For five years I very much enjoyed school.  I was an above average student, and found so many opportunities to do creative things there.  I really did love it.  I had a lot of friends, and not a care in the world.  And you shouldn’t, at that age.

When I started 5th grade, it was like a switch flipped.  We had a group of girls in class who decided that they didn’t like me (I’ll call them the Brat Pack).  Apparently the green gray and white plaid pants that my Mom had to spend entirely too much money on were “not cool”. This group of girls convinced my friends that they shouldn’t talk to me either.  Before I knew it, I was completely alone.  No one in class would speak to me. During recess I’d be standing by myself on the playground.  When I’d raise my hand to ask or answer a question, the Brat Pack would snicker and make jokes about me.  It got to the point where I wouldn’t raise my hand anymore. I wouldn’t look anyone in the eye.  I cried, constantly.

My teachers saw all of this going on, and chose to do nothing. I tried to talk to my Mom about it, but more often than not she was working.  If she wasn’t working, she was exhausted.  She tried to console me.  She’d hug me, kiss me on the head, and tell me to “ignore them.”

Ignore them.  Heh.  Doesn’t really work with 11 and 12-year-old kids.

In sixth grade, the Brat Pack went on a mini vandalism spree with some spray paint.  They tagged the first newish car that my Mother had ever been able to buy.  I’ll never forget the look on her face when she saw the paint. The only reason we knew who did it was because the leader of the Brat Pack wrote her name on the neighbors garage.  The girls were caught, admitted what they had done, and in the end were forced to pay to have the car taken care of (as well as the three other garages they tagged). Two weeks later, one of those same girls picked up a broken pool cue from behind the bar across the street from my house and hit me over the back with it.  All because I wasn’t walking far enough ahead of them on my way to school. I wish I could say that things improved later on that year, or even the year after that, but in all honesty it took moving on to high school for things to get better.

But things did… get better.

**********

When I became a Mom to my first child, Nicholas, from the first second I laid eyes on him I swore to God that I would walk through fire for this boy.  I would do anything and everything to protect him.  The love that you have for your babies, and your instinct to protect them at all costs doesn’t change as they grow from infants to little people.

I’ve written about Nick’s (and yes, I realize I’m calling him by his actual name) voracious appetite for knowledge.  That’s where his blog persona (Future Cardiologist) came from.  He was five-years-old and flipping through one of my text books on EKG’s from class.  He wanted to know what each rhythm meant.  He ended up recreating them in a notebook, in crayon.

That’s my boy, ya’ll.

Nick is the male version of myself at his age.  He’s tall, thin, and has to wear glasses.  He’s a little clumsy.  He’s unbelievably smart.  He has a small group of friends that he eats lunch with, talks to on the phone, and plays video games with.  He loves school.

That’s him now.

That was him two years ago.

That was not him last year.

It started the same way for him that it did for me.  A group of kids decided that because he was a little different, he wasn’t worthy of their friendship.  Because he was a little different, he was less than.  Because he was a little different, he didn’t deserve to be spoken to.  Because he was a little different from them, he didn’t deserve to be treated like a human being.

These… children…  They tortured my little boy.  It started with them making fun of him, which turned in to things like taking things off of his lunch tray, and eventually escalated to physical violence.  He was exactly where I was, and while I knew something was going on, I wasn’t getting the full story from him.

The very second I realized that we had a problem at his school, I went to his teacher.  I put faith in that woman that she’d actually follow up with the promises she made.  I did what I could do to build Nick up outside of school by getting him involved in soccer and art lessons (both of which he had expressed an interest in).  I prayed that things would improve.

Nick was always one who would give me every detail about his school day…  That was changing.  Where before he’d give me details about his friends Pokemon cards, now I had to beg him to tell me if he had even ate his lunch or if he had enjoyed art that day.  He was slowly shutting down.  I went above his teacher’s head to the Assistant Principal when it was clear that nothing was being done.  I agreed when she asked me to give her a week to try to figure out what could be done.

I remember looking in my rear view mirror as I was getting ready to drop him off one morning and seeing a child I didn’t recognize.  Instead of his crooked smile and beautiful bright eyes, he was pale.  He looked ill.  When I asked him if he was feeling okay, he just started sobbing.  I turned the car around and kept him home that day.  While he watched reruns of Spongebob and played on his DS, I marched into the Principal’s office and threatened to come back with a news crew “who would LOVE to do a story about bullying in school”.  She promised that she would take care of the problem that day, that she was completely unaware of “the situation” and “just horrified”.

I begged Nick to give me two days to make things right.  I promised him that if I couldn’t, I would pull him out of that school.  He put on his brave face and agreed.

The following day while in Medic class, I received a phone call from his principal.  She said that Nick was in her office, and that he was in trouble, and that she wanted him to tell me why.  When she put him on the phone he was hysterical.  Through sobs he explained that one of the kids who had been picking on him had taken the cookies from his lunch two days before.  He had decided to get back at him by taking the kids chocolate milk.  A teacher saw him do it and dragged him to the principals office where he sat for an hour before she called me.  Kids had been doing this to HIM off and on for two months straight.  He stood up for himself for once, and they pulled him in the office for it.  This is a child who had never been in trouble a day in his entire life.  This was a child who I had just explained to the same Principal was sweet, and tenderhearted, and hurting so badly because of the way he was being treated by his classmates.   I went from being angry, to being in a blind rage.  I assured Nick that I wasn’t upset with him, I told him to try to calm down, and that I’d be right there.  When I got to his school, I signed him out, I walked him out to the car, gave him a hug, and told him I’d be right back.

I marched back into that Principals office and unleashed on her to the point where I’m lucky I wasn’t arrested.

The following day he was enrolled at another school where he still attends today.  He is back to his old self again, thank God.  He’s got a great group of friends, he’s happy, and he looks forward to class.  His new school has a very good anti-bullying program, but honestly, he doesn’t have problems with that there.  He’s just one of the kids.

I thank God every day that things turned out the way they did.

**********

My story, and Nick’s story it’s no more or less important than yours.  They might be mild compared to what you’re going through.  I understand that.

My God, just… I want you to realize how amazing you truly are.  I want you to realize how much you have ahead of you.  The best parts of your life haven’t even happened yet!  Had I taken my own life, and I did think about it… more than once… I wouldn’t be around to be a Mom to my amazing Son, Nick, or his beautiful and equally as fantastic Sister, Abby.

Let me tell you about another person I couldn’t live without.  I want to tell you about one of my best friends in this world.  His name is Matthew.

I’ve only known him for a few years, but he’s grown into a person who I know that I can call at any hour of the day for any reason.  He’s someone who I’ve cried to, who I’ve laughed with, and I know we have each others back.  No matter what.   He’s an amazing Paramedic who helped drag my sorry butt through Medic school.  He’s one of a select few who I’d ever let take care of my kids.  He’s one of my best friends in the world.  I am in awe of this man and everything that he is.  I don’t know what I’d do without him.  I can honestly say that.  The thought of not having him in my life, even through he’s 15 hours away… It’s inconceivable.

And you know what?  He’s gay. And he’s been where you are.

And I thank God that he was strong enough to get through what he has and turn out to the the unbelievable person he is.

You know what the crazy thing is?  I’ve never met Matthew.  I only know him through numerous phone conversations and chat conversations online.

Know that there are people out there who you don’t even know who love you unconditionally and would do anything for you.  Taking your own life is never the answer.  Don’t be afraid to ask for help.  Please, we need you here.  You truly are destined for fantastic things.

Matthew  got through his personal hell.  Nick and I got through our own hells.

You can do it too. I promise you that.  You can.  You really can!

IT WILL GET BETTER.

It really will.

The Trevor Project has a Lifeline for LGBTQ youth that you can call 24 hours a day.  The phone number is 1-866-488-7386.

The Kristin Brooks Hope Center has a hotline as well.  For anyone who’s hurting out there.  The number is 1-800-442-HOPE

**********

In honor of:

Asher Brown.  He was tortured by kids at his school who called him “queer” and “faggot”.  They pushed him around literally and figuratively for over a year.  His parents did everything that they could to help him by going to school officials and counselors, but nothing was done to help this boy.  In late September, reaching his breaking point, he found his Father’s gun and shot himself in the head. He was just 13-years-old.

Billy Lucas.  Billy loved animals, he bred horses and lambs for show.  Because he was perceived as being gay, some kids decided that he wasn’t worthy of being treated like a human being.  They picked on him relentlessly. One of them told him to “Go kill yourself.”  The following day he hung himself with one of the leads from his prized show horse from the rafters in his Grandparents barn.  He was only 15.

Justin Aaberg.  He loved to play the cello.  From what I’ve read, he was shy, but had always had a huge smile on his face.  He came out to his friends when he was 13, after which he was harassed by kids at school to the point where he felt his only option was to hang himself this past July.  His Mother found him.  He was 15-years-old.

Seth Walsh.  Seth had been teased since the 4th grade just because he was gay.  For years he was tortured by these kids, being told that “the world doesn’t need another queer.”  After some bullying from older teenagers, he felt his only way out would be to hang himself from a tree in his back yard.  His Mother found him and pulled him down.  He was on life support for nine days before dying in September.  He was 13.

Tyler Clementi.  Tyler was a freshman at Rutgers University with a bright future and a talent for the violin.  His roommate, Dharun Ravi and Dharun’s friend Molly Wei set up a webcam and LIVE STREAMED Tyler having an intimate encounter with another man in their dorm room.  When Tyler realized what had happened, he jumped off of the George Washington bridge.  Tyler was 18.

Passionate for Pink

6 comments

“Your Aunt found another lump.”

I remember hearing those words come out of my Mom’s mouth last year…  And just feeling… Well, numb.

I couldn’t believe that with everything my Aunt had already been through that she could have breast cancer again.  I felt like all of the air had been sucked out of my lungs.  I felt the blood drain from my face.  I felt tears forming in my eyes.  I felt sick. I can’t even begin to imagine how SHE felt.

I instantly thought of how many people I knew who had been knocked down by breast cancer: A grade school friend who I had just reconnected with a few months earlier had just lost her Mom to it (who I adored).  My stepmom had been diagnosed a few years earlier and was still suffering through various treatments.  The Sister of my partner at the last service I worked at.  The countless hospice patients who had been told… “I’m sorry, there’s nothing else we can do other than make you comfortable.”

My Aunt’s world changed overnight.

Rediagnosed with DCIS (ductal carcinoma in situ).  We had every reason to believe that it was well contained.  Everyone we spoke with believed it was. We spent some time doing some research on her options.   It was a few weeks later that we found out that her options were significantly more limited than we had hoped.  She was going to need a double mastectomy.

Fast forward another two months and we found ourselves in the hospital with her.  Seeing her in so much pain that it hurt to take a breath in at times.  Nauseous and in tears when she’d throw up from the high doses of pain meds they were giving her.  We stood next to her as her body fought to recover after the mastectomy.  We fought with her, begging her to let us help with the countless drainage tubes.  Making sure that she was eating and that she was comfortable.

When the depression hit, it was… Honestly, I don’t know how to put this in to words.  I felt like I was watching this beautiful vibrant woman fall apart.  I don’t think that any of us truly knew what to say to make things better.  I don’t think there was anything that could be said.

I remember telling her that her femininity, the stuff inside that makes her an amazing woman… It didn’t come from her boobs.  It came from her head and heart.  It sounded right at the time.  I don’t know now. She went through hell. But she survived.

A two-time survivor.  My Aunt is so badass it must hurt to be her.

This is my Aunt, and she really is as badass as I say she is.

**********

A few weeks ago I was sitting at my computer looking at my account for the upcoming Race For the Cure.  I started thinking about the thousands of people who would be there that day, and how each of them had been touched by breast cancer in some way.  Then I started to think about my beautiful little girl with the sparkling brown eyes who loves life to the very fullest.  I thought about my other Aunt, my Mother, my Cousins, partners and good friends.  I thought about their little girls.  I thought about all of the women in my life who could just as easily be diagnosed with this horrible disease.

And it’s not just women who are affected.  2,000 men a year are diagnosed.  That’s right, guys… You’re not exempt.

I started doing a little reading and I found out that the five year survival rate for those diagnosed in an early stage is 97%.

*blink*

That’s right, 97%.  Prevention and early detection is the key.

It’s as easy as 1, 2, 3.

1.  Do a self breast exam every month.

2. Be sure that your doctor is doing an exam once a year.

3. Mammography.  Sure, it’s not pleasant, but neither is stage IV cancer.

I couldn’t believe that such simple steps could result in such a high survival rate… I wanted to scream it from the rooftops.

I immediately wanted to do more than just run this year.  I wanted to do more than just raise a little money.  I wanted to do what I could to get this information to the public (and…. raise a little money for Susan G. Komen as well…)

I wanted to create some thunder.

If there’s one thing that blogging and social media has taught me in the last couple of years it’s that change can start with just one person.  Get enough of the right people involved and you’d be amazed at what can happen. I sought out one of my favorite people, The Happy Medic, and asked him what he thought about possibly changing his blog background pink.  Maybe linking to the Komen page.

Happy Medic being, well, Happy Medic… He ran with it.

EMS for the Cure – Challenge from Thaddeus Setla on Vimeo.

I’m going to ask you to do the same.  Please consider changing your facebook picture, an avatar, your blog banner… Anything… Pink.  If you’re a blogger, consider doing a post on breast cancer awareness and prevention.   If you need help with content or images you can always email myself or The Happy Medic.

Let’s make some thunder, ya’ll!  You have no idea what impact YOU can have.

89 Years and Two Days

75 comments

89 years and two days she had spent on this planet.

65 of them married to her first love.  Her only love.  The man she’d spend her entire adult life with.  The only man she ever looked at according to her daughter.

62 of those years spent taking care of her babies.  Four of them, three boys and a girl.  The children she doted over from the day each was born.  Her mothering instinct would never leave her.  Her oldest three were already retired, with great grandchildren of their own.

5 years spent grieving the death of her husband and best friend.

7 months living with pancreatic cancer.  Dealing with constant pain that never could completely be controlled.  Slowly but surely realizing that if she chose to remain in her home, she would have to allow her children to take care of her…  Their roles would be reversed.

When we arrived at Rita’s home, it was just her and her adult children.

In hushed tones they explained the situation:  She was very weak.  She wasn’t able to keep food down anymore.  She was in so much pain, yet she was refusing her pain meds.  There were times where she wouldn’t be able to catch her breath, even with the nasal cannula and 50 feet of oxygen tubing.  They were all in tears, at their wits end.  They wanted to take care of her so badly, but she was refusing any comfort they offered her.

I knelt at her bedside, touching her right wrist.  I could feel her heart beating away her pulse was a little tachy, her skin was cool.  ”Ma’am, my name is Epi… I’m here to take you to Hospice.”

Her eyes slowly closed as she nodded.

“All right, Mrs Benson, I’m going to go get some of your belongings together, I’ll be right back with you.”  I gently squeezed her hand.

“Young lady, call me Rita” she whispered.

“Yes, Ma’am. Rita it is.  I’ll be right back.”  I left her with her daughter and went about gathering some personal effects that might bring her any measure of comfort in an unfamiliar place.  Pictures of grandchildren, great grandchildren, even great great grandchildren.  A framed picture of her beloved.  A quilt that she had made shortly after her wedding.  Her house coat and slippers.  Her pillow.  Her three sons loaded them into a van along with a grocery bag filled with medications, her walker and her wheelchair.

When I returned, Rita was sitting up in her hospital bed with her daughter making a last plea, ”Mom, please take something for pain, the medics said that it can be an uncomfortable ride.”

She just shook her head and mouthed the word “No”.  When her daughter asked her if she’d like a sip of water, she refused it.  I made eye contact with her frazzled daughter and suggested that maybe she leave the room for a second to help her brothers (and to allow her emotions to settle).  She nodded and left quietly.

“Ma’am… Rita…  I know that you’ve been hurting, please reconsider.  The ride over will be bumpy, the last thing I want is for you to be uncomfortable.  Believe me, I’m back there all day, and it’s rough on me, even.”

She whispered, “Do you really think I need it?”

I nodded.

“Okay.  If you say so.”

“Rita, My partner and I are going to get you moved over to our stretcher.  We’ll cover you up with a blanket and get you comfortable.  I’m going to ask your daughter to give you your pain meds, alright?”

Rita’s eyes slowly scanned the room, as if she was saying a silent goodbye to every framed picture, every knick-knack, every memory that she had made with her family there.

We gave her a moment to gather herself then we moved her gently to our stretcher.

**********

The ride in the back of the squad was bumpier than I had anticipated.  I think we hit every pothole and crack in the road between that farm house and the facility.

“Rita, how are you feeling?  Are you warm enough?”  I had shut down the a/c and her hands still felt cold, her nails beds dusky.

“I could use a blanket, Annie.  Be a dear?”  She was looking at me, but she wasn’t seeing me…. It took me a second to realize who Annie was.  Annie was Rita’s daughter.  Annie was not in the back of the truck, she was two cars behind us crying in her car.

I grabbed two blankets and covered Rita up.  ”Rita, Annie’s not here, she’ll meet us over at–” I stopped speaking when she reached up with a shaky hand to brush my bangs out of my eyes.  It was a simple movement on her part.  A simple every day thing that a Mom does to her daughter.  My Mom had done it to me countless times.  She’s still does it today and I’m 34-years-old.

“Annie, how many times have I told you to keep your hair out of your eyes? Just like when you were a little girl.”  Her voice cracked.

I wasn’t sure how to respond, so I did the only thing that came naturally.  I just smiled.  ”I guess I need to work on that still.”  I adjusted the O2 running to her n/c, increasing it just a bit.

“Did you turn the lights off?” Rita asked.

“Yes,” I nodded.

“Did you lock the front door?”

I nodded again.

“Good girl.”  She closed her eyes and lay her head back on the stretcher.

“You taught us well.” I whispered.

On This September 11th…

2 comments

From Post Secret

Nine years later and I’m still hurt and angry.

So today, in honor and in memory of those innocents who were killed by terrorist murderers, I did the only thing two things that I could do.

First, I learned something about two of the victims from that day.  (Thank you, Happy Medic for the inspiration)

I learned about John Vigiano Jr (FDNY) and Joe Vigiano (NYPD), brothers who were both killed that day.  I read about their father, John Vigiano Sr, a former FDNY Captain.  I read about the family rivalry between FDNY and NYPD… I read about their accomplishments, and how proud John Sr. was to be their Dad.  I read about how important their chosen careers were to them, and how much respect they had for each other and their respective departments.  I read about the love they both had for their little ones.

Two men just doing their jobs.  Killed by cowards.

The only other thing I could do to possibly honor those people… The civilians, my Brothers and Sisters in EMS, the Firefighters and Law Enforcement folks who were murdered that day was to put on my uniform and go  to work myself.

So that’s what I did.  I went to work.  I got on a truck and stood proud, with my chin up.

And I didn’t forget that day.  I’ll never forget.

I refuse to.

New Addition to the Blogroll

1 comment

Please welcome Hybrid Medic to the Blogroll…   He’s got some great experience as both as a Paramedic and Firefighter in a major metropolitan city and I’ve really enjoyed the posts that he’s put up.  He’s been one of the people that I’ve gone to with questions lately, and I’ve really appreciated his input.

Here’s a post he wrote very recently on Medic school.  Enjoy!

New Digs

3 comments

I’m back :)

I’m sorry that I’ve been so quiet lately… I truly believe I just needed a little Medic School cool off period.

I’m all good now.

You might have noticed that I’ve moved over to the JEMS Fire/EMS blog network, and I’m in some fantastic company!  Ambulance Driver (Not just my Blogfather, THE Blogfather), Happy Medic, Medic 999, Medic 22, Life Under The Lights Rescuing Providence… I could go on and on.  I’m humbled to be included among them.

If you have me bookmarked, you may want to update the address.  I’m now located at http://www.pinkwarmdry.com.  No more picture of my screaming daughter.  No more /blog on the end.

Nothing else has changed, I’ll still be rambling on about my kids, and I’ll still be writing about the love affair I have with my job.

Thank you for standing by me for the last year while I’ve been on this journey.  It’s been a wild ride, and I have a lot of stories to tell.

Stay safe out there.

The Day It Clicked.

4 comments

I was a very shaky student.

Literally.

The very first third ride I did as a medic student was with a vollie department in the area… It was a call for chest pain, and I  was ridiculously geeked.  I remember sitting in the captain’s chair in the back of the squad, watching the rural landscape whiz by through the small side window feeling like I was ready to jump out of my skin.  I was ready to hit that run out of the park.  I made sure that I knew where everything was in the patient compartment, I mentally went over different rhythms and their treatments.  I thought of the different signs and symptoms that the patient might be exhibiting.  I thought about what I wanted to do first, and what I’d do after that, and what I’d do after that.  I did what I thought I was supposed to do on the way to a run.

And then we pulled up to the house.  I could feel my heart pounding in the center of my chest.  When I looked at my hands… They were shaking like I had just mainlined a few pots of coffee.  The kind the night shift at the local ER makes.  The stuff you can pave a road with.

Not the picture of calm.  Not by far.  When it was time to climb out of the back of the squad I tripped on the hook that catches the stretcher and damn near fell on my face.

It really was that bad.

I carried the monitor into the house and was instantly met with a scene I was completely unprepared for.  People, everywhere.  Medics, firefighters and equipment was scattered throughout the tiny living room.  A drug bag and an airway bag were open on the floor, and their stretcher was taking up what little space there was left.  I didn’t know where to go.  I felt like I was cemented in that very spot.  Unable to move.  I could have jumped in there… I should have.  A mixture of nerves and a somewhat chaotic scene prevented me from doing so.

So I stood there in the doorway feeling like a complete idiot.  I was supposed to be the one in there asking the questions… Getting things done.  Instead I let my own self confidence issues keep me from functioning. Hell, I was barely breathing, let alone acting the part of the calm, confident Paramedic that I knew I had in me.  Like the Medics I look up to and respect the most.

Those early third rides were a nightmare.   I couldn’t shake my insecurities.  I couldn’t shake the paralyzing fear that seemed to wrap itself around me like a wet blanket every time I stepped into someone’s home.  And I’d torture myself after every single run.

What the hell is wrong with you?  You know your stuff.  You need to get in there and do what you were trained to do.  You are never going to make it through this program if you can’t knock this crap off.

YOU ARE GOING TO FAIL.  AGAIN.

As time moved on I started to make small advances.  The lab portion of class became easier.  My “stage fright” when it came to testing out on skills all but disappeared.  I started doing my preceptor rides with squads from the private service that ran my school, with people that I knew.  That was probably the best thing that could have happened as my comfort level in the back of the squad was at a point where I didn’t feel like I was going to have a stroke every time I was with a patient.  I knew the back of these trucks, I had worked in them for awhile.  I knew the facilities we would go to.  I knew the crew members.  I felt like I was home; not just a guest in someone else’s house.

Even with the improved learning environment, I didn’t feel like I was being aggressive enough on calls.  I still wasn’t jumping in there like I should have.  I was more than willing to hang back and soak everything in for a minute before getting involved.  I knew what needed to be done, I just didn’t have the confidence to do it without being prompted by my preceptor.

**********

Fast forward to ten days before the end of class.

It was hot.  At least 95 degrees in the shade.  We couldn’t even count on the wind to offer any reprieve as every time it picked up it felt like we were in front of a blast furnace.  I had been lucky enough to score a 24 hour third ride with my favorite preceptor, Kozi, and his partner the lovely Miss S.

Dispatch had been running the stripes off of the side of our truck with back to back to back to back to back BLS runs.  11 hours into the shift and I hadn’t even gotten an IV started.

“Sit down, fill out your paperwork, and just relax.”  Kozi was ordering me to cool off.  We had just dropped off an ECF patient for a tube replacement and we were happy to be sitting in the almost icebox like air conditioning of the EMS room.  Still, our uniforms were all stuck to us, we were drenched in sweat and all three of us were possibly a little cranky.

Ugh.

I cracked open a fresh can of the finest Diet Pepsi and took a long swig while starting to jot down all of the patient’s information.

Name… Address… Phone number… Address…  I didn’t even get to “Chief Complaint” before the squad’s pager was going off.  Had I been holding it I’m fairly certain it would have been thrown across the room.

“Are you SERIOUS?  They can’t even let us sit for five minutes?”  I picked up my paperwork and cursed under my breath all the way out to the squad.

Yep, that’s right.  I had a full blown hissy fit.  I stopped just short of crossing my arms and stomping my feet like my daughter does.  I didn’t even bother to ask what the call was for, I just climbed into the back of the truck and sulked.

Kozi and Miss S followed shortly behind.  I could heard them chattering but didn’t pay much attention, instead I focused on the attitude adjustment I knew I was in need of.  I went to my happy place instead.

A hammock strung up between two palm trees, a great book to read… Nice quiet beach with powdery white sand… Waves washing up on the shore… Cold fruity drink in a glass with an umbrella in it… Some stunningly handsome tall dark and handsome man feeding me grapes… And —

*Insert obnoxiously loud siren and airhorn blaring here*

So much for my happy place on the beach… We had an emergency run.

I leaned forward into the cab of the truck and asked where we were going.

“It’s an unresponsive at Happy Hills Psych Hospital,” Miss S. replied.  She was busy watching the other drivers on the road while Kozi steered us around them.

I grabbed the airway bag and the Lifepak and put them on top of the stretcher.  I checked the portable tank to make sure we weren’t low on O2 and made sure that we had strips in the glucometer.  I spiked an iv bag and hung it up above the bench seat and shoved a handful of gloves in my pocket.  Satisfied that I had covered my bases I sat back in the captains chair and waited to get to the facility.  I found myself again watching the scenery fly by through the side window of the squad, our red and white lights bouncing off of mailboxes and windows.

Before I knew it Kozi was parking.  We were there.  ”Epi, can you throw the monitor and the airway bag on the st—”

I yelled back, “Already done.”

“Alright, Girl.  Think about what your treatment for this patient will be.  This is all you.”

I nodded, swallowed hard and pulled the foot end of the stretcher towards the doors of the facility where I could see a security guard and a very anxious nurse waiting for us.  She started talking before we were even to the door.  ”I have no idea what’s going on with him… He was fine a few hours ago, then he started refusing his medications, and now, nothing.”  She was walking fast enough that even I had a hard time keeping up with her.  I felt like I was dragging Miss S behind me with the stretcher.

The security guard let us through one set of doors into a foyer.  When the doors behind us closed he opened the second set of doors that led to the floor.  We repeated this ritual three more times before reaching the area our patient was in.  I could see a group of employees gathered outside of a door a distance down the hall.  Our escort nurse indicated that the patient was in that room.

I entered the room with Miss S.

Our patient was a 45yo male laying in his bed, out cold.  Honestly, it looked like he was sleeping.

“What’s his name?” I asked while grabbing a nonrebreather from the head of the stretcher.

“Franklin,” one of the CNA’s answered.

I rubbed Franklin’s chest hard with my gloved fist.  ”FRANKLIN!”

No response.

I put the NRB on him while Miss S checked his blood sugar.

“What is it,” I asked while slipping the elastic bands behind his ears.

“He’s good.  129.” She replied.

His color didn’t look bad, but I had been watching his chest for ten seconds and I hadn’t seen it move.  ”Yo, is he even breathing,” I asked no one in particular.  At that second Kozi walked in and asked the same thing.

“HEY!!!!  FRANKLIN!!!!!” I yelled a little louder and rubbed a little harder this time.  If he had chest hair before he didn’t when I was done.

Franklin took a breath and slowly opened his eyes, “Mmm whatsgoingon?”  His speech was slurred.

“Franklin, I’m Epi… You need to stay awake and talk to me for awhile.  What’s going on with you tonight?” I started patching him up and Miss S slipped the pulse ox probe on his finger.

“Yeah…. I think we need to get going.  Let’s move him over,” Kozi said while standing back and letting me work.

Franklin, for his part, closed his eyes and had another apneic period that ended with me yelling at him and giving him another wicked sternal rub.  ”I’mup… Immaurp.” He mumbled.

I looked at the BVM on the back of the stretcher and looked at Kozi.  He nodded towards the door.

**********

The mosquitoes were swarming around the lights from our truck and attacked us as soon as we were within twenty feet of the back doors.  My body was beginning to betray me… Sweat poured down my face, stinging my eyes.  I wiped my face on my shoulder and ignored my own tachycardia while helping load Franklin into the back of the squad.

Once inside with the door closed I started a line while Kozi and Miss S did a thorough once over on Franklin.

Okay, Medic…” Kozi started, “What’s the plan?”  He looked right at me.

Fuck, I don’t know. All I could do was sweat.  What I didn’t realize at the time was that everyone else was doing the same thing.

“I have no idea, Kozi,” I replied.

“Yes you do.  You know what you’re doing… what do you want to do?” He was staring at me now.  I could feel my HR slow somewhat.

“Well… ”  I started…

“Yes, Epi?”

“His airway… Maybe a nasal?”

“Sure.  Do it.”

I dropped a NPA.

I looked at the monitor, Franklin was RSR at a rate better than mine.  His BP was better than mine.  He was pinker than I was.  Other than the fact that he was prone to bits of apnea… His vitals were better than mine.

What else… what else… “And his sugar is good?”

“Yes,” Kozi said, wiping his forehead.

“And his pupils are good.”

Kozi nodded.

“Hell, I don’t know… Shouldn’t we just take him to the ER?”  I had no other ideas at that point.  The truth was that I didn’t know what the hell was going on with Franklin… He was pink, he was breathing and the ER was less than a mile away.  Taking him to the ER seemed like a great idea at that point.

“Exactly.  Let’s go.  Good job, Epi.”

At that point for some reason I chose to look at my hands.

They weren’t shaking.

When You're Wrong…

8 comments

You should say you’re wrong.

Today, I was wrong.

I was sent out on a Short of Breath run with a Basic who I’ve worked with before.  Several times, in fact.

I was nervous.  I’m new.  I’m supposed to be nervous, right?  All of these runs get my heart racing.  That being said, I know this particular partner.  I’ve known him for a few years.  I’d trust him with my kids.

And today, I took my own nervousness and the fact that I’m not the most confident Brand Spankin’ New Medic out there… On him.

And that’s just not cool.

I was wrong.  I’m saying I was wrong.

“D”… Again, I’m sorry.  Thank you for pumping me up while my hands shook.  You will be a fantastic Intermediate/Specialist!

I’m willing to beg…

19 comments


For a good cause.

On June 5th, 2010 an F-4 tornado ripped through an area not very far from my home.  It destroyed the EMS quarters where a few very good friends of mine work.  It leveled the Police Department tossing their patrol cars like they were toys. The High School, just hours before a graduation was completely torn apart… It left a trail of destruction.  It took lives, including a sibling of a former coworker.  A little girl is orphaned, losing her Mother, her 4-year-old Brother and her Father.  The Valedictorian of the graduating class lost her Dad.  So many people lost their homes…

Please consider taking a second to vote for Lake High School in Kohl’s Cares.  The top 20 schools will win $500,000.  Imagine what that could do for the area…

Here’s the link. Vote for Lake High School. If you look on the left hand side of the page under the picture, you’ll see a link for LHS.  Click there.  (Sorry, this is turning out to be slightly more complicated than I thought it was)

Thank you…  You have no idea what this means to me.

Be safe out there.

How do you know…

8 comments

How do you know you have a good preceptor?

When they know that IV’s are a sore spot for you and they volunteer their arms.  And hands.  And wrists.

Meet Kozi.  One of the best preceptors to ever walk this planet.

He was my lifeboat of calm in an ocean of “OhmyGODwhatdoIdoNOW????”  He was the one who would catch my eye and in a fraction of a second have me chilled out enough to realize that I actually knew what needed to be done.  And what had to be done next.  And what should be done after that.  He was also the one who would kick me in the ass if I was trying to blend into the ugly wallpaper that so often hangs in the hallways of those ECF’s.

And I needed that. All of it.

He never made me feel like I was “less than”… He never made me feel like an idiot for being so nervous, or for missing an IV or for calling a certain rhythm… *gulp* Well, let’s just say that my rhythm interpretation during third rides was at times less than stellar.

It was NERVES, ya’ll.  And AF with RVR can look like SVT.  Just saying.

All I can say is that when the shit hit the fan, he was there to keep me sane.

He was also the one person who showed up at Pearson after I took my National Registry test and handed me a Paramedic pin…  That he bought seven days before.  Because he knew I’d make it, even when I didn’t.

I hit the jackpot as far as preceptors go.

Thank you, Kozi.

I couldn’t have gotten through it without ya.

The Short Version.

28 comments

A little under a year ago about seventy of you stepped forward and offered a gift that even 11 months later I can’t wrap my head around.  In this economy, in this job field, where so many have such a difficult time getting by, you made it possible for a girl you’ve never met (well, a few of you had met me, but just a few) to go back to school.

Boggles my mind.

11 months later, I’m a Paramedic.

Me.

I’m a medic.

I have a post I’m working on, but I’m currently on vacation, floating on a raft and sipping a wholesome glass of ice cold milk.  Give me two days with more than three hours of sleep and I promise to have something worth reading up here.  I have a lot of thank you notes to write. ;)

I couldn’t have done it without you.

In other news…

9 comments

That isn’t baby related… (Did I mention how beautiful my niece is?  I did?  Oh, my bad)

I passed my NREMT practical test.

I celebrated by riding on a truck with a preceptor who can take me from near tears to calm with just a look, and his partner, who I couldn’t love any more if she were the sister I never had.

Exactly eight days and six hours from now I’ll sit for the class final.  As soon as humanly possible after passing that I’ll sit for the NR test.

Holy crap, ya’ll.


A new addition…

2 comments

Guess who’s an Auntie for the first time?

THIS GIRL :)

Lil’ Peanut

9lbs 14 oz (!)

21 inches long

Congratulations to my Baby Brother and his beautiful wife!

For the EMS folks :)

7 comments

This coming Wednesday (July 14) at 7pm EST I’ll be a guest on the EMS Office Hours podcast.

Me.  Holy cow, ya’ll.

I’ll be talking with Jim about finishing up with Paramedic school, my experience so far, and my expectations as a new medic.

Feel free to pop on by Wednesday night and heckle me participate in the program!

RIP

25 comments

I Can’t, age 34, passed away July 6th after a long battle with the soul of a Paramedic Student.  I Can’t was survived by parents,  Self Doubt and Intimidation, and siblings I Tried and Maybe Next Time.  She is preceded in death by her best friend, Nevermind.  I Cant’s family will remember her as being a constant downer, fighting to the end to bring her victims down and causing nothing but negativity in the lives of those she touched.  They could not be prouder of the life she lived.

There will be no services or visitation.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the “Infecting the mind of anyone who’s ever been too close to their goal” fund at your local watering hole.

**********

Yep.  I took her down.  So those of you out there (and it’s been made abundantly clear who you are) who don’t think I can do the medic thing?  Ya know what?  Kiss my yankee ass.

Sweetness and light has been thrown out the window at this point.  Those ‘woe is me’ moments?  I might still have them, but in the next 19 days I plan on destroying them as well.

Ya know what, “I Can’t” and family?

Screw you.

I might still shake, but I have this.  I got this.

And after I take care of my patient, your ass is mine.

It's 0240-ish…

12 comments

And I can’t sleep.

The one goal I’ve had in the last five plus years is to be a Paramedic.

Yeah, for some of you out there, I know that doesn’t sound like much.  Some of you have been working as Medics  for longer than I’ve been in EMS.  In some cases it’s five times as long as I’ve been a Basic.  Some of you have forgotten what this feels like.  Some of you have never felt this way.  This is just me being very real.

This is not just some job to me.  It’s the only thing (other than my little ones) that means anything to me.  And I’m *THIS CLOSE*….

And I’m terrified.

I’m no longer worried that I’ll finish.  I’m worried about being set loose with a P card.

I don’t want to be half assed at this.

I don’t want to be merely adequate.

I’m not cool with just meeting the minimum standards. I believe the standards should be set HIGHER.  And at the same time, I want to exceed those standards.

I know I’m rambling… This is what happens when I have enough time to step back from my situation and take everything in.

I have three weeks left before my final.

21 days.

That’s it.

Oh…my… Goodness.

Donate Life

6 comments

I don’t know if you had any idea that you were going to die.

I don’t know if you got a chance to say your goodbyes.  To hug your babies… To squeeze the hand of your spouse.  To spend those last moments with the people who meant the most to you.   I don’t know if you had made your peace with God, or even if you were a religious person.  I don’t know anything about you.

That’s not true, actually.

I know one thing about you.

I know that you made a decision.  At some point you decided that should something happen to you, should your life end… That you would give one final gift.  Parts of you would live on through organ donation.

It’s not always an easy discussion with your family, I know it wasn’t with mine.  But I DID have that talk. Multiple times in some cases (I’m pretty sure that my Mother is on board with my decision now).  I’ve had that talk, I’ve signed a donor card, which is always in my wallet, and I’ve indicated my wishes on my drivers license.

You did the same, I’d assume.

I don’t know where your heart ended up, but I have a feeling that it’s beating right now in someone’s chest.

Someone who will have another day, because of your selfless gift.

Godspeed.  Whoever you are.

Donate Life

25

No comments

25 days.

1500 hours.

90,000 minutes.

5,400,000 minutes.

More IV’s, squad hours, BVM’s, ALS team leads, ER hours, tubes and just about everything else than I can wrap my head around.

That being said… I’m game.

I got this.

25 days to go.

24 comments

Today… Was one of the hardest days of my life.  I’ve never felt like a bigger failure as a parent.

But knowing that my little Princess will get the help she needs… It more than makes up for it.

SWR, you can do this.

Hallelujah for the Second Chance.

15 comments

The biggest influences in your life are sitting next to you.

Sometimes, literally.  Sometimes figuratively.

As my second attempt at Medic school comes to a close, I’ve up until VERY recently found myself excited beyond believe, but at the same time, absolutely terrified.

A few months ago I put a facebook update up that looked a little like this:

That was almost two months ago.  Eight weeks later, and just 4 weeks (seven more classes… Oh my GOD, just SEVEN CLASSES?????) from finishing I was finding myself infinitely more nervous.  I thought this was supposed to get easier.

I’ve been here before.  Maybe that was the problem. I had been *this close*.

***********

A little over four years ago I enrolled in a Paramedic program.  It’s hard to believe that I was even greener and sparkier then, but I was.  I loved every second of it.  Every test that was put in front of me I knocked out of the park.  I went into every clinical opportunity bright eyed and excited and PRAYING that something cool would happen.  By cool, I mean horrifying to the average person, unfortunately.  I couldn’t wait to get to the ER for my time there.  When my third rides/internship started, I almost lost my mind I was so geeked.  It was on those third rides that something… Uhm… cool happened.  And again, by cool, I mean… Horrifying.  Not once, but twice.

Not one, but two Pedi codes.  One SIDS, one due to a house fire.

Well, there ya go, Epi.  You got what you wished for.   Nothing supplies a bigger sympathetic dump/pucker factor for a student than a code.  Unfortunately there’s no chapter in a textbook that explains how you deal with two pediatric codes that occur three squad rides apart when you’re used to being on a transfer truck and taking Grandma to dialysis.  I was quickly drowning in a sea of self-doubt.

I’m not tough enough for this job.

I’m too emotional.

I’m a black cloud.

I can’t do this.

I CAN’T do this.

THERE IS NO WAY IN HELL I’M GETTING BACK ON THAT TRUCK!!!!

I was a part of two separate CISD’s (don’t EVER ask me my opinion on a CISD) and several conversations with the people who I respected the most.  In the end it was a mix of people I had never met in person and classmates I wasn’t even particularly close to who pulled me through.  I can’t explain how or why their words were able to convince me not only to stay in EMS, but to stay in the medic program…   I’m just grateful that I had them.  Still, I didn’t truly believe that I’d make it out of the class.  I can’t explain why, because honestly, I don’t know what was in my head back then.

Two weeks before the end of the program I blew out my back on a clinical.  I missed two classes and just like that,  I found myself washed out of the program.  I was simultaneously crushed and relieved.  Crushed because I had spent eleven months missing my kids, holidays, birthdays, etc, and I would have nothing to show for it. Relieved, because as a basic EMT working at a private service in NW Ohio, I wouldn’t have to deal with seeing another baby die in front of me.  There is nothing worse than that in my mind.  Nothing.  To this day I still have nightmares.

I guess I just wasn’t ready then.

Three years later I got my second chance.  I was back in P school (thank you!), and I was going to get through it this time come hell or high water.  I studied my ass off, I picked the brains of the people around me when I couldn’t figure something out, and mentally got myself ready for the clinical time.  I knew I was still green, I knew that the ghosts from my first time through school would still be with me.  I knew it was going to be a challenge.  And it has been.  It’s very hard to admit, but there is very little about me that is calm while on the scene with a person who is truly sick, who really needs my help.  My hands shake and I sweat like it’s my job.  Think about it, as a patient whose world is crashing down on them, would you put your life in the hands of a tall redhead with shaky hands who looks like she might throw up on herself any second?

I wouldn’t.

There is one huge difference between the girl I was back then and the girl I am now. I now know that this is what I was meant to do.  I truly believe it.  I believe that the education I’ve received through both programs is the perfect starting point for me.  I might not be calm, I might not be the picture of professionalism and grace while I’m trying to start an IV on someone in the back of a squad rumbling down a bumpy road while sweating my ass off…  My own little sympathetic dump might still make my heart race and my hands shake, but it doesn’t render me incapable of functioning. And thanks to my people… The biggest influences in my life, I KNOW I’m where I belong. The nervousness is actually *gasp* NORMAL!

I want to thank a few people who have gone above and beyond the call of duty to help me on this journey.

My Instructor, who is pretty much the most patient and simultaneously bad ass Medic/Instructor I know.  I’m fairly certain that if I ever have another baby, I’ll name that child after my instructor regardless of it’s sex.  I’ve been a gigantic pain in the backside to this man, and he’s stood by me and encouraged me from day one.

Medic Matthew, the best friend I’ve never met, who seems to be the first person I run to when I have one of those “You’re NEVER going to believe this” moments.

Ambulance Driver, who has been one of my biggest influences.  My go-to guy for ANY question I have.  The one who won’t hesitate to put a very large bootprint on my backside when I start to complain.  Because I have absolutely no business complaining as far as school goes.  Knowing that he believes I can do this has gotten me further than he could imagine.

CKEMTP and a good friend who I’ll call TFD, both who through a few conversations told me in no uncertain terms that what I was feeling was okay.  For a shaky green nervous girl like me, that elevates them to sainthood.  Realizing that I’m SUPPOSED to be nervous… Holy COW, what a load off of my shoulders.  Particularly when it seems like every other person in my class is cool as a cucumber during clinical time.

Lisa, who I have clung to like a sister.  I talked her into believing that she could get through basic school, and we talked each other into KNOWING that we could both make it through P school.  Again, someone I’ve never met, who knows me better than most of my closest friends know me.

Happy Medic and Medic 999.  Who have no idea how much they’ve inspired me to do more and to be better.  To do more than just talk about what’s broken in my area as far as EMS goes, but that the improvements could actually start with me. If they could accomplish what they have with their resources, certainly I could do my part to do the same.  It starts with being able to do more for my patients on the truck.  It starts furthering my education.

I am going to rock this.

But I’m probably going to do a fair amount of sweating for quite awhile.  Either way….

Hallelujah for the second chance.

Randomness.

2 comments

I can’t sleep.  Indulge me.

IF you find yourself in Medic or Nursing school… And IF you find yourself serving time enjoying clinicals on the labor and delivery floor of your favorite hospital….

Remember the importance of those those three letters.  B…S…I…

I had amniotic fluid not just wash over me… Not splash on me, but in fact SPRAY on me today.

In my hair, on my face, and pretty much showering me from forehead to hips.

Blech.

I mean, I love the itty bitty ones, but I will never walk over to an RN who asks me if I want to see something “really cool” without proper protection again.