|
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...
|
Inspired by insights from PSPNET on how stress, reactivity, and emotional fatigue shape firefighter family life
Firefighters get used to compartmentalizing. You see things, feel things, and move on because that’s what the job demands. But the body doesn’t forget, and neither does the mind. When the tones stop and the noise fades, everything you’ve packed away doesn’t just disappear — it waits. Sometimes it shows up as silence. Sometimes it shows up as anger. Either way, it always finds a way out.
Negative emotions don’t stay neatly contained behind the bay doors. They travel home — into the kitchen, the conversation, the energy of the room. The problem isn’t that you feel them; it’s that they change how you engage with the people who matter most.
For some firefighters, the default is withdrawal. After years of stress, it feels easier to retreat than to risk being misunderstood. You shut down, scroll, zone out, or disappear into the garage. You’re home, but not really. If you’re the spouse, that silence can be painful — like living beside someone you can see but can’t reach. It starts to feel personal, even when it isn’t. The loss isn’t physical; it’s emotional — what psychologists call ambiguous loss. You miss the version of them that used to talk, laugh, and connect….
Read (or listen) to the rest below from our premier content partners at CRACKYL Magazine!



