Beneath The Helmet Show - Firefighter Wellness | Mental Health

Arjuna George - Silver Arrow Coaching

Firefighter mental health, burnout, PTSD recovery, and leadership -- this is where those conversations live. Beneath the Helmet is hosted by retired Fire Chief Arjuna George -- certified executive coach, TRE practitioner, and author of Burnt Around the Edges -- with 24 years inside the fire service. Every episode goes deep on what it actually costs to do this job, and what it takes to heal, lead, and thrive inside it. Topics include operational stress injury, moral injury, nervous system health, peer support, fire service leadership, firefighter family life, and recovery.

  1. Kitchen Table Leadership: Preventing Firefighter Burnout Through Connection | Flip Griffin | Beneath the Helmet Podcast

    2d ago

    Kitchen Table Leadership: Preventing Firefighter Burnout Through Connection | Flip Griffin | Beneath the Helmet Podcast

    What if one of the most powerful leadership tools in the fire service isn't found in a policy manual, leadership course, or in the Chief's office? In this episode of Beneath the Helmet, host Arjuna George sits down with former Navy Command Master Chief, leadership educator, podcaster, and Firehouse Freedom founder Flip Griffin to explore the concept of Kitchen Table Leadership. Drawing from decades of military and fire service experience, Flip shares why the everyday moments between calls often matter more than the major incidents. Together, they discuss trust, accountability, mentorship, burnout prevention, leadership development, and why authentic human connection remains the foundation of strong firehouse culture. This conversation challenges traditional leadership thinking and offers practical insights for firefighters, company officers, chief officers, and anyone responsible for leading people in high-performance environments. Time Stamps 00:00 Introduction and Meet Flip Griffin 02:00 From the U.S. Navy to Emergency Services Leadership 05:00 Similarities Between Military and Fire Service Culture 08:00 The Origin of Firehouse Freedom 10:00 What Is Kitchen Table Leadership? 13:00 Fireground Leadership vs. Firehouse Leadership 16:00 Why the Kitchen Table Is the Great Equalizer 18:00 Authentic Leadership and the Next Generation 22:00 Is the Fire Service Really Paramilitary? 28:00 Situational Leadership and Accountability 30:00 Everyday Moments That Shape Great Leaders 34:00 The Truth About Employee Engagement 39:00 Connection, Burnout, and Mental Health 44:00 Trust, Conflict, and Team Dysfunction 49:00 Advice for New and Aspiring Fire Officers 53:00 Leadership Lessons from Outside the Fire Service 56:00 Reading, Growth, and Lifelong Learning Key Topics Discussed • Kitchen Table Leadership • Firefighter Burnout Prevention • Fire Service Culture • Leadership Development • Trust and Team Building • Fire Officer Growth • Employee Engagement • Accountability and Mentorship • Mental Health and Wellness • Firefighter Retention and Recruitment • Authentic Leadership • Situational Leadership • Organizational Culture Books and Leadership Resources Mentioned • The Five Dysfunctions of a Team by Patrick Lencioni • The Truth About Employee Engagement by Patrick Lencioni • The Checklist Manifesto • Lead Yourself First • Traction • Call Sign Chaos by General Jim Mattis • Project Management in the Fire Service by Peter Yunes About the Guest Flip Griffin is a retired U.S. Navy Command Master Chief, leadership educator, podcaster, and founder of Firehouse Freedom. Drawing from military and emergency service experience, he teaches practical leadership strategies focused on accountability, culture, connection, and developing everyday leaders. About Beneath the Helmet Beneath the Helmet explores leadership, resilience, firefighter wellness, burnout prevention, mental health, personal growth, and life in the fire service. Hosted by retired Fire Chief, coach, author, and speaker Arjuna George. If you enjoyed this conversation, please like, subscribe, and share this episode with a firefighter, officer, chief, or leader who could benefit from the message. Your support helps us bring these important conversations to more people across the fire service community. Stay well.

    1h 7m
  2. Behind the Mask: Firefighter Mental Health With Dr. Marc Wysocki

    Jun 3

    Behind the Mask: Firefighter Mental Health With Dr. Marc Wysocki

    Behind the Mask: Firefighter Mental Health With Dr. Marc Wysocki | Beneath the Helmet Podcast Ep. 111 What can the fire service learn from sports medicine, athletic recovery, and leadership psychology? In this episode of Beneath the Helmet, host Arjuna George sits down with Dr. Marc Wysocki, athletic trainer, educator, volunteer firefighter, fire captain, EMT, and winner of the 2025 Darley Essay Competition. Together, they explore firefighter mental health, recovery debt, leadership, identity, psychological safety, trauma exposure, and the importance of speaking up before challenges become crises. Drawing from his award-winning essay, Behind the Mask: Uncovering the Root Causes of Mental Health Challenges in the Fire Service, Marc shares practical insights that every firefighter, officer, chief officer, and first responder can apply immediately. ✅ Why firefighters should think of themselves as tactical athletes✅ The importance of recovery, sleep, hydration, and stress management✅ What "recovery debt" means and how it impacts performance✅ How officers can better support firefighters after difficult calls✅ Why identity outside the fire service matters✅ Building psychologically safe firehouse cultures✅ Leadership lessons for retention, culture, and generational differences✅ How to encourage healthy conversations about mental health✅ Why speaking up is a sign of strength, not weakness 00:00 Welcome and introduction to Dr. Marc Wysocki01:35 Marc's journey into athletic training and sports medicine02:40 From EMT to volunteer firefighter and fire captain03:25 The story behind the award-winning Darley essay04:30 What the fire service can learn from sports medicine05:20 Treating firefighters like tactical athletes06:30 Recovery strategies for firefighters and first responders08:15 Volunteer versus career firefighter recovery challenges09:40 Recovery preparedness and operational readiness10:20 Exploring Behind the Mask and firefighter mental health11:00 Suicide rates and mental health concerns in the fire service12:00 Officer check-ins after traumatic incidents16:20 Trauma, moral injury, and challenges beyond critical incidents17:15 Identity fusion and life beyond the fire service19:15 Healthy disagreement and firehouse culture20:00 Leaving the job at work and transitioning home22:20 Understanding comparative suffering23:00 Recovery debt and listening to your body24:10 Sleep, hydration, and recovery habits25:20 Hydration strategies and athlete recovery practices26:35 Processing critical incidents and emotional suppression31:00 Moving from mental health awareness to action31:45 Leadership's role in creating healthy cultures33:20 Strengths younger firefighters bring to the fire service35:15 Building psychological safety in the firehouse36:00 Social media and firefighter professionalism37:00 When leaders unintentionally miss the mark39:00 Retention, culture, and explaining the "why"43:00 Building trust through daily 360-degree awareness45:45 Food, baking, and firehouse culture48:00 Marc's message to firefighters about speaking up49:50 What's next for Dr. Marc Wysocki50:40 Final thoughts and closing remarks Link to the Darley | NFFF Essay contest 2025 https://www.darley.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/2025-Thought-Leadership-Essay-Booklet.pdf Beneath the Helmet explores the human side of the fire service through conversations about leadership, resilience, wellness, recovery, mental health, and personal growth. Hosted by retired Fire Chief, coach, author, and speaker If you found value in this conversation, please subscribe, leave a review, and share this episode with a firefighter, officer, chief, or first responder who needs to hear it. Your support helps us bring these important conversations to more people throughout the fire service and beyond. www.beneaththehelmet.ca Arjun George - Show Host

    52 min
  3. Building a Firefighter Recovery Room: One Station's Story of Healing From the Inside Out

    May 20

    Building a Firefighter Recovery Room: One Station's Story of Healing From the Inside Out

    There is a moment in this episode that stops you cold. Chris Johnson is describing March 20th, 2024 -- the morning his deputy chief drove to an outlying station, sat beside him, and said four words: "We're worried about you." And the floodgates opened. By 6:30 that evening, Chris was four hours away in Draper, Utah, beginning a 40-day residential recovery program for first responders living with PTSD and suicidal ideation. He was angry. He was exhausted. He had been carrying things he did not yet have language for -- including unprocessed trauma from watching his firefighter father's mental health unravel after a 30-year career ended in medical retirement. What Chris built on the other side of that experience is the subject of this conversation. What Is a Firefighter Recovery Room? At Rock Creek Fire District in Kimberly, Idaho, there is a room behind the dorm quarters that most visitors would never know exists. Walk into the kitchen and you would not find it. But step inside and you are looking at a sauna, a cold plunge held at 44 degrees, a full-panel red light therapy unit, and a massage chair -- four recovery modalities that cost the department exactly zero dollars to install. Chris and his colleagues built it through community partnerships and sponsorships, with a presentation his wife designed and a subject matter expert who helped them make the case to their chief. What should have cost $42,000 came in at nothing. From demo to ribbon cutting: 28 days. The Science Behind the Modalities This episode covers the practical side of each recovery tool in real depth. Sauna for cardiovascular benefit, muscle recovery, toxin release, and post-fire decontamination protocol -- shower first, sauna, shower after. Cold plunge for sleep improvement, PTSD symptom reduction, and nervous system regulation through deliberate cold exposure. Red light therapy, the least invasive of the four, shown to improve cellular energy, mood, sleep, and cerebral blood flow -- with 66.7% of veterans in one study showing increased blood flow after treatment. And the massage chair, which triggers the release of oxytocin -- the same hormone released during a hug -- giving members something simple and restorative that requires nothing of them except showing up. 2 In 2 Out Wellness: When the Spouse Is Also in the Job Chris's wife Brittain helped save his life in 2024. She also identified a gap that most fire service wellness programs overlook entirely: the spouse who is effectively a single parent every four days, absorbing the emotional residue of a career they did not sign up for directly but carry nonetheless. 2 In 2 Out -- named for the firefighter safety principle, redefined as a commitment to bring firefighters and their spouses into the fire service together and out better, stronger, and more connected -- now offers recovery room buildouts, connection boxes for couples, and nutritional resources, all free to first responder families as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. If You Are Still Carrying It Alone Chris closes this episode with a quiet directness that is worth sitting with. He is not performing recovery. He is living it, with his therapist having told him just days before this recording that she no longer feels needed -- a milestone most firefighters in crisis cannot imagine reaching. If that sounds like somewhere worth heading, this episode is a good place to start. Contact 2 In 2 Out Wellness: https://twointwooutidaho.org/ Deer Hollow First Responder Recovery: deerhollow.com Host Arjuna George - Fire Chief (ret) 🚨 JOIN THE BTH COMMUNITY  📝 Podcast Newsletter:  📨 LinkedIn Podcast Newsletter: ✅Become a BTH Ambassador for a one-time contribution of $23. Your Ambassador contribution supports the behind-the-scenes work that keeps this project alive. Click here to support the show 📺 WATCH & LISTEN 🌐 Full Episodes & Show Notes: www.beneaththehelmet.ca  ▶️ Subscribe on YouTube:

    57 min
  4. Adaptive Resilience: Leading Through Crisis, Recovery, and Uncertainty

    May 6

    Adaptive Resilience: Leading Through Crisis, Recovery, and Uncertainty

    Adaptive Resilience: Leading Through Crisis, Recovery, and Uncertainty - Beneath the Helmet | Episode 109 with Savio Clemente What does it truly take to lead through crisis… and then recover from it? In this powerful episode of Beneath the Helmet, Arjuna George sits down with TEDx speaker, author, and wellness coach Savio Clemente. Together, they explore adaptive resilience, crisis leadership, and the internal work required to move forward when life doesn’t go as planned. Savio shares his lived experience with cancer, relapse, and recovery, offering a grounded perspective on decision-making under pressure, the importance of stillness, and why you don’t always have to fix everything. This conversation is for leaders, first responders, and high performers who are navigating stress, burnout, and the weight of responsibility. Key Topics Covered Adaptive resilience vs. “bouncing back.”Leading through crisis and uncertaintyRecovery, integration, and giving yourself permission to restDecision fatigue and cognitive overloadInternal command, self-awareness, and emotional regulationBoundaries, capacity, and sustainable leadershipTimestamps 00:00 – Welcome & episode introduction 01:00 – Savio’s background and cancer diagnosis story 02:00 – First diagnosis vs. relapse: lessons in recovery 04:00 – Reframing adversity and finding stillness 06:00 – TEDx talk and the “Inner Stranger” concept 07:00 – The Aloha Reboot framework explained 09:00 – Healthcare leadership and post-crisis pressure 11:00 – Recovery, identity, and moving forward 13:00 – Defining adaptive resilience 16:00 – What leaders struggle with after a crisis 20:00 – Internal work vs. external solutions 23:00 – Naming stress and psychological distancing 26:00 – Metacognition and self-awareness 29:00 – Stop fixing everything: lessons in surrender 31:00 – Performance drift after crisis 34:00 – Decision fatigue and overwhelm 35:00 – Somatic awareness and nervous system signals 38:00 – Regulation, capacity, and leadership clarity 40:00 – The role of joy and boundaries 42:00 – Managing overwhelm and priorities 44:00 – Hard boundaries and personal growth 47:00 – The power of saying no 50:00 – What regulation really means 52:00 – Small steps vs. solving everything 53:00 – How to connect with Savio 55:00 – Final message: growth, change, and connection Connect with Savio Clemente www.saviopclemente.com TEDx Talk: Seven Minutes to Wellness: How to Love Your Inner Stranger Social Media: @thehumanresolve Savio's Book: I Survived Cancer, and This Is How I Did It Why This Episode Matters Crisis is part of the job in high-performance environments. Recovery is the part most people skip. This episode brings the conversation back to what really matters Your internal state Your capacity Your ability to lead yourself first If this conversation resonated with you, take a moment to subscribe to the channel and share this episode with someone who needs to hear it. Stay well. Arjuna George - Podcast host - Fire Chief (ret) 🚨 JOIN THE BTH COMMUNITY  📝 Podcast Newsletter:  📨 LinkedIn Podcast Newsletter: ✅Become a BTH Ambassador for a one-time contribution of $23. Your Ambassador contribution supports the behind-the-scenes work that keeps this project alive. Click here to support the show 📺 WATCH & LISTEN 🌐 Full Episodes & Show Notes: www.beneaththehelmet.ca  ▶️ Subscribe on YouTube:  🔥 SOCIALS & CONTACT  Instagram:   LinkedIn:  Facebook: TikTok:  📩 Business Inquiries: arjuna@silverarrowco.com

    57 min
  5. Humanizing Leadership in the Fire Service: Burnout, Culture, and Connection

    Apr 22

    Humanizing Leadership in the Fire Service: Burnout, Culture, and Connection

    In this episode of Beneath the Helmet, Arjuna sits down with Fire Captain and author Jared Vermeulen to explore what modern leadership truly looks like in today’s fire service. This is a real conversation about burnout, culture, emotional intelligence, and the growing need to humanize how we lead. Jared shares insights from his experience, his books The Modern Fire Officer, and his work in peer support. If you’re a firefighter, officer, or leader navigating the demands of the job, this episode speaks directly to what many are feeling but not always saying. Timestamps 00:00 – Welcome back and guest introduction01:00 – Why humanizing leadership matters in the fire service02:00 – Burnout, retention challenges, and generational shifts04:00 – Jared’s background and why he wrote his books05:30 – The gap in leadership: technical vs emotional skills06:30 – Systems failing firefighters and rising mental health concerns09:00 – Increased workload and lack of support systems10:30 – “Building a NASCAR with a stock motor” analogy11:00 – Rethinking “soft skills” and emotional intelligence13:00 – The discomfort of real leadership conversations14:00 – Lessons learned between book one and book two15:00 – Sleep, health, and mental clarity in leadership16:00 – The impact of constant stimulation and brain fog16:30 – Creativity, reflection, and innovation in leadership17:00 – The power of validation in building strong teams18:30 – Creating psychological safety and team cohesion19:00 – Creativity, hobbies, and mental recovery21:00 – Meaning, purpose, and how to beat burnout23:00 – The challenge of losing identity after retirement24:00 – Supporting firefighters beyond their career25:30 – Traditional vs modern leadership in the fire service27:00 – Why old leadership models are no longer enough29:00 – Expanding roles and increased mental load31:00 – The challenge of applying emotional intelligence31:30 – Self-esteem and confidence in leadership33:00 – Practical ways to build confidence as a leader37:00 – Leadership gets harder and less visible over time39:00 – The importance of mentorship across all ranks41:00 – Observational leadership and reading your crew44:00 – Building trust through everyday interactions46:00 – Trust, culture, and performance on calls47:30 – Rethinking discipline: from punishment to redirection49:00 – Understanding root causes instead of reacting52:00 – Leadership vs management mindset55:00 – Turning mistakes into growth opportunities58:00 – Concepts vs rules: why understanding matters more01:01:00 – What firefighters need from their officers01:02:00 – What officers need from their chiefs01:03:00 – Communication, transparency, and trust in leadership01:06:00 – Final reflections and closing thoughts Key Themes in This Episode Humanizing leadership in modern fire service cultureBurnout, retention, and mental health challengesEmotional intelligence as a critical leadership skillBuilding trust, validation, and psychological safetyRethinking discipline and leadership systemsThe importance of meaning and purpose in the jobVideos mentioned in this episode. Why The Army Is Changing How Drill Sergeants Are TrainedHow playing an instrument benefits your brain If this conversation resonated with you, take a moment to share it with someone on your crew or in your network. Make sure to subscribe to Beneath the Helmet, leave a comment with your thoughts, and help spread this message by sharing the episode. Host Arjuna George - Fire Chief (ret) 🚨 JOIN THE BTH COMMUNITY  📝 Podcast Newsletter:  📨 LinkedIn Podcast Newsletter: ✅Become a BTH Ambassador for a one-time contribution of $23. Your Ambassador contribution supports the behind-the-scenes work that keeps this project alive. Click here to support the show 📺 WATCH & LISTEN 🌐 Full Episodes & Show Notes: www.beneaththehelmet.ca  ▶️ Subscribe on YouTube:

    1h 10m
  6. Talk About Talking: Connection Matters Stronger Relationships in High-Stress Careers

    Apr 9

    Talk About Talking: Connection Matters Stronger Relationships in High-Stress Careers

    Talk About Talking: Connection Matters | Stronger Relationships in High-Stress Careers In this powerful episode of Beneath the Helmet, host Arjuna George sits down with Dr. Christie Dion, a psychologist specializing in sex therapy, couples therapy, and first-responder families. Together, they explore the realities of relationships in the first-responder world, where shift work, trauma exposure, and emotional disconnect can quietly affect even the strongest partnerships. This conversation goes deep into communication, expectations, intimacy, and the unseen weight carried by both first responders and their partners. If you’ve ever struggled with connection, conflict, or feeling misunderstood in your relationship, this episode offers practical insight and real-world strategies you can apply immediately. Whether you're a firefighter, first responder, or partner supporting someone in the job, this is a conversation that matters. 🔥 What You’ll Learn in This Episode: Why communication breakdown and unmet expectations create tension in relationshipsHow shift work impacts connection, intimacy, and emotional availabilityThe importance of “talking about talking” in your relationshipHidden red flags that signal your relationship may be strugglingHow trauma exposure and stress affect libido and connectionPractical ways to support your partner more effectivelyWhen it’s time to seek outside support⏱️ Timestamps:00:00 – Introduction to the episode and guest01:00 – Meet Dr. Christie Dion and her background02:00 – Early influences and marriage dynamics in first responder life03:00 – Preparing for a fire service relationship05:00 – The realities of dual first responder relationships08:00 – Managing expectations in first responder marriages10:00 – Hidden relationship red flags13:00 – The impact of dismissive language16:00 – Critical conversations: career, retirement, and trauma18:00 – Joining the fire service mid-relationship20:00 – Finances, family planning, and lifestyle shifts22:00 – Preparing for retirement and identity loss25:00 – Sharing trauma without harming your partner26:00 – “Talk about talking” and communication frameworks30:00 – Timing important conversations31:00 – Intentional check-ins and connection32:00 – How to support your partner better34:00 – What partners can do to support first responders37:00 – Parenting, adolescence, and family dynamics43:00 – Rehumanizing the fire service46:00 – Divorce, contempt, and disconnection49:00 – Phones, temptation, and modern relationship risks51:00 – Intimacy, libido, and stress53:00 – How to talk about sex and connection56:00 – When to seek professional support58:00 – Resources and how to connect with Dr. Dion01:00:00 – Final thoughts and closing message🔗 Connect with Dr. Christie Dion:Instagram: @theignitedcommunityShe also offers coaching services and a membership community with resources on communication, intimacy, and conflict resolution. 🎧 About Beneath the Helmet:This podcast explores firefighter health, wellness, leadership, and resilience. Hosted by retired Fire Chief Arjuna George, each episode brings real conversations that support your physical, mental, and emotional well-being. 📢If this episode resonated with you, take a moment to subscribe, share it with someone who needs to hear it, and help us continue these important conversations. Stay well. Host Arjuna George - Fire Chief (ret) 🚨 JOIN THE BTH COMMUNITY  📝 Podcast Newsletter: https://colossal-trailblazer-6113.ck.page/c0e1b81fbe  📨 LinkedIn Podcast Newsletter: https://www.linkedin.com/build-relation/newsletter-follow?entityUrn=7026972684089528321 ✅Become a BTH Ambassador for a one-time contribution of $23. Your Ambassador contribution supports the behind-the-scenes work that keeps this project alive. Click here to support the show 📺 WATCH & LISTEN 🌐 Full Episodes & Show Notes: www.beneaththehelmet.ca

    1h 3m
  7. “I’m Burnt Out”: The Realities of EMS and the Story Behind Code 3 | Patrick Pianezza

    Mar 27 ·  Bonus

    “I’m Burnt Out”: The Realities of EMS and the Story Behind Code 3 | Patrick Pianezza

    “I’m Burnt Out”: The Realities of EMS and the Story Behind Code 3 | Patrick Pianezza In this powerful bonus episode of Beneath the Helmet, host Arjuna George sits down with Patrick Pianezza to explore the real story behind the hit film Code 3. This conversation goes far beyond filmmaking. It dives into the lived reality of EMS, the emotional weight of the job, and the truth about burnout in the first responder world. Patrick shares how a college writing assignment turned into a feature film, why authenticity mattered more than entertainment, and what he hopes first responders and the public take away from Code 3. If you’ve ever felt the weight of the job, questioned your capacity, or wondered how to keep going, this episode will resonate. ⏱️ Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction and bonus episode kickoff01:00 – Meet Patrick Pianezza and his first responder background04:30 – From EMS to Hollywood: how Code 3 was created06:30 – Getting the script noticed and produced08:00 – Why Patrick wrote Code 3: frustration, burnout, and reality10:00 – Burnout in EMS and lessons learned12:00 – The reality of the job and taking care of yourself13:00 – Building a 24-hour shift into a film15:00 – Authenticity in first responder storytelling16:00 – No hero worship and respecting the patient17:00 – Public perception vs real first responder experience19:00 – Cast experiences and behind-the-scenes insights22:00 – Training actors to perform like real paramedics25:00 – The hardest scenes and emotional impact27:00 – Burnout in the first responder world today28:30 – Gaps in support systems and EAP challenges31:00 – What needs to change in burnout prevention33:00 – Conversations this film is meant to spark34:30 – Three key strategies to cope with the job36:00 – Will Patrick return to EMS?38:00 – Dispatch vs frontline realities41:00 – What Patrick hopes viewers take away46:00 – The danger of romanticizing the job47:00 – If the ambulance could talk…50:00 – Dark humor and where the line is51:30 – Behind the scenes: working with cast and crew54:00 – Filming in Los Angeles and production scale55:30 – Searching for the professor who started it all56:30 – Where to watch Code 358:30 – Final message to first responders: thank you 🎬 Where to Watch Code 3Code 3 is available on Apple and Amazon (rent or purchase).In Canada, distribution is through Vortex Media, and the film is also available on Blu-ray and DVD and now Netflix Canada. This is not just a conversation about a movie. It’s about: Burnout in EMS and first respondersThe emotional impact of the jobThe reality behind 911 callsThe importance of taking care of yourselfBridging the gap between first responders and the publicIf this episode resonated with you, take a moment to: 👉 Subscribe to the channel for more real conversations on leadership, stress, and first responder wellness👉 Share this episode with someone who needs to hear it👉 Leave a comment and let us know what stood out for you Your support helps bring these important conversations to more people. Stay well. Host Arjuna George - Fire Chief (ret) 🚨 JOIN THE BTH COMMUNITY  📝 Podcast Newsletter: https://colossal-trailblazer-6113.ck.page/c0e1b81fbe  📨 LinkedIn Podcast Newsletter: https://www.linkedin.com/build-relation/newsletter-follow?entityUrn=7026972684089528321 ✅Become a BTH Ambassador for a one-time contribution of $23. Your Ambassador contribution supports the behind-the-scenes work that keeps this project alive. Click here to support the show 📺 WATCH & LISTEN 🌐 Full Episodes & Show Notes: www.beneaththehelmet.ca  ▶️ Subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@beneaththehelmetshow?sub_confirmation=1

    1h 1m
  8. The Rescuer Mentality: Why First Responders Stay Always On and How It Impacts Their Lives

    Mar 25

    The Rescuer Mentality: Why First Responders Stay Always On and How It Impacts Their Lives

    The Rescuer Mentality: Why First Responders Stay Always On and How It Impacts Their Lives | Beneath the Helmet S4E105 In this episode of Beneath the Helmet, Arjuna George sits down with licensed mental health professional Dennis Carradin to explore the reality behind the “always on” mindset in first responders. Dennis shares his journey from volunteer firefighter and EMT to working exclusively with first responders and healthcare professionals in trauma and crisis response. Together, they unpack the rescuer mentality, the importance of decompression, and the long-term impact of repeated exposure to critical incidents. This conversation brings awareness to the human side of the job, the hidden cost of staying constantly alert, and the importance of mental health support, play, and authentic connection. 00:00 – Welcome and introduction01:00 – Dennis Carradin’s background and career path03:30 – From fire service to trauma psychology07:00 – Changes in fire service training and culture09:00 – Mental health support and generational shifts10:30 – The future of leadership in the fire service14:00 – What decompression really means16:00 – A simple breathing check for stress18:00 – The rescuer mentality explained21:00 – Why being “always on” creates long-term stress26:00 – Practical ways to slow down and reset32:00 – Trauma adjacent stress and its impact36:00 – Communicating stress without sharing details40:00 – When emotional suppression catches up42:00 – How the job impacts long-term health and lifespan45:00 – Creating balance, play, and recovery47:00 – The stigma around seeking help53:00 – Finding the right therapist54:30 – Are we failing first responders as a society?59:00 – Where to connect with Dennis What You'll Learn: Why first responders develop a rescuer mentality and stay constantly alertThe difference between exhaustion and true decompressionHow repeated exposure to trauma impacts mental and physical healthWhat trauma adjacent stress is and how it affects relationshipsWhy seeking mental health support is a sign of strength, not weaknessGuest Information🔥Dennis CarradinLicensed mental health professional specializing in trauma for first respondersCo-Founder, Trauma Survivors Foundation 🌐 Website: http://denniscarradin.com🌐 Foundation: http://thetraumasurvivorsfoundation.org📱 TikTok: Dennis Carradin Dennis also provides training in critical incident response strategies, peer support, and crisis intervention for first responders. Hosted by Arjuna George, retired Fire Chief, author, and coach, this podcast explores firefighter health, leadership, and the realities of life beneath the helmet. 📣 Subscribe & ShareIf this episode resonated with you, make sure to subscribe to the channel, like the video, and share it with someone in your crew or community. You never know who needs to hear this conversation. Stay well.

    1h 4m

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Firefighter mental health, burnout, PTSD recovery, and leadership -- this is where those conversations live. Beneath the Helmet is hosted by retired Fire Chief Arjuna George -- certified executive coach, TRE practitioner, and author of Burnt Around the Edges -- with 24 years inside the fire service. Every episode goes deep on what it actually costs to do this job, and what it takes to heal, lead, and thrive inside it. Topics include operational stress injury, moral injury, nervous system health, peer support, fire service leadership, firefighter family life, and recovery.

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