I wish you could know
I wish you could know what it is like to search a burning bedroom for trapped children at 3 AM, flames rolling above your head, your palms and knees burning as you crawl, the floor sagging under your weight as the kitchen below you burns. I wish you could comprehend a wife's horror at 6 in the morning as I check her husband of 40 years for a pulse and find none. I start CPR anyway, hoping to bring him back, knowing intuitively it is too late. But wanting his family to know everything possible was done to try to save his life.
I wish you knew the unique smell of burning insulation, the taste of soot filled mucus, the feeling of intense heat through your turnout gear, the sound of flames cracking, the eeriness of being able to see nothing absolutely nothing in dense smoke-sensations that I've become too familiar with.
I wish you could read my mind as I respond to a building fire "Is this a false alarm or a working fire"? How is the building constructed? What hazards await me? Is anyone trapped?
Or to call, "what is wrong with the patient? Is it minor or life-threatening? Is the caller really in distress or is he waiting for us with a 2X4 or a gun?"
I wish you could be in the emergency room as a doctor pronounces dead the beautiful five-year old girl that I have been trying to save during the past 25 minutes. Who will never go on her first date or say the words, "I love you mommy" again.
I wish you could know the frustration I feel in the cab of the engine, squad, patrol car, the driver with his foot pressing down hard on the pedal, my hand at the siren, as you fail to yield the right-of-way at an intersection or in traffic. When you need us however, your first comment will be, "It took you forever to get here!"
I wish you could know my thoughts as I help extricate a girl of teenage years from the remains of her car. "What if this was my daughter, sister, my wife or a friend? What were her parents reaction doing to be when they open the door to find a police officer with hat in hand?"
I wish you could know how it feels dispatching police officers, firefighters and EMT's out and when we call for them and our heart drops because no one answers back or to here a bone chilling 911 call of a child or wife needing assistance.
I wish you could feel the hurt as people verbally, and sometimes physically abuse us, or belittle what I do, or as they express their attitudes of "It will never happen to me."
I wish you could realize the physical, emotional or mental drain missed meals, lost sleep and forgone social activities, in addition to all the tragedy my eyes have seen.
I wish you could know the brotherhood and self-satisfaction of helping save a life or preserving someone's property, or being able to be there in time of crisis, or crating order from chaos.
I wish you could understand what if feels like to have a little boy tugging at your arm and asking, "Is my mommy okay?" Not even being able to look in his eyes without tears from your own, and not knowing what to say. Or to have to hold back a long time friend who watches his buddy caving CPR done on him as they take him away in the medic unit. You knew all along he did not have his seatbelt on. A sensation that I have become too familiar with.
Unless you have lived this kind of life, you will never truly understand or appreciate who I am, we are, or what our job really means to us...I wish you could though.
AUTHOR UNKNOWN