RocketMedic
Californian, Lost in Texas
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@TachticalFire89 , where in the world are you? If you're in Houston, I can offer some advice- this may hold true to a lot of other places too.
1. Fire means nothing if you're not a firefighter at present. It doesn't pay anything extra to the company, so no one cares right now. Even going through the hiring process for an FD is meaningless from the Crappy Private Dialysis Taxi POV- you're putting a certified name on a billable run ticket. That's all.
2. Most of the people you meet in that environment are either 1) new with aspirations to something better and needing 'experience' 2) new and/or severely lacking in the confidence and mojo to get onto something better and hoping BLS transport will magically imbue them with the mojo they lack 3) too stupid, fat, lazy, dumb or arrogant to get into 911 or 4) ambulance drivers. You're not going to get anything useful from anyone of these people, so why stick around?
3. Lots of shady crap happens in EMS, moreso in settings like private BLS transport. It's the Poo Pond of 'EMS'. Don't swim in the Poo Pond. You'll just get stinky, poopy and you'll be dumb for trying. Let them swim in the Poo Pond and do something better with your time.
4. You really don't need to be experienced in most of the USA to get an EMT gig with a decent 911/IFT service. If anything, EMT experience longer than a year or two can be a downside, in that you'll be perceived as having a lot of bad habits and a lack of motivation to excel or lead. Most of the best EMTs I know are those who went for quality first and didn't worry about arbitrary things like "experience" or whatnot.
5. Why did you become an EMT? Was it to help people, or was it because it's a part of being a Firefighter? There's no 'wrong' answer, but your answer defines how you look at the job. To be honest, when I read your post, I viewed a lot of it as taking offense that someone is doing essentially the same job as you without having to go through the same process as you did, and it seemed resentful- like you are more angry that you are essentially the same as someone who just showed up than you are about the fact that you're wasting your potential.
My advice? Decide what you really want to do and do it. If it's fire, find a fireman job and move to it. Uhaul is a thing, Indeed and Monster exist, hiring season is upon us. If it's Fire/EMS, then you need to realize that you've literally chosen a career path that I can summarize in "I should spray that hot fire with cold water from a safe distance while wearing some sort of protective gear" + "We should go with that INSERT PROBLEM(S) HERE to HOSPITAL"...not exactly rocket surgery. If it's EMS, then you need to realize that it's not about you, your partner, or even your company, it's about your patient and the service you can provide to them (and good service has good companies, decent treatment of you and your partner, etc. as prerequisites).
Good luck!
1. Fire means nothing if you're not a firefighter at present. It doesn't pay anything extra to the company, so no one cares right now. Even going through the hiring process for an FD is meaningless from the Crappy Private Dialysis Taxi POV- you're putting a certified name on a billable run ticket. That's all.
2. Most of the people you meet in that environment are either 1) new with aspirations to something better and needing 'experience' 2) new and/or severely lacking in the confidence and mojo to get onto something better and hoping BLS transport will magically imbue them with the mojo they lack 3) too stupid, fat, lazy, dumb or arrogant to get into 911 or 4) ambulance drivers. You're not going to get anything useful from anyone of these people, so why stick around?
3. Lots of shady crap happens in EMS, moreso in settings like private BLS transport. It's the Poo Pond of 'EMS'. Don't swim in the Poo Pond. You'll just get stinky, poopy and you'll be dumb for trying. Let them swim in the Poo Pond and do something better with your time.
4. You really don't need to be experienced in most of the USA to get an EMT gig with a decent 911/IFT service. If anything, EMT experience longer than a year or two can be a downside, in that you'll be perceived as having a lot of bad habits and a lack of motivation to excel or lead. Most of the best EMTs I know are those who went for quality first and didn't worry about arbitrary things like "experience" or whatnot.
5. Why did you become an EMT? Was it to help people, or was it because it's a part of being a Firefighter? There's no 'wrong' answer, but your answer defines how you look at the job. To be honest, when I read your post, I viewed a lot of it as taking offense that someone is doing essentially the same job as you without having to go through the same process as you did, and it seemed resentful- like you are more angry that you are essentially the same as someone who just showed up than you are about the fact that you're wasting your potential.
My advice? Decide what you really want to do and do it. If it's fire, find a fireman job and move to it. Uhaul is a thing, Indeed and Monster exist, hiring season is upon us. If it's Fire/EMS, then you need to realize that you've literally chosen a career path that I can summarize in "I should spray that hot fire with cold water from a safe distance while wearing some sort of protective gear" + "We should go with that INSERT PROBLEM(S) HERE to HOSPITAL"...not exactly rocket surgery. If it's EMS, then you need to realize that it's not about you, your partner, or even your company, it's about your patient and the service you can provide to them (and good service has good companies, decent treatment of you and your partner, etc. as prerequisites).
Good luck!