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My Life After Firefighting

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb
The Truth Network Radio
March 3, 2025 3:00 am

My Life After Firefighting

Our American Stories / Lee Habeeb

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March 3, 2025 3:00 am

A retired fire captain shares his experiences with the physical and emotional toll of working in the fire service, and how he's found purpose in helping others and prioritizing his mental health.

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Because you're worth it. This is Lee Habib and this is Our American Stories. And we tell stories about everything, including your stories. Send them to ouramericanstories.com. That's ouramericanstories.com. They're some of our favorites. And by the way, as you know, we are a nonprofit and what we do, well, it's free to listen to, but it is not free to make.

And if you love the stories we're telling, go to ouramericanstories.com, click the donate button, and do what you can to help us out. Today, you're going to hear from James Pritchard, a retired fire captain right here in Oxford, Mississippi, where we broadcast. James is going to share with us the realities of working in the fire service and how pushing down your emotions catches up with you in the long run. I guess I kind of always wanted to be a firefighter.

I think that's why God put me here. But beforehand, I was just a kid. I was working with the city electric department, actually. And I was in a bucket truck right across from the fire department, working with hot power lines. And I let one of the wires go and it blew a fuse and it pow. And I hunkered down in the bottom of the bucket and I got out of the bucket and I walked across the street and I said, Chief, I'm coming to work.

I said, this is it. I knew the fire chief well, and he liked me a lot. And it worked out where the next hiring cycle, that's where I went. I was just excited and I was ready to go. And that's what I wanted to do. I was a volunteer firefighter for about three years before I actually became a career firefighter.

So I kind of knew what the process was. There was a lot of physical pain, but other than that, besides being away from my wife and my little boy, it was fun. Especially looking back, learning how to repel off the side of a building. At the start of my career, I was there for 24 hours and I was off for 48 hours, which worked pretty good for me. But at the end of my career, we worked 48 hours on and four days off. So I was at the fire station for two days. I was at home for four days. But being away for 48 hours, you just miss so much.

My little girl barrel races. So it was, you know, I'd miss a whole weekend of that or ball tournaments or just being home because I'm a homebody. My family means everything to me. But the hardest part was absolutely the car wrecks. Car wrecks. Dealing with death in general, but when you, when you got to a house fire, if somebody was in that house fire and we couldn't find them right off the bat, we knew they were gone.

But when you got to a car wreck, lots of times they were alive, but there really wasn't much you could do to, to help them. No matter how fast we got them out, we knew they, they likely weren't going to, weren't going to pull through lots of times. You know, it was hard.

Everything built up little by little by little by little. I was going strong and then I was broken and I didn't know why, but it was, it was pretty obvious to everybody around me why, especially my wife. You know, I did pretty good at hiding it from my kids, but I couldn't hide it when I was asleep. I would wake up swinging and kicking and punching and screaming and actually hit my wife while I was asleep several times and just, it was hard. And I still have nightmares. You know, I try to avoid places, things where hard things happen.

I try not to go by those places, but sometimes I can't. And, you know, I'm probably going to cry today, but that's all right. I've got a great wife.

She's been my rock through all of this and, and not being able to go back through all of this and, and not being afraid to ask for help has been very important for me also. And I don't guess we realize a lot of times our purpose until we, till we get into it. And I don't know that we even realized that first one or two or three steps. I actually got hurt during a training exercise and had one back surgery and then I went back to work and then I had another back surgery. And after that, they said I couldn't go back. So I didn't get my last ride. I didn't get to finish the way I wanted to finish, but God had a plan with that too. He knew that I was done. He knew that I was finished. I was so tired and I needed, I needed to stop and I needed to reflect and I needed to get better mentally and physically.

That's what I've been working on ever since. I feel like God put me here for that purpose. I got to help a lot of people, but talking to somebody doesn't mean you're not tough. Let it out.

Don't let it build up. I never looked at the fire service as a way to be a hero or get recognition because that's not what it's about. But there's a lot of special people up there doing it right now. And a beautiful job by Madison on the production and a special thanks to James Pritchard, a retired captain of Oxford's fire department, and a special thanks to all the guys and gals who do this kind of work. And that's the cops, the firemen, the EMT, and even people in some emergency room situations. It is little bit by little bit seeing the world at its worst, near death sequences, and sometimes not being able to help, sometimes blaming yourself, the flashbacks, the nightmares. My goodness, I got to help a lot of people. You sure did.

And now, now James is helping himself and God did have a plan and it was time for James to be with his family and find peace. James Pritchard's story and Oxford, Mississippi story, our hometown, here on Now American Stories. Folks, if you love the stories we tell about this great country and especially the stories of America's rich past, know that all of our stories about American history from war to innovation, culture, and faith are brought to us by the great folks at Hillsdale College, a place where students study all the things that are beautiful in life and all the things that are good in life. And if you can't get to Hillsdale, Hillsdale will come to you with their free and terrific online courses.

Go to hillsdale.edu to learn more. The Unshakable's podcast is kicking off season two with an episode you won't want to miss. Join host Ben Walter, CEO of Chase for Business, as he welcomes a very special guest, Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, Jamie Dimon. Hear about the challenges facing small businesses and some of the uh-oh moments Jamie has overcome.

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