In this episode, Andi shares the vital steps most First Responders are missing when trying to stay strong for their 911 Shifts.
This episode will show you what really needs to happen beyond exercise and nutrition in order to help you fall asleep, stay asleep and wake with a fully recharged battery, recover on days off and enjoy your family time.
No matter what your shift throws at you.
What You'll Learn
Favorite Quote
“Everyone wants some magic pill—some life hack—that eliminates the need to do the work. But that does not exist.” Jocko Willink
There isn't a magic pill. It really is about learning how to work with the operational stressors of your job. Make sure that your stress system is ready for all that your job throws at you and knowing how to recover when it hits you hard.
Are you ready to learn all the tools needed to live a 911 lifestyle that can help you stay strong throughout your entire career? Then Gain The 911 Lifestyle Tools Today!
If you want to learn more about the 911 Elite Performance Program and have questions before joining, Book A Call with Andi here!
Or connect with Andi Online!
Thanks for listening! You can also watch this podcast on our YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss an episode!
This episode is for you.
Speaker:Then you are experiencing one of the following tired and wired, waking beds,
Speaker:possibly snoring and regardless, if you got two hours or 12 hours of sleep,
Speaker:you wake up absolutely exhausted.
Speaker:Like your battery didn't charge at all while you were sleeping.
Speaker:And sometimes you wake up feeling hung over when you
Speaker:didn't drink the night before.
Speaker:So you grab a coffee, but it doesn't seem to give you the kick it used to.
Speaker:And you need more and more coffee on shift just to get by.
Speaker:Or you're always on high alert that hypervigilant you can't shut it off.
Speaker:Even when you're at home.
Speaker:You're constantly worrying or thinking that something bad is about to happen
Speaker:and being on such high alert or anxious, the smallest things your kids do, making
Speaker:a loud sound or dropping something.
Speaker:Has you going from zero to a hundred without thinking about it?
Speaker:And you find that you're yelling at them before you even realized it was happening.
Speaker:Or working out used to be your stress relief but now even though your brain
Speaker:wants to be active and feel that adrenaline rush because being happy
Speaker:or being healthy is who you are deep to your core, your body won't let you.
Speaker:You either go to the gym and try to push but that rush is not there anymore.
Speaker:Or you don't even make it off the couch to get to the gym.
Speaker:You're so exhausted, injuries keep flagging your body and simple daily
Speaker:stressors that never used to phase you now stop you from being able to
Speaker:relax and recover on your days off.
Speaker:In today's episode, I am going to help you understand the vital steps that
Speaker:most first responders are missing when trying to stay strong for 911 shifts.
Speaker:If you resonated with any of the examples that I gave above then
Speaker:this podcast is definitely for you.
Speaker:I'm going to show you what's really needs to happen beyond exercise and
Speaker:nutrition in order to help you fall asleep, stay asleep, and wake with a
Speaker:fully charged battery so that you can recover on days off, enjoy your family.
Speaker:No matter what your shift throws at you and you are going to be
Speaker:able to stay calm while doing it.
Speaker:Before I start teaching you what is needed to be 911 strong, I want to go over a few
Speaker:misconceptions when it comes to what is needed in order to stay 911 shift ready.
Speaker:One of the big misconceptions is that traumas are the only
Speaker:reason first responders struggle.
Speaker:Traumas and PTSD absolutely are a big topic in services
Speaker:nowadays and they should be.
Speaker:We definitely need to take them seriously and they are a big part of the job.
Speaker:But often it feels like it's focused on so much that the other stressors of the
Speaker:job that can actually cause these symptoms that can cause you to be absolutely
Speaker:exhausted, yelling at your kids, snoring, not getting a good sleep, tired and wired,
Speaker:having gut issues, having short-term memory struggles where you're not
Speaker:doing as great on your reports anymore.
Speaker:You're not being able to remember the details or what your spouse said to you.
Speaker:All of these symptoms can also be swept under the rug from other causes.
Speaker:So I want to lead you into this story.
Speaker:It was written it's actually a post that was in my Facebook group.
Speaker:I think this was three years ago.
Speaker:I've been doing this since 2018.
Speaker:It was probably actually in 2018.
Speaker:So we're probably going about four years.
Speaker:And this was written by somebody who was a police officer who
Speaker:worked in high tactical unit.
Speaker:It is currently 6:47 PM Tuesday evening.
Speaker:I've been going as of 7:00 AM Monday morning on roughly
Speaker:as best an hour of sleep.
Speaker:After Marriott of energy drinks and at least two pots of coffee and fast food
Speaker:in between conducted controlled buys, surveillance, pre-read reconnaissance,
Speaker:two forced entries on two search warrants and a vehicle pursuit.
Speaker:It didn't occur to me until my partner and I were cleaning out our vehicle of
Speaker:the remnants of fast food, wrappers and aluminum cans rattling on the floor that
Speaker:we resembled two meth addicts tweaking through a journey across country.
Speaker:Well, knowing what we are putting our bodies through is
Speaker:detrimental to our wellbeing.
Speaker:We had a conversation about why we do these things without
Speaker:question or hesitation to not only ourselves, but to our families.
Speaker:Does it ever end?
Speaker:When do we start letting go of the never ending pursuit of holding the
Speaker:line that gets harder to hold everyday?
Speaker:When do we stop making time for the profession and start making time
Speaker:for ourselves without the feeling of guilt towards either side?
Speaker:Now, this was written by somebody who very shortly after ended up on medical leave.
Speaker:They were not able to get a PTSD diagnosis.
Speaker:And if we break it down though, let's just take a look at this little bit.
Speaker:So he was currently 6:47 PM Tuesday evening and been going as of 7:00
Speaker:AM Monday so that's 36 hours.
Speaker:So he had been up for 36 hours straight after only having an hour of sleep.
Speaker:What I know about this gentleman as well is he was lucky to have got
Speaker:four hours of sleep a night, four to six hours because he just couldn't
Speaker:sleep even when he was home on days off, his body could not sleep.
Speaker:We get into the two pots of coffee.
Speaker:Needing that coffee in order to stay awake.
Speaker:All the stress that comes with doing conducted controlled by
Speaker:surveillance, pre-read reconnaissance two forced entries, two forced
Speaker:entries on two search warrants.
Speaker:What you have to do to get a search warrant already
Speaker:takes so much stress as well.
Speaker:A lot of that's the mental stress but your body doesn't know the difference.
Speaker:And then we've got a vehicle pursuit.
Speaker:All of these stressors are operational stressors.
Speaker:The hours, the overtime, the administrative stressors, these all add
Speaker:up that if we're thinking that traumas are the only reason first responders struggle
Speaker:we are missing a big piece of that puzzle.
Speaker:We've got COVID the last couple of years, I've worked with guys where stations
Speaker:were out with COVID on quarantine and other stations had to cover for them.
Speaker:Short staffing, short staffing is happening all of the time everywhere.
Speaker:Responders are picking up doubles.
Speaker:You're doing two twelves back to back.
Speaker:EMS two 24s back to back.
Speaker:Same with fire.
Speaker:You guys are doing 48 hours.
Speaker:I was hearing of some 96 hours straight during COVID.
Speaker:And I'm pretty sure I haven't heard it recently, haven't been asking
Speaker:but I would not bet that there are some places where some people are
Speaker:still doing some 96 hours straight.
Speaker:And these are services that are busy though calls are 24 hours a day.
Speaker:Protests, fires there's unknown events that pop up all of the time.
Speaker:And it starts getting into what I call the 911 lifestyle spiral.
Speaker:We'll actually look at my husband I'm going to break down the
Speaker:trucker rally for him this year.
Speaker:He is in a specialized unit and he's in logistics.
Speaker:And he's also that EMPO, the emergency management.
Speaker:And so during the trucker rally, he worked 37 days straight.
Speaker:Now for that I do know after 29 days, he's like, holy crap look at my hours.
Speaker:He had gotten his check with the hours of his overtime.
Speaker:He had done 232 overtime hours in 29 days on top of his
Speaker:hundred and 60 regular hours.
Speaker:So think about that 160 is full-time.
Speaker:You're adding 232 hours to that in 29 days that average out to being that he had
Speaker:done 18 hour days for 37 days straight.
Speaker:The operational stress on you guys is unbelievable.
Speaker:And there's no way my husband said no way that he would have been
Speaker:able to have survived that without understanding what he needed in order
Speaker:to be recovered before he went in there.
Speaker:So he had full energy, his sleep was all restorative
Speaker:before going into those 37 days.
Speaker:Knowing what to do during that 911 shift, what to do during that operation
Speaker:to keep his body strong and handle it and then what to do when it was
Speaker:over in order to recover again.
Speaker:He said, there's no way that he would have been able to do that.
Speaker:So I'm going to ask you, has there ever been a time on the job where you worked
Speaker:overtime or an extra shift to cover for someone or put in tons of extra hours,
Speaker:prepping for a special operation or during a special operation and you got
Speaker:little to no sleep where you pushed through, and once it was done though, you
Speaker:weren't able to recover on your days off.
Speaker:When you did get into your next block of shift, you were dragging.
Speaker:Different symptoms started coming up.
Speaker:Has there ever been a time?
Speaker:I know if any of your first responders, there's no way you could be answering
Speaker:no to this because as you're going through your career and as you're
Speaker:going through your years in service, your body can only handle so much
Speaker:stress and it just becomes a cumulative and accumulative and cumulative.
Speaker:And the operational stress is really a factor when considering
Speaker:why first responders burnout.
Speaker:And you guys need more support for this, not the support of a civilian.
Speaker:You need the support of a 911 lifestyle to truly understand
Speaker:what your stress system needs.
Speaker:Which brings us to misconception number two where exercise is often thought of as
Speaker:being the best to combat stress, to combat the sleep struggles, and the exhaustion
Speaker:and the weight gain and stress management.
Speaker:But how does this make sense if you're wearing for fire a hundred
Speaker:pounds of equipment on every call.
Speaker:Officer's 25 to 40 pounds depending on what state, what country you're in.
Speaker:And EMS, it really depends on the patient that you are caring for and what you
Speaker:need to do and how you need to get them into the gurney and what you guys need if
Speaker:you're carrying that amount of equipment on you for a 12 hour, 24 hour shift.
Speaker:That is basically an endurance workout right there.
Speaker:And then every call that you go to is like a hiit workout.
Speaker:It does not matter if that calls cleared because your body sends out the calvary.
Speaker:It sends out your stress hormones to prepare for whatever
Speaker:may happen on that call.
Speaker:So just doing that, you have this endurance workout hiit workout,
Speaker:endurance workout hiit workout.
Speaker:So your body is getting that all throughout your shift.
Speaker:How is pushing it more when you've had a shift like that going to be able
Speaker:to decrease the stress when exercise also increases your stress hormones?
Speaker:Is there not some sort of a top level a point where that stress
Speaker:becomes counterproductive?
Speaker:I kind of like to think of this sometimes like a cell phone.
Speaker:And so your cell phone has a certain amount of energy in it.
Speaker:That's kind of like your body having enough energy or your stress
Speaker:system on how much it can handle.
Speaker:And so every stressor that you handle in your day, just wearing your gear,
Speaker:going to a call, even if it's cleared, look calls, dealing with admin stress,
Speaker:preparing for special operations, all of these extra things start
Speaker:wearing down your battery cells of how much stress your body can handle.
Speaker:So if your cell phone is at the bottom, if it is flashing on empty and
Speaker:you go and do a workout, which uses energy, uses your stress hormone and
Speaker:everything and that cell phone battery dies while you're doing that workout.
Speaker:How is that productive for you?
Speaker:It's not.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And if we also go one step further with this, so with, I like to think
Speaker:of your stress system as well, like a car we've got, the cell phone is
Speaker:one, and then we've got this car analogy and with the car to me healthy
Speaker:nutrition and exercise are like the gas.
Speaker:Your engine of your car is the stress system.
Speaker:So that's all your stress hormones, all of the organs and system that
Speaker:needs to be working your stress system.
Speaker:So we've got hormones, nervous system, gut all of these parts
Speaker:are a part of your stress system.
Speaker:Those are your engine.
Speaker:So if you're going to be adding this exercise and the nutrition
Speaker:and all the self-help stuff, those are like gas going into an engine.
Speaker:If your engine is strong, if your stress system is strong, then that
Speaker:healthy eating that nutrition and that exercise is going to benefit you.
Speaker:It's going to help your engine run smoother.
Speaker:But when your engine is struggling, when some parts need to be replaced,
Speaker:they need to be oil and lube or there's something going wrong in the electric
Speaker:of that car then it doesn't matter.
Speaker:What, what exercise and nutrition, what gas you're putting into it.
Speaker:The engine is not going to run optimally, so they definitely have a place.
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:But it's understanding when and why to work out in order to make sure that
Speaker:your stress system is strong to handle stress events and to be getting rid of
Speaker:stress hormones and de-stressing you.
Speaker:There's a time and a place, but it's not all of the time and the place,
Speaker:it all needs to work together.
Speaker:And this kind of goes back to me, which you'll hear more about
Speaker:in the next episode is that my background is as a personal trainer.
Speaker:And when I was in full burnout, I couldn't workout.
Speaker:I was angry at home.
Speaker:Workout and nutrition was my life.
Speaker:And every time I tried to workout the energy would decrease so much that
Speaker:I could not get through a workout.
Speaker:I couldn't figure out what the missing piece of the puzzle was.
Speaker:I was so exhausted.
Speaker:Like beyond exhausted from the moment my eyes opened and no
Speaker:amount of exercise helped me.
Speaker:I tried meditation.
Speaker:I tried all the health self-help stuff.
Speaker:None of that worked.
Speaker:If I did make progress again and if I worked out too much or I had another
Speaker:stressor, my body would just crash again.
Speaker:I was missing a big piece of that puzzle.
Speaker:And you all know somebody in your service that really works out hard.
Speaker:They're putting in the work.
Speaker:They seem like they are on top of their game mentally and
Speaker:physically for the longest time.
Speaker:And then they start getting injuries.
Speaker:Then health issues start creeping in and they, you know, sometimes have to get
Speaker:accommodations in the service because their body can't even do the job anymore.
Speaker:And this may have been somebody who was exercising and so on top of their game.
Speaker:Thing is, is that they may not have even told anybody when they were not able to
Speaker:work out anymore or they may not have even told you that this is how they're feeling.
Speaker:They're still just somebody that's pushing through their day.
Speaker:This may be you and you may be keeping it a secret.
Speaker:I know I did.
Speaker:I felt like a fraud.
Speaker:I didn't tell any of my clients that I couldn't work out.
Speaker:I was a personal trainer.
Speaker:For you guys, you telling people that you can't be getting to the
Speaker:gym and staying in shape anymore.
Speaker:You may not tell your partner that because this is a big part of your job
Speaker:is staying in shape in order to work out.
Speaker:And there are definitely guys on your platoon and your crew that are taking any
Speaker:depressants and any anxiety medicines.
Speaker:They're trying to do all the things, exercise, nutrition and whatever
Speaker:else they can think of or find to try to stay on top of their game.
Speaker:I mean, heck some of them are even personal trainers themselves,
Speaker:but they're off their game.
Speaker:Their body is not listening anymore.
Speaker:So if working out was all that you needed to stay on top of your game as
Speaker:a first responder, then shouldn't the burnout rate of first responders be
Speaker:lower since most first responders work out and really take pride and be active?
Speaker:I mean, most first responders that I speak with have an athletic sport background.
Speaker:They're very, very active in their lifestyles.
Speaker:Until they can't anymore because burnout took them out.
Speaker:And so I'm just going to go through a few symptoms with you of what I
Speaker:kind of call the rundown responder.
Speaker:It's where you're tired and wired and you can't sleep anymore.
Speaker:Waking without your battery recharged, exhausted, pushing
Speaker:through every day from the moment you wake, until you go back to bed.
Speaker:Needing coffee and energy drinks to get through shift and getting
Speaker:to the point where coffee and energy drinks only keep you stable.
Speaker:Can go from zero to a hundred, calm to anger in a second.
Speaker:Hypervigilance anxiety being on high alert.
Speaker:Can't shut it off rules your life even on your days off and at home.
Speaker:You're yelling at your kids for being kids, distancing
Speaker:themselves, to prevent it.
Speaker:Wondering if you'll have the energy and the stamina required to keep yourself
Speaker:safe and on the job and last year entire.
Speaker:Now, here's the thing, what I'm going to be showing you today.
Speaker:What we're going to be diving into now, helps get you from that point if
Speaker:you were experiencing even one of the symptoms I just mentioned or all of
Speaker:them, which no judgment here, cause I've experienced every single one.
Speaker:If you get from there to getting to where you can become an elite eternal responder.
Speaker:One who falls asleep easily stays asleep, wakes with the recharged battery,
Speaker:has energy to last your entire shift and more leftover for your family.
Speaker:Your coffee is often an enjoyment.
Speaker:When you have time, it's not a necessity that you need in order
Speaker:to even make it through shift.
Speaker:You're calm and relaxed.
Speaker:In control of when you need to be hypervigilant to keep yourself safe
Speaker:on shift and when you can flip that switch, turn it off and relax and be
Speaker:calm when you're writing your reports, when you're home with your family.
Speaker:Getting a solid sleep, waking with energy, remaining calm on any shift
Speaker:schedule because you know which tools are required to keep you that way.
Speaker:So let's dive in to why you're here, which is making sure
Speaker:that you are 911 shift ready.
Speaker:So I'm just going to for those of you that are watching us on YouTube,
Speaker:I am going to share my screen.
Speaker:What we're going to be diving into is there are three big
Speaker:pillars that are important.
Speaker:We talked about how exercise can be, but we've also talked about exercise can
Speaker:actually put you further into burnout.
Speaker:So in order to be 911 shift ready and prevent and avoid burnout, there are three
Speaker:pillars that really need to be considered.
Speaker:The one is 911 shift ready, having a strong resting system,
Speaker:and post shift recovery.
Speaker:So 911 shifts are not predictable as most civilians shifts.
Speaker:So we need to make sure that we are ready for all of the curve balls
Speaker:that are thrown at you, that you were ready for anything that happens.
Speaker:My husband did 37 days straight and he recently we just had our playoffs for
Speaker:our basketball and hockey teams here and he was in that and that was crazy hours.
Speaker:Like it was days, nights, all over the place.
Speaker:You guys have to be ready for everything that is being thrown at you.
Speaker:You have OT there's so much OT.
Speaker:You cannot be in the middle of a call and be like, "Oh, hey can
Speaker:someone else hold this host for me?"
Speaker:Or can somebody else deal with this call?
Speaker:Like you need, you can't leave.
Speaker:I was going to say something.
Speaker:I just don't, I'm going to say it's kind of off the cuff, but
Speaker:I know you guys can handle this.
Speaker:I have to be cautious.
Speaker:This is my first episode.
Speaker:So I need to be careful with what I can and cannot say here.
Speaker:But yeah, you can't in the middle of a call, just be
Speaker:saying stop beating your wife.
Speaker:I need to go home to my own family my shift's done.
Speaker:So you have to stay.
Speaker:You have to stay on a call from start to finish.
Speaker:EMS too like you need to even stay up at least where we are to stay at the hospital
Speaker:until your patient has been checked.
Speaker:Even though you're standing at the hospital lineup.
Speaker:if it's not a crisis emergency that they needed to be welded in right away.
Speaker:So you need to have all kinds of backups and be ready for this.
Speaker:You can't grab food any time of day.
Speaker:You can't just go to bed at the same time.
Speaker:You don't have regular routines and schedules.
Speaker:So we need to really be able to adapt to whichever situation is unfolding each
Speaker:and every day and every shift for you.
Speaker:So we need to make sure that you know how to regulate your sleep
Speaker:and your waking rhythms regardless of what shift you just worked.
Speaker:If it was a 24 nonstop.
Speaker:If you're doing days, nights, if you just pulled some OT and you're, you know,
Speaker:sleeping in the afternoon, when normally you go to bed at eight in the morning,
Speaker:or you have to go be up at 4:00 AM.
Speaker:So you need to go to bed early in the evening.
Speaker:You need to understand how to calm down the stress energy hormone
Speaker:and increase your sleep hormone so that your body knows when to sleep.
Speaker:And if you're adding that natural sleep hormone, all of your other
Speaker:hormones for healing and repairing, and memory and cognition and
Speaker:metabolism, all of these things start repairing while you're sleeping if
Speaker:you can get into a proper sleep.
Speaker:And these are things that depending on your shift, you need to
Speaker:understand how to be able to do that.
Speaker:You need to know how to manage different stressors, how to shut
Speaker:yourself off of stress and everything.
Speaker:So your body needs to be given certain signals, so that it can
Speaker:understand which end is up based on what happened in your shift that day.
Speaker:Now the next one that we said was there a strong resting system.
Speaker:And as we spoke about earlier with exercise, exercise
Speaker:works your stress system.
Speaker:There's not really a lot of talk about your resting system.
Speaker:Your resting system it's really, really important that they are like
Speaker:muscles and the stronger that you work them the quicker they are to react.
Speaker:So if you're constantly working that stress system through your shifts,
Speaker:through going to calls through all of the stressors that happen, admin, on call,
Speaker:all of that stressors that happen at home, your stress systems, constantly working.
Speaker:If you're never working, you're resting system then it becomes
Speaker:overpowered and you keep switching into it which gets that hypervigilance.
Speaker:And that's how you can get that anger going from zero to a hundred.
Speaker:So if you want to be able to unwind, to actually be calm at home, it's important
Speaker:to start training your resting system.
Speaker:And then we get to post shift recovery.
Speaker:Now, this is where when OT leaves you with little to no time to sleep in between
Speaker:shifts or you have court after nights, you have family commitments, kids are
Speaker:waking you up in the middle of your sleep.
Speaker:We need to be able to teach you how to get the most out of your sleep and what to do.
Speaker:We also get a lot of family guilt.
Speaker:One of the biggest transitions for first responders is when they have
Speaker:kids because as soon as you have kids, your time, isn't your own.
Speaker:So when you use to sleep switches, what kids are demanding of,
Speaker:you takes a lot of energy.
Speaker:So really understanding how to work your family into your shifts, into your life.
Speaker:So that you can get the recovery and you can get that good quality family time that
Speaker:you deserve, that your family deserves.
Speaker:It's not going to be as much as a lot of other families because it really
Speaker:depends on your shift and when they're home but making sure that we can give
Speaker:you the most quality time with them, the most energy for them and you also to
Speaker:have some time for yourself is really, really important post shift recovery.
Speaker:So having those tools and those skills to understand how to give your body
Speaker:the rest it needs in order to recover so that you're ready then for the
Speaker:next operation or call that goes out.
Speaker:Now here's the thing, if we combine being 911 shift ready with a strong resting
Speaker:system, then that means that our body knows when to sleep and awake on any
Speaker:shift schedule, we have an increased energy, our batteries recharging.
Speaker:You can control the switch to be in that stress state and when to
Speaker:turn it off and you're anchoring your short fuse decreases.
Speaker:You gain back that ability to relax when you're at home or in between calls,
Speaker:you reduce snoring, possibly sleep apnea decreases that we're going to be
Speaker:diving into in episode three snoring.
Speaker:So keep an eye out for that one.
Speaker:When you really mixed that being 911 shift ready when you're ready for
Speaker:anything that happens on shift and you have that strong resting system, then
Speaker:you don't need coffee as much anymore.
Speaker:It becomes an enjoyment.
Speaker:Your days off stressors, they don't bother you as much as they used to.
Speaker:And your workouts don't get that adrenaline rush anymore.
Speaker:Your brain is clearing and then your reports are starting to improve
Speaker:where you're able to remember details of your calls and your to
Speaker:do list starts taking you less time.
Speaker:But if you don't have that post shift recovery there then what's going to
Speaker:happen is that you're not going to be able to recover on your days off.
Speaker:So your stress system is going to start being overpowered and it's going to stop
Speaker:you from having a strong resting system.
Speaker:Your stress system is going to stay overpowered even if you're
Speaker:working your resting system.
Speaker:If you're not able to get enough recovery in enough downtime then
Speaker:you're still not going to be able to keep that stress system strong.
Speaker:And you're going to decrease as well that ability to regulate your sleep rhythms
Speaker:because you need to make sure that you're recovering better in order for your body
Speaker:to respond while you're actually on shift.
Speaker:So you'll have some good sleeps better than you do now, but you're
Speaker:still gonna have more bad ones.
Speaker:And the benefits from working on the 911 shift ready and a strong resting
Speaker:system will only last you so long.
Speaker:As soon as you get into that special operation and you push yourself too much
Speaker:and you didn't go in recovered then it's going to take you long to recover after.
Speaker:The short fuse will start rearing its head more and more, and you're
Speaker:going to get lots of ups and downs.
Speaker:You'll be okay when you don't have a lot of stress, but when a stress comes up,
Speaker:you're going to take longer to recover and it's going to become this roller coaster.
Speaker:And then if we start mixing that strong resting system with post shift
Speaker:recovery, then we're able to switch on and off that stress and resting system.
Speaker:You start becoming more engaged with your kids and your spouse.
Speaker:You might be ready for like day one on shift.
Speaker:You might be actually recovered enough to handle day one of shift.
Speaker:You're going to be calm a little bit.
Speaker:You can start actually controlling the anger a little bit.
Speaker:So when it starts rearing its head, you're going to have some of those
Speaker:skills to be able to pull that back.
Speaker:You'll be less hypervigilant and anxious at home and you'll be less irritated.
Speaker:That's when you've been working on both strengthening your resting system and
Speaker:working on your post shift recovery tools.
Speaker:But if you miss out on this 911 shift ready while you're working on the strong
Speaker:resting system and your post shift recovery then your sleep is going to
Speaker:stay off track, which is going to reduce your ability to recover on your days off.
Speaker:They're going to struggle to fall asleep and your battery will not
Speaker:charge enough while you sleep.
Speaker:You're going to get back on coffee to make it through your shifts and you're going to
Speaker:be less able to handle smaller stressors.
Speaker:And your short fuse is going to rear more.
Speaker:You're going to be able to still engage with your family more like
Speaker:we mentioned, but you're going to be tired while you're doing it.
Speaker:You're not going to be giving them the full you.
Speaker:And by the end of your block of shifts, if not earlier, as I said, you'll be
Speaker:ready probably for day one of shift and then it depends on how your shifts go.
Speaker:What stressors are thrown your way will depend on how long that's going to last.
Speaker:You most likely will not have recovered enough to last your entire shift if you're
Speaker:not supporting yourself during your shift.
Speaker:If we actually look at being 911 shift ready, so having the tools while
Speaker:you're on shift to keep your stress system strong and your post-shift
Speaker:recovery, you're going to feel like you've recovered on your days off.
Speaker:You will be more engaged with your family energy-wise.
Speaker:Your sleeps are improving.
Speaker:They're not the best, but they are improving.
Speaker:And you're waking with your battery charged more often, and
Speaker:you're going to need less coffee required to get through your shift.
Speaker:But if you miss out on that strong resting system, And you only focus on being 911
Speaker:shift ready on those tools and the tools to recover post shift, then snoring, sleep
Speaker:apnea are going to increase, which is going to mess up your sleep even though
Speaker:you're able to probably fall asleep.
Speaker:It's going to mess up your sleep quality.
Speaker:So you're healing, repairing, and remembering things, your hypervigilance
Speaker:and anxiety won't be able to shut off so while you'll have more energy for your
Speaker:family, you're probably still going to get short fused with them and you're not
Speaker:going to able to fully relax and small stressors will start affecting you more.
Speaker:Your waking energy is going to be up and down.
Speaker:It will be worse near the end of a block of shifts.
Speaker:So you'll might start waking okay on a block of shifts, but you'll
Speaker:find that as more and more stressors continue, you're going to start waking
Speaker:up more exhausted if you are not working your strong resting system.
Speaker:So as you can see these all work together, if you're missing one
Speaker:then you're throwing things off.
Speaker:And with that, this is where we go, where we start to work out and then
Speaker:you get hit cause you might actually workout because your reserves are okay
Speaker:but then other stressors hit you and you workout and you can't handle it.
Speaker:So understanding that you need to have these tools to make sure that your body
Speaker:can handle the stressors of your shifts.
Speaker:Making sure that your resting system is strong so that you can switch in and
Speaker:out of that stress and resting state.
Speaker:And to make sure that you are using the proper tools to recover, to get the most
Speaker:recovery on shift while still also being able to get that time with your family.
Speaker:So it's really, really important to make sure that you are getting all three.
Speaker:So I'm going to ask you, which one's missing for you?
Speaker:Are you doing everything that you need to be 911 shift ready?
Speaker:So are you feeling like you can last your block of shifts?
Speaker:Are you able to recover?
Speaker:How's your post shift recovery?
Speaker:And how is your resting system?
Speaker:Are you able to shift in and out of that, like stressed state
Speaker:and not be like hypervigilant.
Speaker:Where are you?
Speaker:Which one is missing for you guys?
Speaker:So my goal is really to teach you one at a time when I just went through with you.
Speaker:This is what I've been teaching since 2018 in my 911 Elite Performance Program to
Speaker:really be able to teach you how to get out of burnout and if you have these skills,
Speaker:you can take them back to your service because they are missing these skills.
Speaker:They may have one or two of these pillars, but they're usually
Speaker:missing pieces from all three.
Speaker:I'll be honest with you it's rare that I see a service that actually
Speaker:is covering fully what is needed.
Speaker:From even one of the pillars and you need all three of these pillars.
Speaker:So if I can teach you, then you can go back and you can teach your colleagues.
Speaker:And with your new found energy, you can then become a leader.
Speaker:And as you're moving up the ladder, as you're getting promotions, and we
Speaker:see guys getting promotions after they don't have the burnout, when they can
Speaker:think they can study for their exams.
Speaker:And they're really implementing the skills to be able to really leading a team,
Speaker:we're seeing a lot getting promoted.
Speaker:And once they make those promotions, they're able to teach those
Speaker:skills to their team under them.
Speaker:And they know what signs to be looking for in their guys as well, when anything
Speaker:is off and they know where to step in before it becomes noticeable to everyone.
Speaker:And then they're also able to know what's happening from above and
Speaker:they're able to start making some internal changes that help everyone.
Speaker:So it's that big compound effect.
Speaker:And that is truly my goal with this podcast is to give you the skills and
Speaker:the tools and any of you that do join my 911 Elite Performance Program.
Speaker:It is in order to give you enough tools, enough skills to bring back to your
Speaker:service so that you can then impact more people than just me impacting you.
Speaker:I don't know actually many of you listen to Jocko Willink, but there's a quote from
Speaker:him where "Everyone wants some magic pill, some life hack that eliminates the need
Speaker:to do the work, but that does not exist."
Speaker:And hopefully you see that from what we just went over with having being 911 shift
Speaker:ready having that strong resting system and a really solid post recovery strategy.
Speaker:First responders are burning out at an alarming rate.
Speaker:For most of you this is your calling and you couldn't imagine doing
Speaker:anything else but your body is questioning if you have what it takes
Speaker:for the last year entire career.
Speaker:There isn't a magic pill.
Speaker:It really is about learning how to work with the operational
Speaker:stressors of your job.
Speaker:Make sure that your stress system is ready for all that your job
Speaker:throws at you and knowing how to recover when it hits you hard.
Speaker:It is time to stop the old way of preparing for the job and start training
Speaker:so that you can be 911 shift ready, have a strong resting system, and
Speaker:have post shift recovery tools that work for you and modern day stressors.