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Dispatched & Dysfunctional – Because sometimes the worst calls make the best stories.
Welcome to Dispatched & Dysfunctional — where the darkest moments become stories of resilience. These aren’t polished hero tales. They’re the raw, unfiltered truths of EMS: the calls that scar, the ones that save, and the ones we carry forever.
🚑 Toe pain at 3 a.m.? Another chest pain repeat? You know the ones. The regulars. The patients we sigh about as we climb into the rig. The ones we roll our eyes at — until the day they’re gone.
This episode isn’t about blood and trauma. It’s about the calls we almost didn’t care about — and the ones that still haunt us years later. A woman who laughed so hard we made her piss herself. Another we found too late, phone still clutched in her hand.
And it’s about us — the medics, firefighters, and officers who stop seeing people. Who get hardened. Bitter. Burned out. The ones who let compassion slip away because we think we don’t need it anymore.
But this job has a way of teaching you the hard truth: compassion doesn’t cost you a damn thing. And losing it? That costs everything.
⚠️ CONTENT WARNING: Graphic EMS content, death, mental health, and dark humor. Listener discretion advised.
Why It Matters:
🧠 Need support?
💬 “I’d rather hear your story than read your eulogy.”
📬 Want to share your story?
By Chris StocktonDispatched & Dysfunctional – Because sometimes the worst calls make the best stories.
Welcome to Dispatched & Dysfunctional — where the darkest moments become stories of resilience. These aren’t polished hero tales. They’re the raw, unfiltered truths of EMS: the calls that scar, the ones that save, and the ones we carry forever.
🚑 Toe pain at 3 a.m.? Another chest pain repeat? You know the ones. The regulars. The patients we sigh about as we climb into the rig. The ones we roll our eyes at — until the day they’re gone.
This episode isn’t about blood and trauma. It’s about the calls we almost didn’t care about — and the ones that still haunt us years later. A woman who laughed so hard we made her piss herself. Another we found too late, phone still clutched in her hand.
And it’s about us — the medics, firefighters, and officers who stop seeing people. Who get hardened. Bitter. Burned out. The ones who let compassion slip away because we think we don’t need it anymore.
But this job has a way of teaching you the hard truth: compassion doesn’t cost you a damn thing. And losing it? That costs everything.
⚠️ CONTENT WARNING: Graphic EMS content, death, mental health, and dark humor. Listener discretion advised.
Why It Matters:
🧠 Need support?
💬 “I’d rather hear your story than read your eulogy.”
📬 Want to share your story?