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On this episode of Five After Midnight, host and Firefighter Nation Editor in Chief Stephanie White and her husband, Billy Hux, deliver a raw, personal, and honest conversation about mental health in the fire service. Hux recounts a traumatic 1999 call in Virginia—the death of a colleague, a botched immediate debrief, and its long-term effects on careers and relationships. The two examine the challenges of critical incident stress management (CISM) and peer support. They also make a case for simpler, human-first responses. They explore how small, unglamorous acts build trust, why the right peer-support leader matters, and how sensory triggers can reopen memories years after the fact.
By firefighternationpodcastnetwork3.7
33 ratings
On this episode of Five After Midnight, host and Firefighter Nation Editor in Chief Stephanie White and her husband, Billy Hux, deliver a raw, personal, and honest conversation about mental health in the fire service. Hux recounts a traumatic 1999 call in Virginia—the death of a colleague, a botched immediate debrief, and its long-term effects on careers and relationships. The two examine the challenges of critical incident stress management (CISM) and peer support. They also make a case for simpler, human-first responses. They explore how small, unglamorous acts build trust, why the right peer-support leader matters, and how sensory triggers can reopen memories years after the fact.

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