Well, after 6 days, my internet connection has finally been restored. For the 3rd time...we shall see how long it lasts this time.
I went swimming Tuesday night and for the first time in my life, I think I have swimmer's ear. I bought some "swim-ear" drops and can't use them (they made my ear burn and reduced me to tears). I've already tried home remedies like sleeping on that side with a heat pack under my ear....no relief. I may just be feeling whiny, but I can barely hear out of my left ear, and my balance sucks.
Work is still just as frustrating as ever. My captain is still a very annoying pain in my ass. Me and a friend put in paperwork to swap station assignments. No news on if or when the swap will be honored.
I've been considering a certain swap for a couple months now, but recently decided to act on my decision. When I first decided I wanted to work in public safety, I was unsure about going Fire/EMS or Police. During my car accident a few years ago, I dealt mainly with Fire/EMS due to my injuries. After the accident, I decided to go to the fire side...A choice I'm starting to regret.
I tried to step back and take an unbiased look at the pros and cons of each side...
Fire/EMS : Police
24 hours on, 48 hours off : 4-10 hour days, 3 days off
Possibility of being sent anywhere county-wide at a moments notice : Always working at assigned precinct
Constant need to request training : Training scheduled regularly
Training off-duty with no pay : In-service training on-duty with pay
Assigned from training directly into operations : Assigned into operations with an FTO for a few weeks
Fire Stations, Fire Marshall, Arson, TRT, K-9 S&R, Haz-Mat, Airport Crash, Forrestry, Bike Team, SWAT Medics (Medic only) : Uniform Patrol, Detective, Arson, SWAT, STAR Team, Motorcycle Patrol, Park Patrol, Bomb Squad, K-9, Air Support, Property/Evidence Unit, Major Crimes, Communications (911), Homeland Security, Code Enforcement, Animal Control
Limited personal protection (pocket knife, medical jump bags, tools from fire truck) : Greater level of protection (Bullet-proof vest, pocket knife, ASP baton, OC spray, Beretta 9mm, possible backup sidearm, tactital hand-to-hand training)
Usually welcomed by all in emergency situations : Welcomed by some in emergency situations
I'm sure I could continue my list, but I'm going to stop here. I'm not giving up on being a good Firefighter/EMT...I plan to work as a volunteer on some of my off-days to keep all of my certifications up. I'm just tired of spending day 1 at work, day 2 recovering/sleeping, and day 3 getting ready to do it all over again.
Over & Out until then.....Be Safe