Subtitles section Play video
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[WHOOSH]
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[MUSIC PLAYING]
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INTERVIEWER: Why did you want to become a firefighter?
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SUBJECT: I wanted to become a firefighter because I
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saw these guys as superheroes.
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I saw these guys as bigger than life.
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And it wasn't until I got into the job
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that I realized that we are just human.
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I've seen more in one day than probably someone
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has seen in their whole life.
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INTERVIEWER: What kind of things do you see?
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SUBJECT: I see faces of death.
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I see old people, young people, kids.
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There are images that are hard to erase.
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And it doesn't hit me until I get home
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that I can't fix someone's death.
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I can't fix someone who is broken.
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I can't fix these things in my head that
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make me feel like I'm crazy.
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Who talks about that?
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The only time you see a firefighter crying
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is when one of their coworkers die.
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OK.
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INTERVIEWER: Can you tell me about one
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of those times when you weren't able to save someone?
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SUBJECT: I went on a call where the young girl in her early 20s
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was partying on top of an apartment building.
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And she fell and tumbled and hit the sides of the walls
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and was killed.
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But she still had signs of a little bit of life in her.
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And I was the person doing compressions on her,
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but I didn't realize later on that this event was going
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to send me into a tailspin.
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Some of these calls just mess you up.
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And this call messed me up.
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I wanted to start drinking so I'd
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mask these feelings and these emotions.
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And it didn't help.
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I would use prescription pills only because I just
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wanted to get numb.
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INTERVIEWER: You were diagnosed with post traumatic stress
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injury-- PTSI.
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Can you tell me about that?
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SUBJECT: I'm healing from my injuries.
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I'm not going to be completely healed,
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because I just went on a call last week that messed me up.
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But I get through them quicker because I'm not drinking.
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I'm eating cleaner and stair-climbing.
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INTERVIEWER: Tell me how you go from using alcohol
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as a means of escape to climbing stairs as a new ritual.
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SUBJECT: Using drugs and alcohol you get high.
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Doing stairs I get high.
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I try to get in 10,000 steps a day.
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And mentally, it's a great escape,
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because you're able to really get out of yourself.
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I've begun to realize that I'm trying to control things
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that I have no control over.
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I'm trying to control death.
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You can't control death.
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So I focus on trying not to think.
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I focus on just trying to get myself upstairs the stairs.
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And I just focus on just being positive.
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I started organizing my coworkers
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to join in and do this climb as a tribute
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to the guys that were killed in 9/11.
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So now we start wearing gear.
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We start wearing our bunker pants and our firefighting
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boots, and we wear our helmets.
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And you get to a point where you just want to quit.
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And then I think about the people who cannot do this--
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the people who aren't here anymore, you know.
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The stairs are a metaphor to life.
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Just one step at a time.
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All that excitement, energy, sweat,
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tears is contained until you get all the way up to the top
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where you just like explode and just feel like the sky
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open up to a feeling that everyone should experience.
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And I think that a lot of people think
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that they can find that in a pill
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or at the bottom of a glass.
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They don't have go there.
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And then when you're able to really get
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that big breath of fresh air, you're breathing in life.
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It's amazing.
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INTERVIEWER: Next on Seeker Stories,
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the ritual I developed while captive in North Korea.
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Click now to watch.
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It was the scariest time of my life.
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I was isolated in what is perhaps
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the most isolated country in the world.
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But there was something that I began
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to do that helped me get through each day.
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And it was a very simple act.
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Rituals is a part of Seeker Stories.
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If you'd like to continue to see more
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stories from around the world, we need you to subscribe.
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[WHIR NOISE]