The Help Is There. They Just Won't Ask For It. | 1st Moment Thoughts
1st Moment Thoughts

The Help Is There.
They Just Won't Ask For It.

The EAP exists, the awareness campaign ran, the posters are up. And yet nobody calls. Here's why that's not a failure of your people — it's a failure of the system.

A department chief shared this with us

"Our department has seen too many good people leave the field — or worse — because of accumulated stress and trauma. We have an EAP, but nobody uses it."

— Fire Chief

I've heard some version of that sentence more times than I can count. And every time, there's this mix of genuine frustration and real sadness behind it. These are leaders who actually care. They put the program in place. They sent the emails. They hung the posters.

And still — nobody calls.

Here's what I want you to hear: that's not your people failing you. That's the system failing them.


Let's be honest about what we're actually asking them to do.

A standard EAP says: call this number during business hours, navigate the phone menu, wait two or three weeks for an available appointment, and then open up to a stranger who has probably never worked a structure fire, never made a life-or-death call in three seconds, and never had to go back to work the next day like nothing happened.

Meanwhile, real life looks like this. A paramedic crew just worked a pediatric cardiac arrest at 2 AM. A firefighter responded to a fatal crash on Christmas morning. An officer wrapped up a case involving a child. They clock out, drive home, and sit with it.

The need to talk to someone doesn't politely wait for Tuesday's appointment slot. It shows up at 11 PM on a Wednesday when the house is quiet and there's nowhere to put it.

By the time the appointment finally rolls around, they've either stuffed it down or it's become a crisis. Neither one is the outcome anyone was hoping for.


Even if the timing were perfect, most of them still wouldn't call.

Because there are three things standing in the way that no awareness campaign has ever solved.

🪨
The Culture
These are people trained to handle what nobody else can. Asking for help feels like saying out loud: I can't handle this. Nobody wants to be that person in front of their crew.
📂
The Career Fear
Will this end up in my file? Will it affect my fitness-for-duty status? True or not, that fear alone is enough to stop most people from ever picking up the phone.
🗣️
The Language Gap
They need someone who actually gets it — the dark humor, the chain of command, and what it's like to see the things they see and then show up again tomorrow.

You can't poster your way past those three things. You have to build something different.


So what does "different" actually look like?

It's simpler than you might think. It comes down to being available the moment someone needs it — not the moment the calendar allows.

Pick up the phone right now — not in three weeks
When someone has a rough call, they should be able to reach a master's-level clinician who understands trauma. That same night. Not scheduled. Now.
🔒
Nothing goes in the file. Full stop.
The conversation stays between the responder and a third-party clinician. No supervisor reports, no department documentation, no flags. If people don't trust that, they won't call.
🤝
Someone who actually speaks the language
Not someone reading from a textbook. Someone who understands shift work, black humor, and what it costs to carry public safety on your back every single day.
🕐
3 AM on a Sunday counts too
Because that's when the calls come. Support has to be available when the need shows up — not when it's convenient for the system.

One more thing people don't talk about enough — the family.

This part matters more than most people realize

The family is carrying this too.

The spouse who lies awake until they hear the key in the door. The kids who know something is wrong but can't name it. The partner who has learned not to ask about certain shifts because of what comes back.

They need support just as much — and they deserve the same immediate, confidential access. Whether it's a spouse who needs to talk, a teenager struggling with a parent's PTSD, or a kid trying to understand why mom missed another game — that support should be a phone call away, any time.

A first responder with a strong home is a better first responder. It's not a nice-to-have. It's part of the job.

If your department's mental health support isn't being used, please don't read that as apathy. Your people are not indifferent to their own wellbeing. They're navigating a culture, a fear, and a system that was never built for them in the first place.

The job is hard enough.
Getting help shouldn't be.

Built for how first responders actually work

Learn About Responders 1st Moment™

Immediate, confidential behavioral health support built specifically for first responders and their families — available 24/7, with no appointments and no paper trail.

Learn More →