Fire, EMS, police. You run toward what others run from. You also need somewhere to put it.
The calls you cannot talk about at dinner.
The reality
What this job actually costs.
The culture of silence
Asking for help is still seen as weakness in most firehouses and precincts. Peers notice changes but rarely speak up.
Cumulative exposure
Not one call. Thousands. The toll is cumulative and invisible until it is catastrophic.
EAPs that nobody trusts
Employee assistance programs exist. Almost nobody uses them. Fear of the union, the record, the promotion.
How Daylogue fits
A rhythm shaped around your day.
Daylogue lives outside the department record. Private, end-to-end. A post-shift voice note to a non-judgmental ear. Chiefs see anonymous unit-level trends, not individual reports.
What Daylogue might ask you
Questions that actually meet the day.
Is there a call you are still replaying?
How is your sleep since the last rough shift?
What do your people at home not know about this week?
What leaders see
Signal, never surveillance.
Chiefs and peer support teams see unit-level sentiment trends. No individual identification. Just enough signal to act at the cultural level.
Frequently asked questions
Questions about Daylogue for First Responders.
Daylogue is a self-awareness tool. It is not a replacement for professional mental health care.
