American Firehouse

American Firehouse Committed to creating original Firefighter content since 2009.

Long story short, we're just Volunteers helping Volunteers creating Firefighter content and posting it.

05/27/2026

The Heart of the Volunteer Podcast will return next week for another run of 10 episodes. Stay tuned... đźš’

05/25/2026
05/20/2026

“Volunteer firefighters are heroes. That’s it. That’s the end of the sentence.”

When New York Jets defensive lineman Harrison Phillips said that during our conversation, it hit hard. Because this interview wasn’t really about football.

It was about service. Purpose. Faith. Community. And the kind of people who keep showing up, not because they have to, but because something inside them won’t let them look away.

At one point, Harrison said something else that stuck with me: “Paul, I don’t feel like I’m doing enough.”

That’s coming from a man who plays in the NFL, runs Harrison's Playmakers, serves kids and families across multiple states, and continues to use his platform to lift others up. And yet, that feeling is something so many volunteers understand. The feeling that there is always more to do. More people to reach. More good to put into the world.

That is the heart of the volunteer.

Whether it’s on a football field, at a Playmakers camp, in a firehouse, or in the middle of the night when the tones drop, this conversation is a reminder that service still matters. And the people willing to give their time still change lives.

Our full interview with Harrison Phillips is out now on The Heart of the Volunteer.

Available now on Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeartRadio, and YouTube.

There is a side of EMS most people never see.They see the ambulance roll by. They see the lights bounce off the houses. ...
05/19/2026

There is a side of EMS most people never see.

They see the ambulance roll by. They see the lights bounce off the houses. They hear the siren for a few seconds, then the night gets quiet again.

But inside that rig, someone’s whole world may be coming apart. A father who can’t catch his breath. A mother clutching her chest. A child burning up with fever. A teenager wrapped around a steering wheel. A husband holding his wife’s hand, looking at the people in uniform like they might have the answer to the worst question he has ever had to ask.

And then there are the ones in the back of that rig.

The EMT. The paramedic. The firefighter who crossed over into medical because helping people once the fire was out still wasn’t enough.

They climb into that small space with a stranger and become the calm in the middle of everything breaking loose. They read the monitor. They listen to lung sounds. They start the IV. They give the medication. They manage the airway. They watch the clock. They talk to each other. They talk to the patient. They talk to the family. They make decisions that matter while the road is moving underneath them and someone’s life is sitting right there in their hands.

That's not just a ride to the hospital. That's responsibility.

And for a lot of them, it doesn’t even come with the kind of paycheck people would expect for that kind of weight. For some, it comes with no paycheck at all. Just a pager on the nightstand. A radio in the kitchen. A family that knows dinner might get cold and bedtime might happen without them.

So why do they do it? That’s the part that’s hard to explain.

Maybe somewhere along the way, they were the one who needed saving. Maybe they watched someone else step up, and it changed them. Maybe they found purpose in a place where most people only see pain.

Maybe they learned that redemption does not always come in church pews or clean endings. Sometimes it comes in the back of a rescue unit at 2 in the morning, when nobody knows your name, nobody sees what you did, and you still give everything you have because someone needed you.

EMS is not soft work. It will test your mind. It will test your heart. It will test your patience, your faith, your sleep, your family, and sometimes your ability to keep walking back through the door. But they do. They keep showing up.

For the chest pain call. For the rollover. For the lift assist. For the overdose. For the stroke. For the cardiac arrest. For the person who’s scared, hurting, embarrassed, angry, confused, or alone.

They show up because deep down, they know something most people never have to think about. When life turns cruel without warning, somebody has to be willing to meet it head-on.

This EMS Week, we honor the people who do exactly that. The paid crews. The volunteers. The EMTs. The paramedics. The firefighters who carry both sets of gear and both kinds of burden.

You are more than transportation. You are more than a uniform. You are more than the few minutes people see from the outside.

You are the calm voice in the worst moment. You are the hands that start hope moving again. You are the reason someone gets another chance.

And that matters more than most people will ever know!

-PJ Cummings

05/19/2026

Some people walk into the firehouse because they’ve dreamed about it their whole life. Becca Sikorski didn’t.

She’ll be the first to tell you she joined for the wrong reasons. But what happened after that is the part that matters.

Over the past two and a half years, Becca found something she never expected to find. Confidence. Purpose. Family. A place where people pushed her, supported her, challenged her, and helped her become capable of things she once never thought she could do.

In this episode of The Heart of the Volunteer, we talk about what it means to be part of a combination department, what it feels like to step into the fire service as a woman, the importance of mentorship, and why the firehouse can become so much more than a building.

But the heart of this conversation came back to one simple truth.

“You make time… and you make time for other people’s lives, because it’s important. Our community is important.”

That line says a lot. Because this isn’t really about having extra time. It’s about what we choose to make time for. It’s about showing up for our neighbors, investing in something bigger than ourselves, and understanding that community only works when people are willing to be part of it.

Season 1, Episode 9, “You Make Time,” featuring Becca Sikorski, is out now.

Available on Spotify, YouTube, Amazon Music, and iHeartRadio.

05/18/2026

This week's podcast schedule will be Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. We have some great guests lined up, so refresh your podcast feeds tomorrow and be sure to listen in!

05/15/2026

Today’s episode is one I really hope people take the time to listen to.

I sat down with Chad Fraser, Chief of the Hemlock Fire Department, for a conversation that is about much more than one firehouse. Hemlock is facing the end of its fire district as they’ve known it, not because the need went away, but because there simply aren’t enough volunteers left to keep carrying the load.

For Chad, this is deeply personal. His own family lost their home to a fire years ago, and the way local firefighters showed up for them is what pulled him into the fire service. He took one of the worst days of his life and turned it into 15 years of answering the call for other people. Now he’s helping his department face a reality no chief ever wants to face.

This episode is not about blame. It’s not about pointing fingers at one town or one generation. It’s about what happens when communities change, when fewer people walk through the door, and when the same small group is expected to keep showing up over and over again. Hemlock is not alone. Their story is a warning for every small town protected by volunteers.

If you have a firehouse in your community, don’t assume it will always be there just because it always has been. It exists because someone is still willing to answer.

The new episode of The Heart of the Volunteer, “Facing the End,” is out today with Chad Fraser of the Hemlock Fire Department.

Available now on Spotify, iHeartRadio, Amazon Music, and YouTube.

05/14/2026

Brian Gay serves with the Reader Volunteer Fire Department in West Virginia. His town has roughly 350 people. His fire department has three members.

And sometimes, when the tones drop, Brian is getting on the truck alone.

Unfortunately it's not uncommon, and it's a reality in more places than most people realize. This episode is not just about one small town or one struggling department. It's about what happens when the volunteer fire service gets stretched too thin, and the people left standing are still trying to hold the line for their communities.

Brian speaks honestly about the weight of that responsibility, the fear of what could happen if more people don't step up, and the personal reasons he continues to answer the call.

His episode of The Heart of the Volunteer is live today on Spotify, Amazon, iHeartRadio, and YouTube.

The question is not whether the firehouse has a truck.

The question is whether someone is there to answer...

05/13/2026

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The Reason He StayedHe didn’t know what he was looking for when he first walked in. Most people don’t.They call it servi...
05/13/2026

The Reason He Stayed

He didn’t know what he was looking for when he first walked in. Most people don’t.

They call it service because that’s the word everyone understands. It sounds clean. Respectable. Easy to explain. But sometimes the truth is messier than that. Sometimes a person walks into a firehouse because something in their own life feels unfinished.

Maybe they’re trying to prove something. Maybe they’re trying to become someone. Maybe they’re tired of feeling ordinary. Maybe they’ve spent years carrying things they never knew how to say out loud, and for the first time, they find a room full of people who don’t ask them to explain all of it. They just hand them a job.

“Hold this. Pull that. Watch your back. Trust me. I’ve got you.”

And somehow, in the middle of all that noise and pressure and imperfection, something inside them starts to settle. Not because the fire service fixes everything. It doesn’t. It won’t save a marriage by itself. It won’t erase grief. It won’t make a hard childhood disappear. It won’t quiet every doubt or make a person feel whole overnight. But it gives the pain somewhere useful to go.

That’s the part people miss. There are men and women in firehouses all over this country who have carried disappointment, failure, loss, anger, loneliness, and fear into that building. They have sat through meetings with things on their mind nobody else could see. They have laughed with the crew while quietly wondering if they were falling apart. They have answered calls while fighting battles of their own.

And still, they showed up for someone else. That's not a small thing.

There is something powerful about being needed when you don’t feel like you have much left. There is something sacred about becoming steady for someone else when your own life feels anything but steady.

Some people find their faith in a church pew. Some find it in a quiet room. Some find it years later, standing beside people who would never let them carry the weight alone. And maybe that is why they stay. Not because every call is dramatic. Not because every night feels meaningful. Not because anyone says thank you often enough.

They stay because service gives shape to the parts of them they thought were broken. It teaches them that courage is not always loud. That purpose is not always obvious. That family is not always blood. That healing does not always happen by stepping away from hard things. Sometimes it happens by walking straight into them with people beside you.

And over time, the reason changes. What started as curiosity becomes responsibility. What started as wanting to belong becomes being counted on. What started as a way to prove yourself becomes a way to give yourself away.

That’s the why! It is not one moment. It is not one call. It is not one story.

It is the slow realization that your life is bigger when it is connected to someone else’s need. It’s knowing that even on the days you question everything, there is still a place where your presence matters. A place where your hands can help. Your voice can calm. Your strength can lift. Your name can mean something to people who may never know the full story of what it cost you to be there.

That is why they continue to serve. Because somewhere along the way, they stopped asking, “What am I getting out of this?” And started understanding the better question...

“Who would I be without it?” 🚒

-PJ Cummings

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Rochester, NY

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