Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Hi. This is episode three, episode three of the podcast Jaden Wold podcast.
[00:00:07] And I'm at the boarding school right now. So we're gonna see how this works, figure out this is going to be good or not, whatever, but episode three.
[00:00:17] So for today I got some input from some friends. Oh, from my friend's family. So my friend's mom.
[00:00:27] So got some input and idea for an episode and I really liked it a lot. So tell another story today then hopefully one of these next times we'll get a interview going or just like a, like a group whatever it is like a feature featuring someone else. Probably someone, maybe someone here at the dorm or just somebody, I don't know.
[00:00:49] So today just gonna tell a little story.
[00:00:52] I don't know, we'll see. Try to hit 15 minute mark on this one. But yeah.
[00:00:58] So this is a story. This is kind of a more brutal story in a way.
[00:01:05] Not. It's not like anything crazy. I mean it's kind of crazy, but nothing that needs to be like sensitive about or whatever.
[00:01:13] So my mom, she's a paramedic. She does a lot of crazy things. She's pretty cool.
[00:01:19] She. Yeah, no, she's amazing. She works really, really hard and they, my mom, my friend's parent or whatever gave, gave me an idea to do something like tell one of her crazy stories, something like that. It's like, whoa, okay, that's a really good idea. So my mom, she's a paramedic and she gets all sorts of crazy calls and all sorts of absurd whack, messed up stuff.
[00:01:44] And she works a lot, like, I was kind of trying to say she works a lot. Like I'm Talking over, over 120 hours in a week. 120 hours in a week. Like she's, she's insane.
[00:01:56] So she works really hard and she gets all these crazy calls.
[00:02:00] So this one call, she, she worked or works Oklahoma City or whatever. She worked. And so she pulls up on scene. All right, so she's paramedic in the ambulance. She doesn't drive the ambulance anymore. That's the EMT's job. But she's either in the back or up front, I guess, I don't know, something like that. And she's the one who helps the patient in the back on the way to the hospital once they pick up the patient or whatever or just taking someone, I don't know. So they get on scene.
[00:02:32] And from what I was understanding, it was a 30 year old woman and she was just going crazy about her boyfriend who was down down on the floor and just seizing or something along those lines. He was just, he was an overdose, not seizing. He was an overdose. And the girl, or yeah, the girlfriend, three year old woman, was just.
[00:03:03] I mean, obviously if your boyfriend's overdose, you might be a little bit crazy, but. But she's just going at it or whatever. She's like, she's telling him like, do cpr. Do cpr. Come on, do cpr.
[00:03:16] And she just needed something.
[00:03:19] Like, not something, she needed her boyfriend to be okay, which is valid. So she's telling my mom, even like, I don't know if telling my mom what to do is going to be very useful, but she's telling her do cpr.
[00:03:31] And my mom's like, no, she does not need that. Like she knows what she's doing or like my mom knows what she's doing. She does not need that. She's an overdose. That's not going to help.
[00:03:39] Needs airway or oxygen or whatever and just needs Narcan. So my mom's doing that or whatever. And by the sounds of it, this woman, she pulls out a machete just out of nowhere. I don't even understand, I think quote ass crack and pulled out a machete, which I can imagine my mom is like, okay, okay, what are we doing? Why are we like, yo, what are we doing?
[00:04:05] So she pulls out the machete and she comes on my mom. She's going on my mom with it or starting to at least starts walking or running. I don't know, I'd imagine running towards my mom with her machete because she's crazy, her boyfriend's in trouble and she's like, gotta help.
[00:04:22] I don't know. I don't know what's going through her mind. I don't think attacking anybody with machete is a valid reason for anything. But here we are. So she's coming out, my mom, and my mom just takes off, like just runs. Which is valid when someone's coming at you with a machete and my mom's just making a run for it. I don't know how far she ran, but she's making a run for it. And she like gets away, I'm assuming. I don't know. That's kind of what I understood from the story.
[00:04:52] And it's just. To me, this isn't like, that's insane.
[00:04:57] I don't know people who are listening, but I've me personally, I mean, I'm only 15, but I never had a machete pulled on me. I'm sure there's 15 year olds who have, but already know that's a scary experience within itself. And my mom's trying to help, trying to help the boyfriend. She knows what she's doing. This girl, this woman obviously does not know what she's doing.
[00:05:18] Obviously she does it when she's pulling out a machete on the person who's the only chance of your boyfriend living.
[00:05:23] So just comes at my mom with a machete and yeah, that's just. All of that's insane to me. It's like absurd. I don't even like, it's crazy. This stuff happens and worse stuff happens than that.
[00:05:39] And I know my mom has had worse stuff or whatever, but this is the one she wanted to little mini story that she wanted to share or at least tell me about.
[00:05:50] And that's just like, I can't imagine. It's really scary. I bet.
[00:05:55] And the fact my mom is just trying to save the boyfriend, it's like, dude.
[00:06:01] But that's kind of a little short story. We're only at 16 minutes here, so I think I just wanted to, I don't know, just to talk for a second here. Just.
[00:06:11] My mom, she's genuinely amazing person.
[00:06:17] Like I don't care. She's not necessarily as religious anymore. She's the coolest, like genuine person of all time. Like I don't, I don't even know. I don't know. I low key. I kind of lost my train of thought.
[00:06:33] She's the person I admire the most in life out of anybody ever and probably will ever.
[00:06:39] She's like, respect. She's the definition of hard work. And just in general, I told you about the hours she works and she's. Yeah, I just admire her so much.
[00:06:52] To me, I don't. I'm not really trying to work 120 hours plus a week. That's crazy to me. I mean, pays the bills, I guess. And she loves the adrenaline and parts of it and she loves her work, but that's so much under high intense, high stress situations and it's just crazy to me. I respect her so much for it.
[00:07:13] So like I, I told.
[00:07:16] I think maybe. I think it might have been the first episode that I'm interested in firefighting and that sounds like a cool career idea to me. And I mean I'd be doing the same type of thing.
[00:07:28] Like I'd be doing that. And that's scary, I guess. I mean scary, but kind of cool.
[00:07:37] Like I want. I'm excited almost. I don't even know how I'd do 100% I don't even know if this ride along thing is gonna work. It's like a potential idea that my mom talked about with just something. I don't know, but she has like friends and places or whatever. And to me it's just a.
[00:07:57] I don't know, I'm curious, excited, interested, all the things. But I mean, it is scary. It's like, it's the work. Like the stuff I'd be doing is not necessarily all the medical side. I mean medical stuff too, because what we're first before the ambulance gets there or whatever. I mean, obviously police. If it's like a shooting. I don't actually know how the entire thing works. I could be wrong. But I think it's something along the lines of that. That makes sense kind of.
[00:08:20] And like I gotta understand some medical stuff and I probably get my EMT first or whatever. I think that's what she was kind of saying if I want to go that route.
[00:08:28] And it's just, I don't know, it's crazy. Scary, tense, kind of sick, cool. All the, all the emotions, feelings, all that everything.
[00:08:40] And I don't know, it kind of sounds like something I'd be interested in doing.
[00:08:45] I want to. I want to put in that. I want to put in the work and like try. Give it a chance. I don't know. My dad sounded a little bit skeptical almost on the idea. But I mean, to me that sounds awesome.
[00:09:01] Maybe the adrenaline rush, maybe the.
[00:09:04] I think really for me, the helping people almost. Because I don't know about the paramedic stuff. That sounds like. I mean, honestly, it couldn't. Maybe it wouldn't be that bad. But fire sounds particularly interesting to me, especially if I were to do more like some of the more medical side. But at least the fire part, like that sounds like cool. Like, come on. So I just.
[00:09:24] I don't know, I'm gonna just take it, figure it out. If that's even something I'd be interested in doing in the long run and I don't know, see where that takes me. But yeah, enough about my fire stuff. I don't know. But I mean it's the same line of work. Like I'd be doing that too. I don't know if I'm gonna have machetes pulled out on me. But it's. It's real stuff. It's scary. It's crazy that people even like this happen to people are so.
[00:09:48] I don't know, it's not even like it's all their fault half the time. But I mean, pull out machete on my mom who's trying to save her boyfriend. So, you know, and I mean, my mom's going through stuff like this all the time almost every night, I guess whether it's maybe not something that's crazy like that always or maybe things crazier or maybe it's just a slow day. Usually never a slow day with her. She's always working hard, but I don't know, it's scary stuff and I'm interested to learn more or whatever. But back to my mom, she's.
[00:10:24] I think she'll probably listen to this, but Mom, I.
[00:10:28] You're amazing.
[00:10:30] Genuinely. I don't admire anybody else more than you. It doesn't matter you're religious or not or whatever.
[00:10:37] You got the most amazing heart and a general genuine care while these people treat you like whatever and I mean you're still helping them and you kind of get paid for this. But like, I think the work ethic is something I could admire to look up to.
[00:10:55] Just putting at least maybe not the hours, but that same amount of effort she puts into it. And she's really good at it. My mom's just genuinely talented when it comes to this stuff too. I mean, she's known since she was little, she's told me that this is what she wants to do and like she's putting up crazy hours. Whether it's like transfers in total some crazy stat how she put up more than like the number one in all of I don't even California or something like that just in. I was crazy absurd amount of transfers. And I just want to even get close to on that level of work ethic. And I. I know, I don't know. I don't know if she gets treated the greatest at work. I would hope people do treat her like what she deserves. But she.
[00:11:43] I. Oh yeah, I want to be on like the same respect level. I want to.
[00:11:48] I don't know, I don't work out to it, learn from her, get ideas, figure out again, this is what I want to do. I mean, obviously not the same thing, but it's in the same field and just do even close to the amount of that she puts in and respect and just, I don't know, like it changes you. It's the real deal. It changes you. I know it definitely changed my mom. And I mean change isn't always that bad, but it changes you. This is like the stuff is happening every night, every day, every whatever. People are messed up. So I think I've just.
[00:12:31] I don't know. I'm gonna figure it out, but I think I'll just wrap this up here. We're at 13 minutes, but I'll just kind of begin to wrap this up.
[00:12:41] So. Just want to end. Mom, I love you. I can't believe you got attacked by a lady. 30 year old woman, machete. But I just love you, mom. And you're the best. You're the person I admire the most. So yeah, I just, I love you so much and guess this is a little personal dedication or episode to my mom, but, you know, so love you, Mom.
[00:13:08] And I think that's kind of. Yeah, I think that's kind of where I'll end up wrapping this one up. If you have any questions. I don't know if you can ask questions or however that works on a podcast, but I don't know. I could learn more from her, more about the story. I kind of wanted to know some more details, but it's a quick little, little story. I'm sure there's a lot more to it too, but.
[00:13:28] Yeah, terrible, but you know, just all part of the job, I guess. All right, so that's it for episode three. I love you, Mom. And yeah.