The sirens fade.
The shift ends.
But the damage doesn't stop.
Most people think first responders "get used to it."
They don't.
They carry it home.
They carry it to bed.
They carry it into silence-because nobody wants to hear what really happens after the lights turn off.
Echoes After the Sirens is a raw, unfiltered look at the mental and emotional toll of life in uniform-written by someone who lived it.
Written by Michael R. Eggleston, a retired U.S. Air Force veteran, former law enforcement officer, and Director of Security, this book pulls back the curtain on what first responders endure long after the call is over.
This isn't a clinical guide.
It's not written by a therapist.
And it doesn't sugarcoat reality.
The calls you never forget-and why they come back years later
How dark humor becomes armor (and when it stops working)
The pressure to stay silent while everything inside you is screaming
Why "I'm fine" is often the biggest lie first responders tell
What happens when the uniform comes off but the trauma doesn't
This book speaks to the quiet damage-the kind that doesn't make headlines but destroys people from the inside out.
This book is for:✔ First responders
✔ Veterans
✔ Dispatchers and security professionals
✔ Families trying to understand the person behind the badge
✔ Anyone who knows something is wrong-but can't quite name it
✘ People looking for inspirational quotes
✘ People who believe toughness fixes everything
✘ People uncomfortable with hard truth
By the author of:
The House That Pulled The Trigger
Service Wounds
Run. Hide. Fight. Repeat.
Echoes After the Sirens is for those who kept going when they should've stopped-and for the people who love them but don't know how to help.
If you've ever felt the weight of what you've seen...
If the sirens still echo long after they're gone...
This book was written for you.