On a crisp Vermont morning, Emily Pratt Slatin steps out onto her ten-acre farm, tools in hand, ready for another day of self-reliant homesteading. It’s a far cry from her previous life rushing into burning buildings, yet somehow perfectly fitting for someone who has always forged her own path. Through her writings on RescueGirl557, Slatin chronicles her remarkable journey from firefighter to farmer with the same raw honesty that has defined her life.
Few people can claim as diverse a career path as Slatin’s: decorated firefighter, paramedic lieutenant, accomplished photographer, and now Vermont farmer. Yet these transitions feel less like career changes and more like chapters in a story of unwavering authenticity. Her blog posts reveal not just what she does, but who she is—someone who has consistently chosen truth over comfort, courage over conformity.
Born intersex with XX chromosomes, Slatin’s path to self-determination began early. Despite her clearly female anatomy, her family mounted a legal challenge to contest her name and identity—a battle that would shape her early years. By sixteen, medical professionals had confirmed what Slatin had always known about herself: she was genetically female. This medical validation, however, led to a family intervention that ultimately severed her ties with her biological relatives.
Rather than crumbling under this rejection, Slatin built something remarkable. At just eighteen, she earned her EMT certification, launching a career that would span two decades in emergency services. She quickly distinguished herself, rising through the ranks to become a respected Firefighter and Paramedic Lieutenant-Specialist. Her colleagues came to know her as someone who could handle the most challenging rescue operations with steady hands and unwavering focus.
“I made a name for myself – not the one they assigned, but the one they tried to erase. Emily. Rescue Girl. The one who didn’t flinch,” Slatin reflects on her blog, capturing both pride and defiance in her professional achievements. These words carry extra weight knowing they were written without the backing of family support—each accomplishment earned entirely on her own merit.
The toll of emergency service work, however, eventually became impossible to ignore. After years of witnessing humanity at its most vulnerable and tragic moments, Slatin made the difficult decision to step away. She turned her focus toward a different kind of resilience—one measured not in lives saved but in acres tended and buildings maintained.
Today, Slatin’s world revolves around her Vermont homestead, where she handles everything from rewiring electrical systems to maintaining farm equipment. “Every square inch of this life is mine,” she writes, and you can almost hear the quiet satisfaction in those words. Her current lifestyle represents more than just a career change—it’s a deliberate choice to live authentically, answering to no one’s expectations but her own.
In her personal life, Slatin’s journey mirrors similar themes of authenticity and resilience. After ending a long-term relationship that had become increasingly restrictive, she found partnership with Amelia, a writer who embraces Slatin’s identity completely. Their marriage embodies the values they both hold dear: trust, freedom, and mutual understanding. As Slatin writes with palpable warmth, “There are so few places in this life where a person can be fully seen and still fully loved… Amelia was, and always will be, that place for me. Some loves are loud. Ours was simply true.” Together, they’ve built what Slatin describes as “a life stitched together from understanding, patience, and a kind of love that never asked either of us to be anything other than who we already were.”
This same authenticity flows through every aspect of Slatin’s creative work. Her photography captures the stark beauty of abandoned places and Vermont landscapes alike, while her writing—influenced by early mentorship from Beat poet Allen Ginsberg—combines unflinching honesty with poetic insight. Through her blog, she documents not just events but emotions, not just facts but deep truths about identity and belonging.
“Truth doesn’t care if it makes people uncomfortable,” Slatin writes, in what could be considered her personal manifesto. This philosophy permeates every aspect of her existence—from her career choices to her relationships, from her artistic work to the daily labor of farming. It’s a principle that has cost her dearly at times but has also led her to a life of genuine fulfillment.
Through her blog posts, Slatin has created something larger than a personal diary. She has documented a blueprint for living authentically in a world that often demands conformity. Her story resonates beyond her personal circumstances, speaking to anyone who has ever felt pressured to be something they’re not.
These days, you’ll find Emily Pratt Slatin tending to her Vermont homestead, writing when the mood strikes, and living precisely according to her own principles. Her journey from rejected teenager to decorated professional to independent farmer offers a compelling testament to the power of perseverance and the importance of remaining true to oneself, regardless of the consequences.
Looking out over her farm, tools still in hand, Slatin embodies a truth she’s learned through years of challenge and change: authenticity, though costly, remains the most valuable currency of all.