I have previously written about pain,
suffering, compassion and empathy and I don’t want to restate something that I
have already touched on in previous post. I want to talk about Secondary
Traumatic Stress or “the cost of caring”. I believe the current that runs
through all of these questions is a person’s threshold for compassion and
empathy. Expressing these can try on a person; they can become a weight on your
shoulders, on your mind, your spirit, and your heart. When we experience
someone else’s pain we can reach our “limit” and look for an option to break
ties. We want that break up to be the other’s fault. We are done, and we shut
the door. We want to bury the situation, the person, in a grave of blame filled
with shame, disgust, and anger. We are suffering from compassion fatigue. We
have reached our limit with the person. This is the easy way out…detachment.
How do we prevent this? Through
self-care. We need to relieve our stress; we need to share with others the
burden we experience. We need to laugh. We need to feel safe, understood, we
need “cosigners”. We need to separate ourselves at times to let go of the attachment,
the emotions. We need others to help us. We need to self-reflect. We need to be
mindful. We need to seek positive healthy ways to alleviate our stress, our
pain.
We need to be reminded that we
should not give up on anyone.
B