April 23, 2026

The Signs of Compassion Fatigue Every Peer Supporter Needs to Know

The Signs of Compassion Fatigue Every Peer Supporter Needs to Know
Apple Podcasts podcast player badge
Spotify podcast player badge
iHeartRadio podcast player badge
Apple Podcasts podcast player iconSpotify podcast player iconiHeartRadio podcast player icon

Peer supporters carry the weight of other people's worst days, and that caring comes at a cost. This episode walks through the warning signs of compassion fatigue and gives you a reset routine you can use after a draining conversation.

When's the last time someone checked in on you? Not the hallway version. The kind of check-in you give the people you support.If you're a peer supporter, you know this work comes at a cost. You take the calls. You carry pieces of people's worst days. You do it because you care, and that caring is exactly what puts you at risk. Compassion fatigue isn't a character flaw. It's what happens when you absorb emotional weight faster than you can process it.In this episode, Dr. Bart Leger walks through where compassion fatigue comes from, how it's different from burnout, and why peer supporters carry a particular kind of risk that clinical professionals are partly protected from. He names the warning signs to watch for in yourself, gives you a reset routine you can use after a hard week, and covers what to do if you see these signs in someone else on your team.BY THE TIME YOU FINISH LISTENING, YOU'LL LEARN:

The difference between burnout and compassion fatigue, and why the response to each is different

Six warning signs of compassion fatigue to watch for in yourself

A practical reset routine you can use after a draining conversation or a hard week

How to check in on a teammate you're worried about without making it weird

If this episode helped you, share it with someone on your peer support team. Putting the right information in front of someone at the right time is often the most useful thing you can do.

Share this episode: https://www.survivingyourshift.com/56

Connect with Bart

LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/bartleger

Facebook Page: facebook.com/survivingyourshift

Website: www.survivingyourshift.com

Want to find out how I can help you build a peer support program in your organization or provide training? Schedule a no-obligation call or Zoom meeting with me here.

Let's learn to thrive, not just survive!

Track 1 00:00:01

When's the last time someone checked in on you? And

Track 1 00:00:04

no, I don't mean the hallway version where you cross each

Track 1 00:00:07

other and ask, how's it going? I mean the kind of check-in you

Track 1 00:00:11

give the people you support. If you're a peer supporter, you

Track 1 00:00:15

spend a lot of your time showing up for other people. You take

Track 1 00:00:17

the calls, you carry pieces of their worst days, and you do

Track 1 00:00:22

because you care about this work and that caring has a cost. If

Track 1 00:00:27

you're not paying it'll take more from you than you realize

Track 1 00:00:30

until one day you notice you've got nothing left to give. Today,

Track 1 00:00:33

we're talking about compassion fatigue. We're talking about

Track 1 00:00:37

what it how to spot it in yourself, and what you can do

Track 1 00:00:40

about it when you can't just disappear for a month to recover.

Track 1 00:00:45

So stay

Track 2 00:00:48

Welcome to Surviving Your Shift, your go-to resource

Track 2 00:00:52

for building strong, peer support teams in high-stress

Track 2 00:00:55

professions. I'm your host, Bart Leger, board-certified in

Track 2 00:00:59

traumatic stress with over 25 years of experience supporting

Track 2 00:01:03

and training professionals in frontline and emergency roles.

Track 2 00:01:07

Whether you're looking to start a peer support team, learn new

Track 2 00:01:10

skills, or bring training to your organization, this show

Track 2 00:01:14

will equip you with practical tools to save lives and careers.

Track 1 00:01:19

Welcome This podcast exists to help peer supporters

Track 1 00:01:23

do this work well and to keep doing it for the long haul. So

Track 1 00:01:27

if you're new here, I'm glad you found us. I want to talk about

Track 1 00:01:32

something that doesn't get enough attention in peer support

Track 1 00:01:35

circles, and it's the toll that this work takes on the people

Track 1 00:01:39

doing it. We train peer supporters to watch for signs of

Track 1 00:01:43

struggle in others, but we don't spend nearly time teaching them

Track 1 00:01:47

to watch for those same signs in themselves. So let's fix that

Track 1 00:01:51

today. Before we go further, a quick note. This episode is here

Track 1 00:01:54

to help you recognize what's happening, and point you toward

Track 1 00:01:57

what helps. It isn't a substitute for working with a

Track 1 00:02:00

licensed clinician. If the signs I describe sound like where you

Track 1 00:02:04

are right now, would you consider reaching out to a

Track 1 00:02:07

professional who understands the first responder or the medical

Track 1 00:02:10

or whatever culture that you're in? Getting your own support is

Track 1 00:02:14

how you keep doing this work. So let's start with where this idea

Track 1 00:02:19

came from. Because compassion fatigue isn't a new concept. The

Track 1 00:02:24

was first used in 1992 by a nurse researcher named Joinson,

Track 1 00:02:29

who saw it in emergency room nurses absorbing the suffering

Track 1 00:02:33

of patients day after day. And then Dr. Charles Figley later

Track 1 00:02:38

expanded on her work. What we've learned since is that people who

Track 1 00:02:42

do empathy-driven work, the ones who genuinely care are at

Track 1 00:02:47

measurable risk for a specific kind of exhaustion that goes

Track 1 00:02:50

beyond just simply being tired from the long hours. Burnout

Track 1 00:02:56

researcher Pines wrote that burnout can only be experienced

Track 1 00:03:00

by people who enter their careers with high ideals,

Track 1 00:03:04

motivation, and commitment. Probably sounds a little bit

Track 1 00:03:07

like you, doesn't it? He said you cannot burn out unless you

Track 1 00:03:11

were on fire initially. He says people that don't care rarely

Track 1 00:03:16

get compassion fatigue because they don't have compassion in

Track 1 00:03:18

the first place. I want you to think about that for a second.

Track 1 00:03:22

The very thing that makes someone a good peer supporter,

Track 1 00:03:26

the fact that they care, is what puts them at risk. And that's

Track 1 00:03:30

what happens when you do emotionally demanding work

Track 1 00:03:33

without enough recovery built in. Now, you've probably heard the

Track 1 00:03:37

terms compassion fatigue and burnout used interchangeably. I

Track 1 00:03:40

know many have, and I've probably done it in the past

Track 1 00:03:43

also. They're related, but they work differently, and the

Track 1 00:03:46

response to each is different. So let's sort them out. First of

Track 1 00:03:49

all, burnout is a psychological syndrome that develops from

Track 1 00:03:54

long-term exposure to chronic interpersonal stressors on the

Track 1 00:03:57

job. It erodes slowly, and it undermines your well-being, your

Track 1 00:04:02

self-confidence, and it affects your psychological health before

Track 1 00:04:06

you even recognize it's happening. The indicators? Those

Track 1 00:04:10

would be things like chronic fatigue, cynicism. I know we get

Track 1 00:04:14

to have that first responder culture. But then we also begin

Track 1 00:04:19

to feel a loss of future orientation and then ultimately

Track 1 00:04:24

resentment. Then there's self-medication, which we all

Track 1 00:04:28

know in first responder culture usually means alcohol. We all

Track 1 00:04:32

know it shows up, and we all know why. Compassion fatigue, on

Track 1 00:04:36

the other hand, is more specific. It's what happens when absorbing

Track 1 00:04:41

the emotional pain of pile up faster than you can process But

Track 1 00:04:45

here's a way to picture it. If a caregiver becomes consumed by

Track 1 00:04:48

compassion and neglects their own self-care, then compassion

Track 1 00:04:52

fatigue sets in. It gets in the way of your ability to function

Track 1 00:04:55

well, and in some cases, it takes away your ability to

Track 1 00:05:00

anyone at all. The key word there is consumed. Caring

Track 1 00:05:04

without recovery is what wears a peer supporter down. Here's

Track 1 00:05:08

where compassion fatigue gets personal. partially protected

Track 1 00:05:16

from, and there are a few reasons why. Think about what

Track 1 00:05:20

makes peer support work in the first place. We have social

Track 1 00:05:23

support. We have experiential knowledge, meaning we know what

Track 1 00:05:28

the job entails. We've done the job, so we know what other

Track 1 00:05:32

people are going through. And then there's trust,

Track 1 00:05:35

confidentiality, and there's easy access. They have access to

Track 1 00:05:39

us, sometimes 24-7. Those same features are what make the role

Track 1 00:05:45

demanding in ways clinical professionals are partially

Track 1 00:05:48

protected from. Like I said, a therapist has a clinical

Track 1 00:05:51

supervisor to debrief with, a caseload with defined session

Track 1 00:05:55

limits, and they have a structured between sessions and

Track 1 00:06:00

their personal time. peer supporters, on the other hand,

Track 1 00:06:04

typically don't have any of that. You're a coworker, and you're

Track 1 00:06:07

trusted, and you tend to be always available, which means

Track 1 00:06:10

people come to you at 11 p. m. on a weekend after a rough call,

Track 1 00:06:15

and there's no end-of-session structure to protect either one

Track 1 00:06:19

of you. The confidentiality requirement, we know it's

Track 1 00:06:22

essential, also means peer supporters can't easily process

Track 1 00:06:26

what they're carrying because you can't just go to a colleague

Track 1 00:06:29

just tell them what a struggling peer supporter said to you. So

Track 1 00:06:32

you tend to hold it inside, and when the demands keep piling up

Track 1 00:06:37

faster than you can cope with them, that's how the damage

Track 1 00:06:40

happens. Add in the fact that most peer supporters are still

Track 1 00:06:44

running calls. They're still doing the operational job.

Track 1 00:06:47

You're doing this role on top of a career that already carries a

Track 1 00:06:51

heavy psychological load. And within first responder

Track 1 00:06:54

professions, the risk of some form of psychological impairment

Track 1 00:06:58

is much higher than in the general population. Peer are

Track 1 00:07:02

first responders doing first responder work and peer support

Track 1 00:07:05

work at the same time. So what does this look like when it's

Track 1 00:07:09

happening to you? Here's what to watch for in yourself. First of

Track 1 00:07:13

all, emotional exhaustion that doesn't lift after rest. You

Track 1 00:07:18

sleep reasonably well, but you wake up empty. You're already

Track 1 00:07:21

drained before the day starts, and that's chronic fatigue, and

Track 1 00:07:25

that's paired with loss of future orientation, meaning you

Track 1 00:07:29

stop being able to picture things getting better. And then

Track 1 00:07:32

we have detachment from the role. The calls that used to feel

Track 1 00:07:36

meaningful start to feel like something to get through. You

Track 1 00:07:39

find yourself going through the motions without really being

Track 1 00:07:43

fully present. And there's cynicism and depersonalization.

Track 1 00:07:47

It's the mind's attempt to protect itself creating distance.

Track 1 00:07:52

And then there tends to be irritability out of proportion

Track 1 00:07:56

to the situation. Things like you yell at your three-year-old

Track 1 00:07:59

for spilling milk at the breakfast table. You snap at

Track 1 00:08:02

your spouse or significant other over something that would have

Track 1 00:08:05

rolled off you six months ago. Small things at home or at work

Track 1 00:08:09

start setting you off in ways that don't match the actual So

Track 1 00:08:13

that's usually a sign that your nervous system is overloaded.

Track 1 00:08:17

When you should be off the This is a feature of what we call

Track 1 00:08:33

secondary traumatic stress. And it often shows up alongside

Track 1 00:08:37

compassionate in people doing peer support work. And avoidance.

Track 1 00:08:41

That's the next one. You don't answer the phone as quickly as

Track 1 00:08:43

you used to do. You hope someone else steps up for a particular

Track 1 00:08:47

situation. And then you feel guilty about it, which in turn

Track 1 00:08:51

adds another layer of weight on you. And then there's loss of

Track 1 00:08:55

empathy. This one is pretty hard to admit because you pride

Track 1 00:08:59

yourself in the empathy that you have for those on your team or

Track 1 00:09:03

those within your profession. You hear about someone's

Track 1 00:09:06

situation and instead feeling concern, you feel nothing or

Track 1 00:09:12

maybe you feel irritation. That's your nervous system

Track 1 00:09:15

attempting to protect itself through what we call emotional

Track 1 00:09:18

numbing. It's a sign that you're depleted and the depletion's

Track 1 00:09:22

reached a clinical level, potentially. A person in that

Track 1 00:09:25

place needs support. Okay, so if you've recognized yourself in

Track 1 00:09:30

some of what I just described, the next question is what to do

Track 1 00:09:33

about it. And I want to be practical here. Regular exercise

Track 1 00:09:36

is one of the best tools for people managing chronic exposure

Track 1 00:09:39

to other sufferings. And the reason it works is pretty simple.

Track 1 00:09:43

Exercise gives your body a healthy way to burn off the

Track 1 00:09:45

stress hormones that pile up when you absorb emotional weight

Track 1 00:09:48

without a physical release. And then beyond exercise, there's a

Track 1 00:09:53

difference between processing and resting. Rest helps with

Track 1 00:09:57

physical fatigue, but it doesn't resolve the unprocessed

Track 1 00:10:01

emotional weight that comes with compassionate fatigue. You need

Track 1 00:10:03

somewhere for it to go. might be a conversation with a trusted

Track 1 00:10:07

person outside your department, a time with a chaplain who

Track 1 00:10:11

understands first responder culture, or a counselor or a

Track 1 00:10:15

therapist who specializes in first responder wellness. them,

Track 1 00:10:23

someone who can absorb what you can't share with the team

Track 1 00:10:25

because of confidentiality. And training and good oversight also

Track 1 00:10:30

help protect peer supporters. If you've got regular contact with

Track 1 00:10:34

a clinical supervisor or program coordinator, someone who's

Track 1 00:10:37

watching for signs of strain, you're going to be in much

Track 1 00:10:40

better shape than a peer supporter running without that

Track 1 00:10:42

kind of backup. And I want to say this plainly. Getting your

Track 1 00:10:47

own support is part of the peer support role. A 2018 study by

Track 1 00:10:52

Nolitt and colleagues found that people trained in a form of

Track 1 00:10:56

psychological first aid, similar to what we use in assisting

Track 1 00:11:00

individuals in crisis part of critical incident stress

Track 1 00:11:03

management, showed significant lower compassion fatigue scores

Track 1 00:11:06

a full year after training compared to where they started,

Track 1 00:11:11

despite repeated exposure to difficult situations. So

Track 1 00:11:14

training and support protect the supporter. Let me give you

Track 1 00:11:16

something you can use after a draining conversation or maybe a

Track 1 00:11:19

hard week. Think of this as a reset routine. Name it first,

Track 1 00:11:24

just in yourself. Something like, that conversation tough. It was

Track 1 00:11:27

a lot to carry. Putting words to what you're feeling takes some

Track 1 00:11:31

of that edge off physiologically. naming what's happening. Naming

Track 1 00:11:34

what's happening is the first step toward not being controlled

Track 1 00:11:37

by it. And then move your body within the next hour if you can.

Track 1 00:11:41

It might be a walk, a workout at the gym, even five minutes

Track 1 00:11:45

outside. It gives your body a healthy outlet for the

Track 1 00:11:48

neurochemicals that built up during that stressful

Track 1 00:11:51

interaction. It doesn't have to be long, but you need to do

Track 1 00:11:54

something physically. Then reconnect with someone who has

Track 1 00:11:59

nothing to do with the situation. Not to process it with them, but

Track 1 00:12:02

just to get back to the rest of your life. Strong social

Track 1 00:12:06

connection is one of the most reliable things we know for

Track 1 00:12:09

bouncing back from stress. You need contact with people who

Track 1 00:12:12

remind you that there's a world outside. There's a world outside

Track 1 00:12:16

of the weight that you're carrying. And then at the end of

Track 1 00:12:19

each week, take five minutes and ask yourself, am I dreading any

Track 1 00:12:23

part of this role right now? Is there anything from the last few

Track 1 00:12:26

weeks that I haven't set down yet? I haven't processed. Do I

Track 1 00:12:30

need to flag anything to my coordinator? Those questions, if

Track 1 00:12:33

you ask them regularly, can catch a problem before it gets

Track 1 00:12:36

to a clinical level. One more thing before we close, and I

Track 1 00:12:40

believe it's an important one. What to do if you see these

Track 1 00:12:44

signs in somebody else on your team. You do what you do for any

Track 1 00:12:48

peer who's struggling. You show up and you ask a direct question.

Track 1 00:12:52

Something like, I've noticed you seem off lately. I'm not trying

Track 1 00:12:56

to pry, but I wanted to check in. How are you doing? How are you

Track 1 00:12:59

doing, really? Then you listen without trying to fix it. The

Track 1 00:13:03

quality of the connection, I believe, matters more than the

Track 1 00:13:06

advice. Don't remind them they signed up for this. Don't tell

Track 1 00:13:10

them just to push through. If stepping back from active duties

Track 1 00:13:14

for a while makes sense, then help them make that possible. A

Track 1 00:13:17

program that runs through its won't last very long. Protecting

Track 1 00:13:21

your team members is part of protecting the program. So

Track 1 00:13:24

here's what I want you to take from this episode. Compassion

Track 1 00:13:27

fatigue is a predictable response to doing emotionally

Track 1 00:13:31

demanding work without enough recovery. We've known about it

Track 1 00:13:34

for a long time. If you've recognized yourself in anything

Track 1 00:13:37

I described today, that says something good about you. You're

Track 1 00:13:41

present in the work. You care about it. That's exactly the

Track 1 00:13:44

kind of person who needs to hear this episode. Caring well over

Track 1 00:13:47

the long haul means protecting yourself along the way. Watch

Track 1 00:13:51

for the signs I described. Use the reset routine. Get your own

Track 1 00:13:56

support when you need it. If you're building or leading a

Track 1 00:13:59

peer support program, build the assumption into your structure

Track 1 00:14:03

that your peer supporters will need care too. Because they will.

Track 1 00:14:07

And if you'd like help building a peer support program that

Track 1 00:14:11

sustains the people in it, I'd love to talk. Visit

Track 1 00:14:14

StressCareDoc.com to schedule a complimentary discovery call. If

Track 1 00:14:20

this episode helped you, would you consider sharing it with

Track 1 00:14:22

your peer support team or someone else? Putting the right

Track 1 00:14:26

information in front of someone at the right time is often the

Track 1 00:14:29

most useful thing you can do. Thanks for joining me on

Track 1 00:14:32

Surviving Your Shift. I'll see you on the next episode. Until

Track 1 00:14:35

then, God bless and have a great day.