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This month we’re going beyond the surface. These featured sections are designed to help you understand what burnout really is, how it lives in your body, and what you can do about it starting today.
Burnout is not a personal failure. It is a physiological and psychological response to prolonged, unmanaged stress and it looks different for everyone. Recognizing the signs is the first step toward reclaiming your well-being.
For those working in helping professions — social workers, counselors, first responders, advocates, and caregivers — burnout is often compounded by secondary traumatic stress (STS). Repeated exposure to others' trauma can rewire your nervous system, making it harder to recover, regulate, and reconnect.
This is not weakness. This is biology. Understanding this connection is vital for sustainable self-care.
Caused by chronic overwork, lack of autonomy, poor boundaries, toxic environments, and compassion fatigue.
Caused by caregiving demands, unresolved trauma, lack of support, identity loss, and emotional depletion.
Take a moment to honestly assess how you're feeling. Check any statements that resonate with your current experience.
If you checked 3 or more — it may be time to reach out. You don't have to navigate this alone.
In this 7-minute video, Yale cognitive scientist and professor Dr. Laurie Santos breaks down what burnout really is, how to identify the clinical signs, and four simple, actionable steps to stop burnout in its tracks.
Source: The Well · Dr. Laurie Santos, Cognitive Scientist & Yale Professor
In this 12-minute episode from Kaiser Permanente’s Healthier You Podcast, board-certified psychiatrist Dr. Christina Lee explains how cortisol is released and regulated, how chronic stress affects the body and mind, and practical ways to manage stress.
Source: Kaiser Permanente · Healthier You Podcast · Dr. Christina Lee, MD, Psychiatrist
When you experience stress, your body releases cortisol, the primary stress hormone. In small doses, cortisol is helpful, sharpening your focus and boosting energy. But when stress is chronic, cortisol levels stay elevated, and the effects on your body and mind can be serious, impacting nearly every system.
Impairs memory, concentration, and decision-making. Increases anxiety and depression risk.
Suppresses immune function, making you more vulnerable to illness and slower to heal.
Raises blood pressure and heart rate, increasing cardiovascular risk over time.
Disrupts digestion, contributes to IBS, bloating, and appetite changes.
Interferes with melatonin production, causing insomnia and poor sleep quality.
Disrupts reproductive hormones, thyroid function, and overall hormonal balance.
Practical strategies to help regulate your nervous system and bring your cortisol levels back into balance, fostering resilience and promoting healing.
Even 10 minutes of walking lowers cortisol and boosts mood-regulating endorphins.
Slow, deep breathing activates the parasympathetic nervous system and signals safety.
Prioritizing sleep is one of the most powerful cortisol regulators available to you.
Safe, supportive relationships are proven to reduce cortisol and promote healing.
Spending time outdoors reduces cortisol levels by up to 21% in just 20 minutes.
Whether you're experiencing burnout, secondary trauma, or chronic stress — Protect Each One Consulting, LLC offers trauma-informed counseling, coaching, and group support designed to help you restore balance and rise again.
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