Compassion Fatigue: The Wake-Up Call That Started My Self-Care Journey
In my first few years as a PICU nurse, I was full of passion and drive. I took pride in being the one people could count on by stepping up for the sickest patients, mentoring new staff, and leading when needed.
But then I noticed something shifting. I was always tired. The emotional toll of watching children decline or die started to weigh heavier and heavier. One day, I decided to take advantage of the hospital’s EAP and met with a therapist. She listened carefully and then said something that stopped me in my tracks:
“What you’re describing sounds like compassion fatigue.”
I was stunned. I had gone to a top nursing school, yet I had never even heard the term. No one had taught us that taking on everyone else’s pain without an outlet could drain us to the core.
That conversation was the first spark that made me realize: nurses need support too. And more than that, we need self-care practices that go beyond bubble baths and slogans.
Why Is Self-Care Important for Nurses?
Nursing is consistently ranked as one of the most trusted professions. But trust comes with weight. Nurses are often the first to arrive, the last to leave, and the ones holding everything together in between.
The reality is that without rest, reflection, and restoration, we can’t sustain our ability to care for others. Fatigue impacts judgment. Stress affects communication. Burnout makes us short-tempered with colleagues, patients, and even loved ones at home.
Self-care isn’t selfish. It’s a safety measure. It protects our ability to provide safe, compassionate, high-quality care.
Common Self-Care Deficits in Nursing
Let’s be real — a lot of us fall into the same traps, and I’ve lived every single one of these:
Overworking
Saying yes to “just one more” shift, even when you are tired. A nurse recently told me that she was on her 60th hour of work and was asked to come in for a few hours tomorrow. She mentioned that boyfriend suggest that she rest, but she still felt guilty saying no. That guilt is real.
Skipping Meals
My first NP job was in a GI clinic, and Mondays were brutal. Morning clinic was supposed to end at 11:45 — but it never did. By 12:30, no matter what I ate for breakfast, I was ravenous. My medical assistant once leaned over and whispered, “Do you want a snack?” . I felt like the Snickers commercial. That was the moment I realized how often I was pushing past my body’s signals.
No time for recovery
If you’ve worked three 12s in a row, you know that “day one off” isn’t a day off. It’s recovery. Yes, you now have 4 days off, but you probably need 1-2 days off just to recover. You’re groggy, foggy, and just trying to feel human again.
Always being available
This one hit me hard. Once, I offered to be a “pinch hitter” for covering a smaller ED near my home. I suggested I could come in for a few hours if they needed extra help. They said they would let me know. One week later, It was 10 p.m. when I got a call while still seeing patients at another site, asking if I could drive 30 minutes to cover. My heart wanted to say yes, but my body said no. I had to admit it – I was exhausted. I never made that offer again.
Losing identity outside of work
Work can swallow up our whole identity. If you can’t remember the last time you had a hobby, or when someone asks “what do you do for fun” you draw a blank. It may be a sign that work has become your life.
Does any of this sound familiar? I know, me too. Here’s the good news, these patterns don’t have to be permanent.
Self-Care Strategies for Nurses That Actually Work
During my sabbatical and even in my part-time clinical work now, I’ve learned that self-care is both evidence-based and deeply personal. Here’s what I’ve found truly helps:
Joy in work
Even on my hardest days, I find joy when I hear kids giggle, when I make a child feel better, or when I can comfort parents who are terrified. Holding onto joy, even in small doses, keeps the spark alive.
Gratitude
My gratitude practice is simple — noticing the sun, enjoying a really good cup of tea in the morning, laughing with friends on the phone, or just hanging out with family. With all the chaos around us, those little joys remind me that each day is a gift.
Mindfulness and Meditation
I used to fail at this all the time. How do people just sit and not think? I’d sit down, try to breathe, and my to-do list would rush back in. Now I use the Peloton meditation app. Something about the music, the voice, and the guidance helps regulate my heart rate and even helps me sleep after shifts.
Rest and Naps
I don’t always get them, but when I do, naps are glorious. A 30-minute nap can reset my brain more than any caffeine ever could.
Movement
For me, movement has to stay interesting. I’ve done 5Ks, a half marathon, Pilates, kickboxing, walks, light strength training and now pickleball and pilates lessons are part of my rhythm. Switching it up keeps me from getting bored and gives me energy.
Food as care
I’ve been guilty of eating too fast at work (who hasn’t?), but I’ve learned the power of slowing down. Pack snacks. Plan meals. Take the time to actually taste your food. Patients will still be there when you finish eating.
Self-care is not a one-size-fits-all checklist. It’s about experimenting until you find what helps you feel human again.
How to Prevent Nurse Burnout Through Daily Habits
The biggest myth about self-care is that it only happens outside of work. Truth? You can build small habits into your shift that make a big difference:
Take 5-minute walks
Patients will still be there when you get back. A quick loop clears your head. My favorite walk is to the gift shop, or outside just to get fresh air during a shift.
Music for energy
On the way to a 12-hour shift, I blast music that lifts my energy. I’ll never forget one evening shift — the ED was packed with psych patients waiting for placement. It was heavy. I walked in with good energy on purpose, knowing I couldn’t fix the system that day, but I could shift the vibe for my team.
Set limits on days off
I only give myself three things max to do on recovery days. Everything else can wait. For years, I followed her ways of always being productive. Funny enough, now she’s the one reminding me to rest. Sometimes she even tells me to nap before work if I’ve been up early writing. Oh, how the tides have turned.
Unplug intentionally
At two of my jobs, I lived just 20 minutes away. Whenever the weather and daylight allowed, I’d walk home after my shift. Those walks were magical as they were the perfect way to clear my head and shift out of “work mode.”
Use your breaks
Lunch is not optional. Pack snacks. Have a plan for food. And if you have enough time, walk during lunch and invite a friend. I promise, it will replenish you.
None of this is glamorous. But these daily resets are the difference between feeling constantly depleted and building the resilience to keep going.
Redefining Nurse Self-Care for a Sustainable Career
Nursing is not just a job — it’s a calling. But even a calling can’t be sustained on empty.
Sustainability comes from choosing the ways you want to work:
- Do you thrive on 12-hour shifts, or is it time to move to 10s or 8s?
- Would part-time or admin work allow you to recharge?
- Could you bring more balance by exploring hobbies or side gigs that energize you?
For me, sustainability has meant refusing to chase the money at the cost of my health. It’s meant honoring the fact that I don’t bounce back like I did at 22 — and that’s okay. What matters is re-building a career and life that doesn’t steal my soul.
Taking Care of Yourself Is Part of Caring for Patients
The first time I heard the words “compassion fatigue,” I felt both shocked and seen. Now, the key term is burnout, which is very real. Either way, the research (like the National Academy of Medicine’s findings on clinician well-being) is clear: self-care is not optional — it is essential.
If you are exhausted, irritable, or feeling like you’re only surviving shift to shift, please know this: it doesn’t have to be that way.
Self-care is not about being perfect. It’s about being whole.
Because when you take care of yourself, you’re not just protecting your well-being — you’re protecting your patients, too.
Take care, take breaks.