Support for community stewards and members who are doing sustained caregiving work — for people with mental illness, addiction, physical disability, complex child needs, or aging. Covers: compassion fatigue vs. burnout vs. secondary traumatic stress, warning signs, role boundary collapse, sustainable caregiving practices, when and how to ask for relief, and the community's responsibility to care for its caregivers. Activate when a community member is doing significant caregiving and showing signs of depletion, when role boundaries have collapsed, when someone is afraid to ask for help, when a caregiver is in crisis themselves, or when the community needs to think structurally about how it shares caregiving load. Works within Louisoix as a subordinate function or can be invoked directly. Often works in tandem with trauma-informed-care, mental-health-first-response, and caregiver-support. The steward using this skill may themselves be the caregiver who needs support — this skill is explicitly for that too.
These three conditions look similar but have different causes, different trajectories, and need different responses.
What it is: Emotional exhaustion that comes from empathizing with another person's pain over time. Sometimes called "the cost of caring." It is not a character failure — it is what happens when an empathetic person is exposed to suffering without adequate restoration.
Signs: Emotional numbness or detachment (feeling nothing where you used to feel something), intrusive images or thoughts about the person you're caring for, dreading contact with them, irritability, difficulty concentrating, physical exhaustion not explained by workload, loss of pleasure in other areas of life.
Key feature: The fatigue is specifically connected to the caregiving relationship. Stepping away from that relationship, even briefly, brings some relief.
What it is: Depletion from sustained high demands with insufficient resources — emotional, practical, or both. Burnout is structural: it happens when the demands of caregiving chronically exceed what the caregiver has available.
Signs: Cynicism and detachment, feeling ineffective and like nothing makes a difference, physical exhaustion, withdrawal from other relationships, loss of purpose or meaning, sense of being trapped.
Key feature: Burnout doesn't resolve with short breaks. It requires structural change — reduced demands, increased support, or both. A week off and returning to the same situation will produce the same result.
What it is: Trauma symptoms that develop from close exposure to someone else's traumatic experience. Can develop from listening to detailed accounts of trauma, witnessing someone in acute crisis, or sustained contact with a person carrying severe trauma.
Signs: Hypervigilance, intrusive thoughts or images, avoidance of reminders, sleep disruption, increased startle response, feeling unsafe. These are PTSD symptoms — they are real clinical presentations, not dramatizations.
Key feature: STS is trauma. It requires the same respect and care as direct trauma. It is occupationally common in first responders, therapists, and — in communities of care — in stewards and caregivers who are close to members in acute distress.
In yourself or in other caregivers:
Early:
Middle:
Late / Crisis:
In community caregiving, boundaries between roles erode gradually. A community member becomes a friend, then a close friend, then their primary support, then effectively their only support — and nobody chose this transition consciously. This is role boundary collapse.
How it happens:
What it costs: The caregiver loses access to a peer relationship with this person. The person in need loses access to a caregiver who can hold perspective. The community loses distributed responsibility and gains a single point of failure.
Signs of collapse: You are the first person they call for any distress. You feel responsible for their emotional state. You think about them constantly. You feel guilty when you're not available. You've stopped having expectations of reciprocity.
Restoring boundaries without abandonment: This is the hard part. You cannot collapse a boundary back instantly without causing harm. The work is gradual redistribution — introducing other supports, naming your own limits honestly, being present but less exclusively so. This often requires naming what happened: "I realize I've become your primary support, and I care about you too much to be that — because I'll eventually burn out and then I won't be able to be here at all. I want to help you build a wider network."
Individual self-care is not the answer. Sustainable caregiving requires structural support.
Distribute the load deliberately. When one person is carrying disproportionate caregiving burden, name it explicitly and redistribute. Don't wait for the caregiver to collapse before acting. "Who is supporting [member] right now, and is that sustainable?" should be a regular stewardship question.
Create caregiving rotations. For members with sustained high needs, build a rotation of support people so no single person bears the weight continuously. The person in need may resist this (attachment to primary caregiver is real), but the structure protects everyone including them.
Build in relief as a norm, not an exception. Asking for a break should not require crisis-level depletion. Normalize: "I need someone to cover for me this week." Make it structurally easy to hand off, and socially safe to ask.
Tend to the caregivers. Who checks in on the person doing the checking in? Stewards need stewards. Make explicit that caregivers are community members whose wellbeing matters independently of their capacity to care for others.
Name your limits before you hit them. "I can hold this for two more weeks, and then I need support" is a gift to the community. Waiting until you're in crisis is not.
Stay connected to your own life. Caregiving that consumes all other relationships and activities is unsustainable. Non-caregiving relationships are not luxuries — they're the source of replenishment that makes continued caregiving possible.
Allow imperfection. You will have days when you're less present, less patient, less available. These days don't erase what you've given. You don't have to be consistent every day — you have to be consistent enough over time.
Accept care yourself. Caregivers often have difficulty receiving. Practice being cared for. It models for the person you're supporting that receiving care is not a weakness.
Asking for help is hard, especially for caregivers who have organized their identity around being helpful. These scripts make it easier:
Direct: "I need a break from being [person's] primary support. Can we figure out how to share this more?"
Specific: "I can't be available this weekend. Can someone else be on call for [person]?"
Honest: "I'm getting close to my limit. I don't want to burn out and become unavailable — so I'm asking now, while I still have something to give."
With context: "I've been [person's] main support for [time]. That's been meaningful and it's also more than I can sustain alone. I need the community to help carry this."
Communities of care often pour attention into members in crisis while the people sustaining those members go unseen. This is a structural failure with predictable consequences: caregivers collapse, the person they were supporting loses their primary support, and the community loses capacity.
A community that cares about its caregivers:
For stewards specifically: Your depletion is a community vulnerability, not a private problem. Naming your limits and asking for support is stewardship, not weakness.
Compassion fatigue and burnout can be addressed within community with structural changes and intentional support. Secondary traumatic stress often requires professional attention.
Refer a caregiver to professional support when:
For caregiver crisis situations — where the caregiver is in acute distress themselves — invoke the mental-health-first-response skill.