Healing The HealersНамуна
Strengthening Personal & Professional Care Relationships
An inherent risk in conducting healing work, whether as a first responder, a medical professional, mental health provider or a spiritual health provider, is compassion fatigue.
Compassion fatigue, or vicarious traumatization, occurs when a provider feels beyond her or his capacity to cope with the exhaustion or other physical reactions that may result from providing care to trauma survivors. People sometimes refer to this experience as “burnout.”
One way to protect against this risk, a form of preparedness that too often goes unrecognized, is developing personal and professional care relationships to rely on in times of crisis, trauma or disaster.
Care relationships are essential for healthy living and resiliency. A sense of belonging to other people gives us a sense of hope, responsibility and purpose, joy, and encouragement. They help to sustain us, especially in turbulent times.
As you consider how to develop skills for responding to crises, trauma or disaster in your community as a clergy or ministry leader, consider the ways to prepare by establishing or strengthening both your personal and professional relationships.
What are ways you can sustain healthy family or household relationships, no matter what is going on in the world around you? Are there daily rituals that can help to hold you together? For example, some people practice never leaving the house without saying “I love you!” or always greeting next door neighbors with a friendly “Hello!”
Another helpful practice: pre-determine and communicate how you would like to communicate in turbulent times. For example, let people know if you would prefer phone calls, texts or email. Would you prefer for people to keep you in prayer until you reach out to them, or for them to regularly check in with you? Having these kinds of more detailed conversations about expectations can help avoid miscommunication and frustration, while helping everyone feel more connected.
Also, you may find particular types of mentoring helpful in times of crises. Take time to consider what that might be, who may best offer it, and how to prepare that relationship in order to be able to call on them when you need them.
Your professional peers can be an invaluable source of support. Consider ways that groups of you – whether as ministerial alliances or denominational groups – can meet on a regular basis to support, learn from and encourage one another.
About this Plan
When tragedy strikes, pastors and faith leaders are called to guide and sustain communities. But who heals the healers? This devotional can help give hope, support, and encouragement to those in ministry who need healing in their own lives.
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