What Breaks My Heart About What I Do?
Being an empath can be both a gift and a curse.
Being an empath gives me the ability to truly feel and connect with people; to assist them in finding the words to describe their thoughts and feelings; and help them feel less alone in their experience.
It is also very common to experience secondary trauma - the effects of hearing first hand trauma experiences of another - when you are a therapist.
Secondary trauma can lead to similar symptoms to PTSD, and it is vital that clinicians actively engage in self-care in their lives.
Seeing a person’s struggle with food and their body, desperately wanting recovery before becoming a parent, or before their child can develop a similar difficult relationship with food and their own body.
Hearing how a person’s past traumas and childhood wounds are still actively present in their day-to-day lives, and not knowing how to make constructive, sustainable changes.
So why do I do it? Stay tuned for tomorrow to hear about what lights me up about the work I do, and why this is a lifelong passion for me to do this work.
Interested in reading more? Click here to sign up for my weekly newsletter!