Occupational Hazards of Being a Therapist

Exposure to Suffering

  • Exposure to traumatic details and experiences which can lead to secondary trauma, vicarious trauma, compassion fatigue, and ultimately burn out

  • We may become jaded, dissociate from our own emotions and experiences, feel more irritable, fantasize about another career, wish clients would cancel and not show up for sessions, and more

  • Hearing accounts of people pain and suffering over and over can be challenging unless we finds ways to manage it

Compassion Fatigue

  • Over identifying with clients and feeling exhausted/tired due to taking on client’s information/suffering/pain/distress from listening to them

  • Feeling sad, nightmares, physical exhaustion, over working, lack of ability to empathize, anxiety, cynicism, anger, depression, using substances to numb feelings, overwhelmed, tired, depleted are common symptoms

  • Caring for others is part of our job, but it requires boundaries, outside consultation, practice, and regular care for ourselves

Vicarious Trauma

  • Occurs due to years of experience (over time, not a single event)

  • Shift in beliefs about the world, self, and others

    • “Life is unfair”

    • “No one understands me and what I’m experiencing”

    • “Others are dangerous”

    • “This work shouldn’t be this difficult. Why can’t I handle being a therapist?”

    • “Who am I if I wasn’t a therapist?”

    • “The world is unsafe”

    • “Why are people so evil?”

    • “Am I competent enough to be a therapist and do this work?”

  • Behavioral responses

    • Avoiding friends and family

    • Isolation

    • Laughing at things that are not funny

    • Using substances to numb overwhelming feelings and thoughts

Isolation & Feeling Lonely

  • Being a therapist can feel lonely because the work is unique in so many ways and also due to issues of confidentiality

  • Getting consultation and support is crucial from peers, supervisors, and colleagues

  • Having a life outside of work is also key toward maintaining connection to something larger than just our work

Limited Capacity to Meet Needs (Systemic Issues)

  • This is true in the United States where there is a lack of providers for clients, insurance coverage (and lack of coverage), high costs for mental health care, wait time for care, and more

  • We are only one person unable to meet and see all clients we want to see

High Caseloads

  • This is especially true in agencies, hospitals, and companies where a clinician is expected to maintain certain client caseloads related to performance expectations

  • High caseloads can lead to vicarious trauma, compassion fatigue, feeling overwhelmed, clients unable to get the treatment they deserve (i.e. weekly frequency vs. one session every 5-6 weeks), etc.

  • In private practice, therapists are more able to have more choice around their caseloads

Time Constraints

  • If you accept insurance or work for an agency that accepts insurance, insurance dictates time spent with clients

  • A 38-45 minute session is billed as CPT code 90834

  • A 52-55 minute session is billed as CPT code 90837

Self & Community Care Is Mandatory

  • Taking care of self is necessary

  • Reaching out to our community/family/friends/support is also necessary

  • We cannot do this work alone and should not do this work alone

  • Replenishing ourself through:

    • Regular and consistent time off

    • Eating nutritious foods

    • Getting regular and consistent quality sleep

    • Drinking water

    • Getting exercise and moving our bodies

    • Limiting caffeine intake

    • Limiting substances like alcohol and drugs

    • Having flexible boundaries

    • Not checking email on off days

    • Engaging in regular daily practices to get out of our head and into our body

    • And more

Being a Therapist is a Lifestyle

  • This is not the sort of job where you can clock in and out for most people

  • For most people, this requires shifting our life and how we live on a day to day basis

  • This can include:

    • Life long learning such as continuing education and supervision

    • Self and community care

    • Work life balance

    • Attending one own’s personal therapy

    • Saying no and boundaries

    • Letting go and accepting the reality

    • And more

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Interventions 101: Paraphrasing & Reflecting