Caregiver fatigue
@smallesttiger I feel this incredibly hard. There's not a lot of stuff that acknowledges the very real cost of being a very heavy emotional / social / practical support for folks in your life who are struggling, which I think makes it easy to feel like it's expected of you in every circumstance and if you can't always do it, you're somehow bad
Caregiver fatigue
@angrboda @smallesttiger Caregiver reserves are finite, too. And often they're assumed to be infinite just because they're deeper than the people who're depending on us. Managing that is __hard__. And sometimes the shame of not knowing how to say "I can't help you right now; I have to take care of me for a while" can drive me to burn spoons I haven't got. I've done a lot of damage to myself that way over the years, from which I'm only just now starting to recover.
Caregiver fatigue
@literorrery @angrboda Telling someone who needs me “I can’t” feels like the hardest most hurtful thing I can do. How can I tell someone who is depressed that the unrelenting misery every time I talk to them is burning me out, without only making it worse? (of course the answer is to not say it like that but. Any kind of pulling away or withdrawal from these people who need so intensely feels like such a tight rope it’s easier to just continue on)
@angrboda @literorrery YES. I have no idea what to do. I’m on that threshold; do I tell all my friends and partners that I can’t help anyone anymore and watch them all fall apart? Or do I just keep having three hour text message conversations about depression brain, keeping up my unrelenting positivity until I’m completely fried
@smallesttiger @literorrery the thing that I had to make peace with is the idea that they wouldn't want to be hurting you and the only way for them to move forward w/o continuing to do that involves any or all of getting a better handle on stuff / a better action plan for their depression / a more diversified support network.
Like, the fact that they naturally beat themselves up doesn't exempt them from the fact that what they're doing does actively suck, even if they don't realize it.
@smallesttiger @angrboda I hear you. This is legit hard.
The best I can offer is that you're allowed to take care of yourself. If that means not taking care of someone else for a day, an hour, even a minute, that's okay. If they can't forgive you for making sure that you're in a position to _keep_ being there for them, the relationship isn't healthy and something needs to change.
I hope you can find the peace and strength to be there for yourself as passionately as you are for others.