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Empathy Is Powerful — But It Can Also Burn You Out

If you’re an inclusive leader, chances are you feel a lot — for your team, your organisation, and the inequities you’re trying to address.

But what happens when all that feeling starts to wear you down?

That’s empathetic fatigue — the emotional and cognitive exhaustion that comes from constantly showing up, tuning in, and holding space for others.

It’s real. And it’s common.

😓 You might feel it as a creeping sense of frustration.
😩 Or a deep emotional heaviness.
😶 Or the numbness that comes from simply having nothing left to give.

Inclusive leaders are particularly vulnerable because this work is personal, persistent, and complex. You’re often pushing for change against resistance, within systems that weren’t designed for equity. And you’re doing it all while trying to care deeply for others.

So if you’re feeling tired — it doesn’t mean you’re not resilient. It means you’re human.

💡 The first step in managing empathetic fatigue is to name it.
The next is to create space for recovery.

Here are some strategies that help:

🛑 Set emotional boundaries: You can care without carrying everything.
🧘 Plan for emotional recovery: Just like physical recovery after intense exertion.
💬 Talk about it: With peers, mentors, or coaches who understand the emotional toll of this work.
🫶 Practice self-compassion: You’re not a failure for needing rest. You’re a leader who lasts.

💬 “Just talking about it isn’t enough anymore.”
That’s a realisation shared by many leaders once empathy kicks in and they start seeing inequity clearly. But action without self-care can lead to burnout. Sustainable leadership requires both.

Inclusive leadership is a marathon, not a sprint. Empathy fuels the journey — but recovery keeps you in the race.

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