What to Do When You've Lost Your Sense of Compassion

Feeling numb to the struggles of others? This episode explores compassion fatigue, the cost of caring too much without refilling. Learn how Jesus found renewed compassion and discover practical steps for compassion fatigue refilling by returning to the Father, not by trying harder.
Key Takeaways
- Compassion fatigue is not a sign of being cold, but a depleted heart from prolonged giving without refilling.
- Jesus modeled compassion refilling by regularly seeking communion with His Father.
- Refilling compassion comes from connecting with God, the source, not from forcing yourself to care more.
- A numb heart is depleted, not dead, and can be refilled by returning to God.
- Rest and reconnecting with your calling can help overcome emotional numbness caused by compassion fatigue.
When Your Compassion Runs Dry
Have you ever noticed the slow fade of your own empathy? It’s a disquieting experience when, after a long period of caring deeply for others, you begin to feel numb. The news of a tragedy barely registers, a friend’s struggles elicit only a polite nod, and the vibrant wellspring of your compassion seems to have run dry. This phenomenon has a name: compassion fatigue. It's often called the cost of caring, and it doesn't signify a loss of character, but rather a warm heart that has been pouring out more than it has been replenished.
Understanding Compassion Fatigue
Esther Smith, a Christian trauma counselor, understands this pattern intimately. Her work involves absorbing the emotional weight of others' most challenging moments. She explains that the very heart that drives us to care can, over time, become numb. This emotional depletion strikes hardest among the most devoted – those who consistently give of themselves without pausing to refuel. Compassion fatigue isn't exclusive to those in helping professions. Parents navigating years of a child’s struggles, or friends who are always the steady, strong one, can also reach a point of depletion. Anyone who continues to give without replenishment is susceptible to running on empty.
The Example of Jesus: Compassion Refilling at the Source
The Gospel accounts offer a profound insight into where refilling comes from, even amidst relentless demands. In Matthew 9:36, we read, "When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them because they were confused and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd." This moment occurred during Jesus’ own period of intense ministry—precisely the conditions that would exhaust most people. Yet, he looked upon another crowd and was moved with compassion. The Gospels consistently reveal the secret to Jesus’ enduring compassion: he regularly withdrew to be alone with his Father. His compassion flowed out of these sacred hours, and it continued to flow because he persistently returned to the ultimate source.
Your Compassion Isn't Gone, It's Depleted
This offers profound encouragement. Your compassion isn't lost forever; it hasn’t been destroyed, only depleted. And depleted things can be filled again. You won't regain your capacity to care by sheer force of will or by simply telling yourself to care more. True replenishment comes from imitating Jesus: by intentionally spending time alone with the Father, allowing Him to minister to your heart in ways you cannot accomplish on your own. Compassion, in essence, is downstream from communion. When the river of your empathy feels dry, the solution isn’t found at the riverbed; it’s found by returning to the spring.
From Numbness to Renewal: A Personal Journey
In this episode, Dr. Bart Leger shares a candid account of his own experience with numbness. After making over a thousand death notifications in his previous career in law enforcement, he reached a point where each subsequent notification felt like just another call. The process of reawakening his compassion involved rest and a deliberate reconnection with his sense of calling. This emphasizes a crucial truth: a numb heart is not a dead one; it is a depleted one. And just as the Father replenished Jesus, He is ready and willing to refill you.
Finding Your Way Back to Compassion
If you find yourself experiencing this emotional depletion, consider it a sign that your inner well needs refilling, not a mark of personal failure. The path forward involves carving out dedicated time to be alone with God. Bring your numbness, your weariness, and your depleted feelings to Him. Allow Him the space to minister to your heart and restore you. Embracing rest, without guilt, is a vital part of this process.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is compassion fatigue?
Compassion fatigue is when a person who cares deeply becomes emotionally numb to the suffering of others due to prolonged giving without adequate replenishment.
How can I refill my compassion?
You refill compassion by returning to the source, God, through prayer and communion, rather than trying to force yourself to care more.
Why do devoted people experience compassion fatigue?
Devoted people often experience compassion fatigue because they pour themselves out for others consistently and neglect their own need for refilling.
What does Jesus’ example teach about compassion fatigue?
Jesus’ example shows that even amidst relentless ministry, he found compassion by slipping away to be alone with His Father, demonstrating the power of returning to the source.
How can I overcome emotional numbness?
You can overcome emotional numbness by recognizing it as depletion, not a character flaw, and intentionally seeking time alone with God to allow Him to refill your heart.
Esther Smith spends her workdays in a small room
Bart Leger:listening to people tell her their worst things that have
Bart Leger:ever happened to them. She's a Christian trauma counselor
Bart Leger:trained to remain calm while others share their pain hour
Bart Leger:after hour, week after week. And she's very frank about what
Bart Leger:years of that can do to a person who cares deeply. The same heart
Bart Leger:that pulls you into this work can slowly go numb until you
Bart Leger:catch yourself nodding along to someone suffering and feeling
Bart Leger:almost nothing at all. There's a clinical name for it. They call
Bart Leger:it the cost of sharing. Now, that's not the clinical name for
Bart Leger:it, but by the way, I'll get to that a little later. The strange
Bart Leger:part is who it hits the hardest. feels it the most and what
Bart Leger:refills them. But
Bart Leger:welcome to Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. I'm Bart Leger. If
Bart Leger:you've ever noticed yourself going numb to other people's
Bart Leger:pain lately, feeling less than you used to, I want to walk you
Bart Leger:toward getting that back. I'll tell you where I experienced
Bart Leger:this. During my years in law enforcement, I made over 1,000
Bart Leger:death notifications. You knock on a stranger's door and hand
Bart Leger:them the worst news of their entire life. And you do it again
Bart Leger:and again. There comes a point where the next one is just
Bart Leger:another call. I went long stretches where I was only going
Bart Leger:through the motions, present in the room, but not really feeling
Bart Leger:much of anything. It scared me a little how emotionally numb I'd
Bart Leger:gone. What brought my compassion back wasn't trying harder to
Bart Leger:care. It was resting and reconnecting with the calling
Bart Leger:God gave me until my heart could feel again. That's the thing
Bart Leger:about that numbness. It can happen to anyone who cares for
Bart Leger:others over a long stretch. It's called compassion fatigue. And
Bart Leger:it's not only a counselor's problem or chaplain's or a
Bart Leger:nurse's or someone that's in first response. A parent of a
Bart Leger:child who struggled for years can hit it. So can the friend
Bart Leger:who's always the strong one. You give and you give. And one day
Bart Leger:you notice the news shows another tragedy and you barely
Bart Leger:register it. Or someone tells you what they're going through
Bart Leger:and you find yourself nodding without feeling it. The caring
Bart Leger:is still in there somewhere. The well it draws from has just run
Bart Leger:dry. That's compassion fatigue. And it doesn't mean you become a
Bart Leger:cold person. It means a warm person has been pouring out
Bart Leger:faster than they've been being refilled. Now look at Jesus
Bart Leger:because he shows us where the refilling comes from. Matthew
Bart Leger:tells us about a moment in the middle of relentless ministry,
Bart Leger:crowds pressing in from every side. Listen to Matthew 9.36.
Bart Leger:When he, or Jesus, saw the he had compassion on them because
Bart Leger:they were confused and helpless like sheep without a shepherd.
Bart Leger:He saw the crowds and he felt for them. Stop and notice how
Bart Leger:remarkable that is. This was after long days of healing and
Bart Leger:teaching and being grabbed at by people who all wanted something
Bart Leger:from him. The exact conditions that leave most of us left with
Bart Leger:nothing to give. And Jesus still looked out at one more crowd and
Bart Leger:was moved with compassion. How did he do that? Well, the
Bart Leger:gospels keep showing us the same habit again and again. He
Bart Leger:slipped away from the crowds to be alone with his father. His
Bart Leger:compassion for flowed from those hours with God and it kept
Bart Leger:flowing because he kept returning to the source. That's
Bart Leger:the key for you too. Your compassion isn't gone for good
Bart Leger:and it hasn't been destroyed. It's been depleted and depleted
Bart Leger:things can be refilled. But you won't refill it by gritting your
Bart Leger:teeth and ordering yourself to care more. You refill it the
Bart Leger:same way Jesus did, by getting alone with the father and
Bart Leger:letting him do for your heart what you can't do by force.
Bart Leger:Compassion is downstream from communion. When the river feels
Bart Leger:dry, you don't fix it at the riverbed. You go back to the
Bart Leger:spring. It hits the most devoted ones, the people who pour
Bart Leger:themselves out for everyone else and never stop to be refilled.
Bart Leger:Esther had seen that up close, which is why she now spends part
Bart Leger:of her time caring for other worn-out counselors, pointing
Bart Leger:them back to the one well that doesn't run dry. It's the same
Bart Leger:rhythm Jesus kept. Matthew tells us that when he saw the crowds,
Bart Leger:he was moved with compassion for them, confused and helpless as
Bart Leger:they were, and even then he kept slipping away to be alone with
Bart Leger:his father. His compassion flowed out of those hours and it
Bart Leger:kept flowing because he kept going back. Here's today's
Bart Leger:challenge. If you've gone numb, stop treating it as a character
Bart Leger:flaw to muscle past and start treating it as a tank that needs
Bart Leger:refilling. Carve out time this week to get alone with God with
Bart Leger:nothing to produce and no one to help. Just bring him your
Bart Leger:numbness and tell him the truth about it. God, I've got nothing
Bart Leger:left to feel with. I need you to refill me. Then, let yourself
Bart Leger:rest without guilt and watch for your heart to soften again. And
Bart Leger:it will. The spring you've been drinking from doesn't run dry.
Bart Leger:Father, you see the ones listening whose hearts have gone
Bart Leger:numb from caring too long. They've poured out for everyone
Bart Leger:around them and there's little left. Thank you that numbness
Bart Leger:isn't the end of compassion, only a sign that the well needs
Bart Leger:refilling. Draw them away to be with you the way you drew your
Bart Leger:son and refill what years of pouring out have emptied. Let
Bart Leger:them feel for the people in front of them and for you. In
Bart Leger:Jesus' name, amen. If this episode encouraged you today,
Bart Leger:would you share it with someone who might need to hear it?
Bart Leger:Simply go to DailyDevotionsForBusyLives.com
Bart Leger:slash 271 and copy the link. It only takes a second, and it
Bart Leger:might make a real difference in someone's day. Thanks for
Bart Leger:joining me on Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. Remember, a numb
Bart Leger:heart isn't a dead one. It's simply a depleted one. And the
Bart Leger:same Father who refilled Jesus is ready to refill you. Come
Bart Leger:back next time for more encouragement to help you live
Bart Leger:grounded in God's truth. Until then, God bless and have a great
Bart Leger:day. Thank you.








