
A woman was standing between two strangers on the downtown train on a recent Tuesday morning commute, glued to her phone. Her forehead furrowed as she scrolled past a video of distant wildfire damage, a friend’s cancer update, and a coworker’s layoff notice. She appeared to have run a mile by the time the train arrived at the station. She hadn’t even moved.
There’s a certain weight to taking on other people’s emotions before you’ve even had your coffee. It’s not a dramatic case of mental exhaustion from consuming other people’s emotions. It doesn’t make an announcement. It builds up gradually, drip by drip, much like a dripping faucet that you don’t notice until the sink overflows.
| Name | Dr. Susan Albers, PsyD |
|---|---|
| Profession | Clinical Psychologist |
| Affiliation | Cleveland Clinic |
| Known For | Research and commentary on empathy fatigue and emotional eating |
| Field | Mental Health & Behavioral Medicine |
| Website | https://health.clevelandclinic.org |
Psychologists have long characterized empathy as a limited resource. According to Dr. Susan Albers of the Cleveland Clinic, empathy fatigue—a term used to describe the emotional and physical exhaustion brought on by prolonged caring—can result from repeated exposure to distress. After being bombarded with cortisol every day, the body finally lets you know when it’s had enough. Often, that signal manifests as numbness. The scale is different now.
In the past, therapists and healthcare professionals were thought to be the main victims of compassion fatigue. The rest of us are currently consuming a constant flow of unfiltered emotion via group chats, livestreams, podcasts, and screens. Social media users may have become unintentional caregivers as a result of its ability to absorb grief and anxiety at industrial speed.
Last month, two college students were sitting across from one another at a London café, talking about climate anxiety with their laptops open. One acknowledged that she had completely stopped reading the news. Long after the sugar had dissolved, she stirred her tea and said, “I just can’t carry it.” It wasn’t indifference. Depletion was the cause.
Often, empathy fatigue begins quietly. When your friend vents, you become agitated. You ignore a tragic headline as you scroll past it. You don’t answer calls because you can’t handle any more issues. Research released by organizations such as the National Institutes of Health indicates that extended exposure to the trauma of others can increase vulnerability to anxiety and depression, interfere with sleep, and impair concentration. Overstimulated, the brain switches to self-defense.

Detachment may be the appearance of that protection.
It seems that being emotionally available all the time is rewarded in modern life. It has social value to be “the strong friend.” Being informed also helps. However, there is an unnoticed tax involved. Boundaries become hazy when every group chat turns into a helpline and every feed into a crisis bulletin.
It’s difficult to ignore how many people report feeling both emotionally empty and hyperconnected.
This drain may be exacerbated by hyperempathy, which clinicians refer to as heightened empathic sensitivity. Strongly emotionally attuned people experience other people’s emotions somatically, such as constricted chests, racing thoughts, and uneasy stomachs. Carrying those borrowed feelings over time can make it harder to distinguish oneself from others.
However, taking a step back can make you feel guilty.
When parents ignore school emails that describe systemic stress, they feel it. When they turn off alerts about international conflicts, activists sense it. There is a recurring concern that showing less concern equates to showing less compassion. Whether this guilt is biologically based or culturally conditioned is still unknown, but it keeps many people attached to emotional currents they are unable to maintain.
The symptoms are not merely hypothetical. headaches in the middle of the afternoon. Despite being physically tired, I have trouble falling asleep. an increasing indifference to small annoyances. According to medical literature from sources such as the Mayo Clinic Health System, emotional exhaustion frequently develops gradually and presents itself as “just a busy season.”
However, busy seasons typically come to an end. Overwhelming empathy doesn’t always work.
The performance component is another. Expressing emotional awareness has come to be seen as a sign of maturity in some circles. Under upsetting news, people post reflective thoughts and live-narrate their reactions. We haven’t thoroughly examined how cognitively taxing that continuous processing, carried out repeatedly and in public, may be.
We feel as though we are running emotional marathons while oblivious to the distance as we watch this play out.
In the past, local tragedies, vigils, and funerals were all part of the collective but sporadic grieving process. Exposure is ongoing and worldwide now. Within seconds of a disaster occurring on the other side of the ocean, calls to action, images, and commentary are displayed. The nervous system does not distinguish between pixels and proximity as clearly as we would like.
A peculiar duality—deeply caring and deeply worn out—may emerge as a result.

None of this implies that apathy is the solution. Empathy is still necessary for moral decision-making, policy formation, relationship building, and the smooth operation of societies. However, empathy that isn’t refilled can turn into apathy or resentment. People are frequently surprised by that change. When they awaken one morning, they discover that they have very little emotion.
According to experts, recovery entails setting almost anticultural boundaries, such as limiting exposure, planning emotional downtime, and putting one’s own processing ahead of taking on other people’s suffering. These aren’t very impressive gestures. These recalibrations are minor. shutting down the news app. sending a call to voicemail. sitting quietly and without saying anything.
It’s possible that learning to care sustainably, rather than more, will be the next big thing in mental health.
One of the silent defining characteristics of this age may be the mental exhaustion of consuming everyone else’s emotions. This isn’t because we lack empathy, but rather because there are too many opportunities for us to exercise it. How resilient and connected we are will depend on how well we handle that flood.

