Saturday, June 6, 2026

Tired from Caring? A Practical Reset for When You Feel “Off” - By Dr. Jiji Harner

Dear Friends,

 I’ve been thinking deeply about your struggle lately. Thank you for attending the debriefing sessions. When our role places us on the frontlines of helping others, it can feel as though everything will fall apart if we don’t do something. Carrying that responsibility can take a toll on us and leave us feeling overwhelmed.

We snap at minor annoyances and turn them into catastrophes, or sometimes we simply shut down and disguise our feelings as sarcastic jokes. We become so busy helping and checking on others that we forget to check on ourselves.

Many of you work in the medical field, human services, legal and justice professions, and shelter services. Some of you are parents and teachers. Feeling off is often a sign that something within you is asking for attention. It is your mind and body’s way of telling you that you matter too, and that something within you needs care.


Photo by Rejen Bosquit

I want you to know that I care—not just as your company's mental health consultant, counselor, or psychologist, but also as your friend. Many of you have asked me, “Why do I feel so drained? Why do little things cause me to overthink?” I’ve noticed that these questions can sometimes begin a downward spiral that pulls you into a state of depression.

You see, in life we all experience moments when something goes wrong. We magnify it and catastrophize it into a major mistake, rejection, failure, or loss. As we spend more and more time thinking about it, our attention shifts. That shift in attention can suddenly change our mood, and before we know it, we no longer feel like ourselves.

Instead of staying open and engaged, we withdraw. We overthink. We avoid. We become smaller. In psychological terms, this is your brain’s threat response system activating. The amygdala detects emotional danger (shame, fear, rejection), and your nervous system shifts into protection mode. Instead of staying calm and open we engaged in fight, flight, or most commonly, freeze and hide. That “hiding” doesn’t always look obvious.


Here are the signs of hiding:

  1. Procrastinating on things you used to enjoy
  2. Avoiding people who care about you
  3. Being overly self-critical
  4. Numbing out with distractions
  5. Playing small to avoid more disappointment

But here’s the key principle: You can’t heal what you keep avoiding. In counseling and behavioral science, growth begins with self-awareness. This is by allowing yourself to see the actual situation without judgment. So instead of asking, “What’s wrong with me?” 

Ask a better question: ðŸ‘‰ “Where am I right now—emotionally, mentally, relationally?” Not the ideal version of you. Not who you used to be. Just the honest present version.


💌THERE IS HELP AVAILABLE:
When you are ready for a session with me
Just send me a personal message on Messenger Jiji Harner
Here is more information about my services:
https://safeguardmentalhealth.org/

 

Here are the Daily Practical Steps to Overcome this Tendency

1. Name your state (regulate your brain)

  • Say it simply: “I feel anxious.” “I feel ashamed.” “I feel off.”
  • This activates the prefrontal cortex and calms emotional overload.

2. Calm body down before you fix

  • Take 3–5 slow breaths
  • Put your hand on your chest (this signals safety to your nervous system)
  • Sit in stillness for a minute instead of rushing to escape the feeling 

3. Reduce isolation (micro-connection)

  • Send one honest message to someone safe
  • Or spend quiet time in reflection/prayer—not performing, just being. Isolation intensifies distress; connection regulates it.

4. Take one small, identity-restoring action

  • If you’ve lost confidence → do one small task well
  • If you’ve lost joy → do one thing you used to enjoy (even briefly)
  • If you’ve lost kindness → help one person 
  • Don’t wait to feel like yourself—act your way back into alignment.

5. Reject toxic self-talk this is your brain learning a bad habit of faulty thinking:

  • I’m not enough
  • I messed everything up
  • I should just stay small 

Interrupt it:  This is just a stress response, not the truth.

6. Practice “presence” not “perfecting”

         Growth isn't about never falling. It's about returning to what is true each time you drift. Not the filtered version of you. Not the strong version. The real one—even when that reality is messy, uncertain, or unfinished. Because restoration psychologically and spiritually always starts the same way:

  • Stop Hiding
  • Be Present
  • Be honest
  • Reconnect
  • And from there, your brain rewires, your emotions stabilize, and your sense of self begins to rebuild—step by step, day by day.

 Connect with God: When life becomes overwhelming, our first response is often to do more, think more, or worry more. Yet Scripture invites us to something different: to be still. Stillness is not giving up; it is creating space to become present to God, to ourselves, and to what truly needs our attention. In that place of presence, we are reminded that we do not carry every burden alone. 


Here is God’s Invitation: Matthew 11:28-30 NIV “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Real Superheros Get Tired Too

 To Our Medical Doctors and Healthcare Professionals of the Philippines,

I am deeply honored to serve the men and women I consider the true heroes of our nation—our medical doctors, nurses, healthcare workers, and allied health professionals. Every day, you carry responsibilities that most people never fully see. You show up for your patients despite exhaustion. You answer calls at all hours. You make difficult decisions. You carry the weight of critical cases, life-changing diagnoses, and the hopes of countless families. You stand on the frontlines of healing, often sacrificing your own comfort, time, and well-being in service of others. Yet while you are tirelessly caring for everyone else, many of you rarely have the opportunity to care for yourselves.

The truth is that many healthcare professionals are struggling quietly. Beneath the white coat, many carry burdens that few people recognize. Some are emotionally exhausted. Some battle anxiety every day. Some are carrying grief, burnout, compassion fatigue, or overwhelming stress. Some are questioning themselves despite years of training and dedication. Some are even wondering whether they can continue in the profession they once loved.

Healthcare professionals are not immune to life's challenges. You balance patient care, family responsibilities, financial pressures, personal needs, and the emotional demands of your profession. Too often, your sacrifices go unnoticed.

Having studied and practiced in New York, my family and I chose to return to the Philippines because we believe this country remains a place where meaningful impact can be made. We believe the lives we touch here matter. We believe that those who dedicate their lives to caring for others deserve care, support, and appreciation as well.

Today, it is my privilege to extend my mental health services to our medical community. My mission is simple: to provide a safe, confidential, and supportive space where healthcare professionals can prioritize their own well-being without judgment—a space where they can process stress, anxiety, burnout, emotional fatigue, grief, life transitions, and the unique challenges that come with caring for others. Because taking care of yourself is not a sign of weakness. It is an act of wisdom. It is an act of courage. It is stewardship of your calling and of the very instrument of healing God uses for those who come under your care. And it is essential to sustaining a life and career dedicated to healing others.

To every doctor, nurse, therapist, technician, and healthcare professional throughout the Philippines: thank you. Your sacrifices matter. Your dedication matters. Your well-being matters. We appreciate you choosing a profession that requires years of study, countless sacrifices, and a heart committed to serving others. Thank you for answering God's call to heal, comfort, and care for those entrusted to you. And if you are carrying burdens in silence, please know that you do not have to carry them alone. Support is available. Seeking help is not a sign of weakness—it is a sign of strength. You spend your life caring for others. Allow someone to care for you, too.

THERE IS HELP AVAILABLE:

When you are ready for a session or debriefing with me

Just send me a personal message on Messenger Jiji Harner

Here is more information about my services:

https://safeguardmentalhealth.org/