Caregiver Burnout Is Real — And It Nearly Took Me Out

News

You won’t find this on a prescription bottle or in a medical chart, but it’s just as deadly:
Caregiver burnout. And it nearly took me out.

When my wife Vera was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, her doctor told me “Johnny, you’re going to need a support system.”  My overly confident, male-ego driven reply—imagining myself pounding my chest like King Kong—was “Doc, I’ve got this!”  Not knowing what was to come, I told myself I could handle it. That I was strong enough. That love would carry me through.

What I didn’t know is that love without support can destroy you.

Let’s get one thing straight:
This disease doesn’t just take our loved ones — it takes us with them.
Not always physically. But mentally, emotionally, spiritually? Piece by piece, it chips away at who we are. 

The research says 40% of caregivers die before the person they’re caring for.  

Let that sink in.

Forty percent.
Not from accidents or illness — but from the slow, silent cost of pouring out everything you’ve got without ever getting refilled.

I’ve lived that stat. I’ve walked right up to the edge of total collapse.
And I’m here to tell you: you’re not weak for feeling exhausted. You’re human.

Here’s what it looked like for me:

  • Forgetting to eat until dinner.
  • Snapping at people I love.
  • Going numb to everything that used to bring me joy.
  • Waking up more tired than I went to bed.
  • Telling myself, “Just push through,” every damn day — until my body finally said no.

I don’t care how tough you are — no one’s built to carry this alone.

They told me to take care of myself—but no one told me how. No one warned me what happens when you give and give until you disappear. No one mentioned the silent epidemic slowly killing caregivers while we’re too busy keeping someone else alive.

What you’re feeling? The exhaustion, the anger, the guilt, the shame, the panic, the hollow ache? It’s not weakness. It’s not selfishness. It’s burnout.

Burnout isn’t solved with bubble baths or better sleep. Burnout is soul-level depletion. It’s spiritual exhaustion. It’s compassion collapse. It’s a slow erosion of you.

And it’s real. I lived it. And I nearly didn’t make it out.

You’re not imagining it. You’re not overreacting. And you’re definitely not alone.

Watch for These Signs:

Let’s cut through the noise. These aren’t just “stress symptoms” — they’re warning signs your body and soul are waving in your face:

  • You’re always tired, even after resting.
  • You feel irritable, guilty, hopeless — sometimes all at once.
  • You get sick more often.
  • You’ve pulled away from things you used to enjoy.
  • You snap or shut down over little things.
  • You feel invisible. Like no one sees what you’re carrying.

Sound familiar? Then listen close…

Here’s What I Had to Learn the Hard Way:

You can’t serve from an empty cup.
You can’t care for someone else if you’re falling apart.
And no — that’s not selfish. That’s survival.

You were never meant to do this alone. Not by Scripture. Not by biology. Not by design.

So What Can You Do?

Start small. Breathe.
Ask for help. Even if it’s just for an hour.
Say yes to a walk, to church, to rest.
Let someone sit with your loved one while you get poured into.

And if you don’t have anyone in your life who understands what this takes — you do now.
I’ve walked this road. I’m still walking it. And I’m here to walk it with you.

Need someone in your corner?
Reach out. No pressure. No judgment. Just someone who gets it.

Recommended Listen: “Trust In Jesus” by Third Day

Founder | Caregiver Coach & Mentor | Fortis Invictus, LLC
www.fortisinvictus.com