Self-Compassion for Care Staff

Using self-kindness, mindfulness, and balanced self-talk to reduce burnout risk and support steadier care home practice

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Recognising and Reframing Negative Self-Talk

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Negative self-talk is the inner commentary that criticises, blames or predicts failure. In care home work it often follows a complaint, a difficult resident interaction, a safeguarding concern, a medication error, an inspection remark, or a shift where there was simply too much to do.

Common patterns

  • All-or-nothing thinking: "If I did not do this perfectly, I failed."
  • Catastrophising: "This will ruin everything."
  • Overgeneralising: "I always get this wrong."
  • Personalising: "The resident is upset, so it must be my fault."
  • Mind reading: "Everyone thinks I cannot cope."

Reframing with compassion

Reframing does not dismiss the problem. It replaces a harsh, global judgement with a balanced statement that keeps responsibility and supports learning.

Scenario

After a relative complains about communication, a care worker thinks, "I am awful with families. I should not be doing this job."

How could this self-talk be reframed?

Compassionate reframing keeps the learning but removes the unnecessary self-attack.

 

Ask Dr. Aiden


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