AI Money Machine
A complete 30-day step-by-step system for entrepreneurs, freelancers, and job seekers to b…
A guide for when life gets hard
When caring for others has taken everything — finding yourself in the giving.
Caregiving is one of the most loving and most exhausting things a human being can do. Whether you are caring for an ageing parent, a partner with chronic illness, or a child with complex needs, the relentless nature of that love — and the grief, the resentment, the guilt, the profound tenderness — is rarely acknowledged by the world around you.
Compassion fatigue is not selfishness. It is the inevitable consequence of giving without adequate replenishment. These books and resources are here to help you care sustainably — and to remind you that your needs matter too.
Your recovery pathway
Five science-backed stages from crisis to thriving
Every title below has been chosen because it speaks directly to where you are right now — and where you are going.
A complete 30-day step-by-step system for entrepreneurs, freelancers, and job seekers to b…
A 21-day, body-first somatic workbook for resetting an exhausted nervous system. Grounded …
The rebuilt self is not a return to who you were before — it is something more honest, mor…
Personalised guidance
The free 5-minute Strong Through Change Assessment reveals exactly which stage of the framework you're in right now — and gives you a tailored reading path to help you move forward.
Compassion fatigue is not a sign that you have stopped caring. It is a sign that you have been caring without adequate support — and that something needs to cha…
Read the full article →You're not the first to feel this way — and you won't be the last. Here are honest answers to the questions we hear most.
Get personalised guidance →Yes — and the shame around this feeling can be worse than the feeling itself. Resentment is almost universal among caregivers and it does not mean you love the person less. It means you are human, and that you need more support than you are currently receiving.
Signs include emotional numbness or detachment from the person you care for, chronic exhaustion that doesn't improve with rest, loss of pleasure in things you once enjoyed, reduced empathy, and physical symptoms like recurring headaches or illness. If several of these ring true, this resource is for you.
The premise of "no time" is often partly real and partly a symptom of caregiver identity — where your own needs feel illegitimate. Start microscopic: five minutes of intentional stillness, one call to a friend, one request declined. Recovery accumulates from the smallest acts of self-acknowledgment.
This is one of the most painful dimensions of caregiving. You cannot force acceptance of outside help. What you can do: seek support for yourself regardless of their preferences, connect with caregiver peer groups, and work with a professional who can help you navigate where compassionate care ends and self-erosion begins.