Tune in as we get REAL about working in schools, serving students, and advocating for our roles. You've never heard school counseling like this.
We LOVE helping school counselors! From interviewing to learning about all the the
things they don't teach in grad school like 504, MTSS, and behavior intervention, we will help you become the most empowered & educated counselor-expert you can be!
When “I’m Tired” Doesn’t Tell the Whole Story
Have you ever been asked how you’re doing and surprised yourself with your answer? Not “I’m busy.” Not “I’m tired.”
Instead, something deeper came out.
“My soul is tired.”
That kind of exhaustion hits differently. It’s not fixed by a long weekend, a break, or even a summer off. It lingers. It follows you home. It shows up even when you technically did everything right.
Many school counselors live in this space, even if we don’t always have language for it. We know we’re exhausted, yet all the usual advice never seems to help. Set stronger boundaries. Practice more self-care. Try a new routine. Download another app. Journal more.
Still, the tired stays.
Why Calling It Burnout Doesn’t Fully Fit
For years, school counseling conversations have labeled this feeling as burnout. Burnout is real, and research defines it clearly: emotional exhaustion, depersonalization and a reduced sense of accomplishment… all caused by chronic workplace stress.
Here’s the problem.
Burnout research starts with the assumption that the role itself is healthy and the stress comes from overload within that role. That assumption breaks down for school counselors.
Our exhaustion often doesn’t come from doing too much of the right work. It comes from being unable to do the work we know is right.
The Weight of Moral Distress and Moral Injury
A growing body of research across helping professions points to something different: moral distress and moral injury.
Moral injury shows up when you know what ethical, effective care looks like, the system prevents you from providing it, and you’re still held responsible for the outcome.
Read that again slowly.
If you’ve ever assessed a student, known exactly what they needed, and been blocked from providing it, you’ve felt this. If you’ve been accountable for outcomes without authority or control, you’ve lived it. This isn’t a mindset issue. It isn’t a confidence issue. It’s a structural problem with predictable psychological consequences.
High Demand, Low Control Is a Toxic Combination
One of the strongest predictors of long-term occupational stress isn’t workload alone. It’s lack of control.
Research using the job demand-control model shows that high demands paired with low control create unsustainable stress. High demands paired with high control are far more manageable.
School counselors sit squarely in the high-demand, low-control category by design. We’re responsible for student outcomes while having limited authority to influence the systems that shape them. That tension doesn’t disappear when you clock out.
When You’re Trained for More Than You’re Allowed to Do
Another layer of exhaustion comes from role distortion. Studies on job satisfaction show that when professionals are consistently prevented from using their highest-level skills, satisfaction plummets even when workload stays the same.
This hits school counselors hard.
Many of us are trained alongside clinical professionals. We learn assessment, intervention, and counseling skills deeply. Then we enter systems where we’re routinely prevented from using them. That gap creates frustration. Over time, it creates disengagement. Not because you don’t care, but because being blocked again and again wears you down.
Vicarious Trauma Doesn’t Always Announce Itself
Vicarious trauma doesn’t always show up as feeling overwhelmed in the moment. Research shows it accumulates quietly, especially without structured processing or consultation.
The stories build up. The crises stack. The exposure continues. Eventually, the system clogs.
Most helping professions assume access to supervision or consultation as protection. School counselors are often expected to do trauma-adjacent work without either. That isn’t resilience. It’s exposure without a container.
Systems That Never Recovered Shift the Load Onto You
After collective trauma, research distinguishes between returning to function and true recovery. Many school systems returned to productivity without recovery. When systems don’t regulate, the emotional load shifts onto individuals. School counselors become the pressure valve.
If your work feels like nonstop tier three crisis response with no space to build tier one support, that’s not a personal failure. It’s often the result of a system that was never allowed to recalibrate.
Why Self-Care Alone Keeps Missing the Mark
Traditional self-care addresses depletion. What many school counselors experience is chronic role strain, ethical conflict, and low control.
You can’t self-care your way out of moral injury.
You can’t boundary your way out of authority you don’t have.
Relief starts with naming the problem accurately.
The Role of Consultation as Protective Infrastructure
In psychology, medicine, social work, and emergency response, consultation is considered essential. Not optional. Not a bonus. It protects against distorted self-blame. It prevents ethical drift. It helps professionals separate what they can control from what they can’t.
Humans don’t do high-stakes helping work well in isolation. If you’re exhausted, research says this clearly: your response is normal. Your conditions are abnormal.
Naming It Is the First Step Forward
Understanding what’s actually happening changes everything. It shifts the conversation from “Why can’t I handle this?” to “Why does this role make it so hard to do ethical, sustainable work?”
That clarity matters.
Want More?
If you want to hear this conversation unpacked even more deeply, including the research behind moral injury, vicarious trauma, and why consultation matters so much for school counselors, this week’s episode of the School for School Counselors Podcast dives straight into it. It’s one you may want to listen to with a notebook nearby.
If you’d like more support, clarity, or even just a place where people get it, come hang out with us. The S4SC Blog and Hub are packed with resources to help you feel grounded and confident, and the Mastermind is where we walk through these exact situations together in real time. You belong in a community that lifts you up as much as you lift your students. Come join us. ?

Would love to get on your mailing list.
Absolutely!
https://hub.schoolforschoolcounselors.com/sign-me-up