Tag Archives: Megan E. O’Laughlin

On the Shore of the Apocalypse

by Megan O’Laughlin

One of these days, I will find a dead body on this beach. It’s written in the stars, or at least in so many true crime stories: woman walking dog finds dead body on neighborhood beach.

Every morning I walk the new puppy to our small neighborhood shore where he sniffs seaweed while I hunt for sea-glass. I walk because I’m tired and my depletion comes from something that has a lot of terms: secondary trauma, compassion fatigue, vicarious trauma, all terms for various forms of caregiver exhaustion, definitions for intense weariness.  I used to believe such symptoms indicate how I’ve given too much, but perhaps it means that the needs outweigh any possible gifts.   Continue reading

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Filed under Nonfiction