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Burned
Out and Up
by Ronald Terry Constant ©
1992
(reprinted with permission)
Police Stress (Main Page)
The Veteran Officer
Causes Of Burnout
Symptoms Of Burnout
Combating Burnout
The Veteran Officer
"I don't want to talk to
citizens. I don't even want to come to work most of the time. The sergeant
has warned me about the sick time I'm using. I dread it when the
dispatcher sends me on a call. My nerves are on edge. I have no patience
at all. I'm afraid that I'm a danger to citizens, and worse, I'm scared
that I can't backup up my buddies! I've just about decided to leave police
work--I never thought I would think such a thing, much less say it."
The veteran officer of twelve years who was sitting across from me was
speaking without emotion. Each word passing his lips proclaimed the
extreme conscious effort he was making to talk in spite of the lethargy
that screamed from his posture, demeanor and attitude. This officer--who
had won multiple honors, awards and recognition in his exemplary
career--was burned out to the point of being completely burned up
emotionally. Burnout can occur at almost anytime in a career, but the
twelve year mark seems to be one of the pivotal points.
Job burnout is a form of stress that all people suffer to some degree at
various times in their lives. Burnout becomes critical when a person is
distressed and begins to feel fatigued and frustrated every day with no
relief. Normally people have days when they feel energetic and optimistic,
days that are so-so, and days when they are down and frustrated. When your
days go from being fatigued and frustrated to despair and anger with no
good days, then you might be suffering job burnout without the emotional
reserves to rise above the stress.
What is job burnout, and what distinguishes it from other stress? Job
burnout is the continuing sense of frustration and tiredness described
above that often occurs when a person is dedicated to a calling, career,
or cause and does not receive the rewards he expected.
There are many aspects of police work that contribute to burnout. Let's
look at a few.
Causes Of Burnout
Police have too much to do and not enough time to do their job. Crime and
calls for police service are increasing incessantly, but resources and
time to do the job are not increasing accordingly.
One poster said, "The faster I work, the behinder I get."
Another poster said, "We, the dedicated, have done so much with so little
for so long, we are now qualified to do the impossible with nothing."
These sayings express feelings of frustration with a shadow of hope that
something will be done to improve the situation, but the reality remains,
despite the hope, that police have a job that must be done well in
seemingly impossible circumstances.
Not only are the demands on
police officers increasing, the rate of increase is increasing, that is,
the demands on police are accelerating, not just growing. Changes in
crime, court decisions, and community expectations occur faster than
people can cope with the changes. We are all suffering from the stress
that Alvin Toffler called "future shock" in his excellent book with that
title.
Police officers must do impossible tasks and meet unrealistic deadlines in
the worst of working conditions. When an officer is on a bridge in cold
rain protecting the scene of an accident caused by a burglar escaping from
a building and is being cursed by a passing motorist who had to slow down
on the freeway, the officer wishes that she had the problems of an office
worker who is frustrated because the transformer in a light is buzzing and
the coffee isn't ready yet. The community expects the officer to clear the
freeway immediately, care for injured people, gather all evidence
necessary to convict the fleeing felon, not inconvenience other people,
and keep citizens and administrators happy.
The demands at home don't relent either. An officer must meet the needs of
his family and spend time with them. Yet he works shift work, attends
court, and works overtime. He has little control over these times and how
they affect his family. He does not receive a large salary to compensate
for the time he can't spend with his family. He is further demoralized
because he is seldom recognized or appreciated for his dedicated work. In
fact, officers are sometimes criticized by the news media, officials and
citizens after putting themselves in harm's way to aggressively protect
and serve. No wonder so many of you are suffering from job burnout. You're
burned up.
The causes of burnout mentioned are not the only causes, and police work
is not the only profession that suffers burnout. Regardless, the fact
remains that many police employees are suffering from burnout. Officers
need to remember that dedicated civilian employees are just as committed
and suffer many of the same stresses.
Symptoms Of Burnout
Burnout appears as symptoms in several areas including job performance,
health and emotional stability.
Job performance is often affected by lessened productivity, carelessness,
and absenteeism. Officers begin to make fewer calls and initiate fewer
activities. They become careless, even sloven, in their appearance, and
they don't take good care of equipment and cars.
A person might drink more, sleep less, and eat erratically. Drinking more
intensifies tiredness because excess alcohol interferes with normal sleep
cycles that rejuvenate emotional reserves. Low quality foods from fast
food places contribute similarly to alcohol.
On the physical side, the body begins to give out under the distress.
People have indigestion, ulcers, and body aches. Higher blood pressure is
common. Officers complaining of or feeling more physical ailments than
normal need to heed their bodies which are shouting that there are
problems.
At an emotional level people become depressed and despair of continuing to
try. They are often lethargic, apathetic, and tired. They become anxious
and irritable. Their very demeanor is a bright, flashing sign showing the
problems within.
If you see these symptoms in yourself or a fellow officer, you might be
seeing the effects of job burnout, and the "blue code of silence" doesn't
apply. Officers suffering burnout often don't see the temporary nature of
their feelings nor the need for support. Be proactive to help a
friend--not reactive in bemoaning the loss of a good officer. Contact
support services such as a chaplain, psychologist or peer support group.
Offer an understanding ear. Don't just sit by and watch a career tiredly
soak away.
Combating Burnout
The best way to combat burnout is to prevent it. An ounce of prevention is
worth a gallon of ulcer medication.
Maintaining physical health and exercise is the most obvious and concrete
way to prevent burnout. The paradox is that as a person begins to despair
and feel fatigued, she usually stops exercising and taking care of
herself. She skips meals and eats junk from fast food establishments. She
begins to sleep less. A downward spiral begins. If you are burned out,
start sleeping more, eating good foods, and exercising. The best time to
fight the battle is before you are burned out. Establish good habits for
eating, sleeping, and exercising when you feel up to the task, not after
you see the need.
Don't get into the cycle of working longer hours. Work smarter. Set
realistic goals for yourself. Do what you can do, not what you can't do.
You are only responsible for what you can do. Administration is
responsible for providing resources for the things that employees can't
do.
When you go home after a shift, leave the job at work and become a normal
human. Enjoy your friends and family. Have at least as many friends
outside of law enforcement as you do within. I'm not suggesting that you
never talk to your spouse, family or friends about what you do as an
officer or the feelings you have when doing your job. Don't protect them.
On the contrary, your family, especially your spouse, needs to understand
who you are as an officer. What I am saying is that you are a person first
and police work is your career. For example, be a parent guiding your
children to adulthood--not an officer laying down the law to make sure
your child never suffers through the mistakes of the delinquents you
encounter on the streets.
Part-time jobs are a prime contributor to job burnout. If you work as an
officer in your off-hours, you don't ever get away from the job which is
one the things you need most to do. If you can live without the jobs,
don't work them. Do something else to make extra money. It's better to
have a few less bucks than to lose a family or a career. Are those few
hours per week at a part-time job worth being stressed out all week long,
week after week?
Make sure you have people to talk to, preferably away from police work.
Talking with someone who cares and is sympathetic helps you sort your
feelings. Avoid people who continually gripe about the police department
and never seem to grow. They will only feed the despair in you, and you
will return the favor by feeding the bad feelings in them. This
self-perpetuating cycle is why choir practices never really helped
officers out of their burnout. The truth is that choir practices encourage
job burnout.
Earlier I pointed out that burnout results when a dedicated person doesn't
receive the rewards and recognition she expected for a job well done.
People have dealt with that problem for centuries. One answer found
throughout Judeo-Christian tradition is spiritual. Read these two passages
from the Bible.
Pro 29:26 "Many seek the favor of a ruler, but from the LORD a man gets
justice." (RSV)
Col 3:23 "Whatever your task, work heartily, as serving the Lord and not
men, 24 knowing that from the Lord you will receive the inheritance as
your reward; you are serving the Lord Christ." (RSV)
Ultimately, you work for the Lord and you will be judged by the Lord. If
your supervisor overlooks your dedicated work, you can be sure that your
Lord will remember. Eternal rewards and recognition are better than
immediate ones as a brick of gold bullion is better than a copper penny.
Keep your spiritual perspective. After all, you are an important part of a
much larger war of good against evil in which crime forms but a single
campaign.
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