Secondhand Trauma: How News Overload Affects Us The Bridge Chronicle
Life

When the World Hurts Too Much : Coping with Secondhand Trauma from the News

War, climate collapse, mass shootings, civil unrest, economic crises, natural disasters. You didn’t live through them—but somehow, you feel them in your chest. As the world appears to unravel in real-time, your phone, TV, or timeline keeps delivering one heartbreaking headline after another.

Indrayani Walokar

This phenomenon—where someone experiences emotional distress from exposure to someone else’s trauma—is called secondhand trauma, or vicarious trauma. And in the age of 24/7 news cycles and social media, it’s quietly becoming a widespread emotional crisis.

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Secondhand trauma happens when we absorb the stress, fear, grief, or helplessness of others. Unlike direct trauma, where you experience the crisis yourself, secondhand trauma comes through indirect exposure—such as watching a bombing unfold on a livestream, reading stories of forced displacement, or scrolling through graphic footage of protests or humanitarian disasters.

While more commonly discussed in professions like healthcare, journalism, or law enforcement, it’s now extending into everyday civilian life—thanks to how global suffering is digitally broadcast into our homes and pockets.

Why You Might Be Feeling This Now

  • Information overload

  • Visual intensity

  • Lack of closure

  • Empathy burnout

What You Can Do to Cope

1. Set Emotional Boundaries with the News

Give yourself permission to disconnect. You don’t need to be constantly updated to care. Choose specific times in the day to check the news, and avoid doing so before bed.

2. Be Mindful of the Format

Reading a long-form article may be less distressing than watching raw video footage. Choose formats that inform without shocking.

3. Create a Ritual of Pause

After consuming heavy news, engage in something that recenters you: a walk, deep breathing, lighting a candle, or calling a friend. These small rituals create emotional separation from what you’ve witnessed.

4. Don’t Guilt Yourself Into Emotional Exhaustion

You can care deeply about the world and still protect your mental health. Detachment is not denial. It’s a survival skill in a hyper-connected world.

5. Take Action, However Small

Often, secondhand trauma comes with a sense of helplessness. Donating, signing petitions, spreading awareness responsibly, or even educating yourself further can transform passive pain into active purpose.

Why It Matters to Address This

Left unchecked, secondhand trauma can lead to chronic anxiety, emotional numbness, or even compassion fatigue—where the desire to care gets replaced with irritability, apathy, or avoidance. In a world that needs compassion more than ever, protecting your mental bandwidth becomes a form of civic duty.

You are not meant to carry the weight of the world on your own. It is possible—and necessary—to stay informed and still protect your peace. Humanity is not a sprint of outrage. It is a marathon of care. And to sustain that, you must first care for yourself.

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