When Everything Has Been Drained: Living With Exhaustion in a Long War
If you have been living under the weight of prolonged war — the sirens, the grief, the uncertainty that never fully lifts — exhaustion is not a sign of weakness. It is what happens when a human nervous system is asked to hold too much, for too long, without enough rest or safety. You are not broken. You are overloaded. What Exhaustion Actually Looks Like This is not ordinary tiredness. This is waking up already depleted. It may look like struggling to get out of bed, losing interest in things that once mattered, feeling a fog settle over your thoughts so thickly that even simple decisions become difficult. Everything irritates — sounds, messages, other people's voices. And underneath all of it, a quiet, cruel thought: others are managing, and I am not. These are not signs of personal failure. They are predictable responses of a nervous system that has been cycling through the same loop — alert, mobilize, hold on — without a real break. Under prolonged traumatic stress, the body...