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Oct 11 , 2025. By Kidist Yidnekachew ( Kidist Yidnekachew is interested in art, human nature and behaviour. She has studied psychology, journalism and communications and can be reached at (kaymina21@gmail.com) )
Psychologists describe the savior complex as the relentless drive to help others even when personal wellbeing suffers. While rooted in empathy, this pattern can drain emotional and physical energy, leaving the helper isolated and depleted. Studies show that chronic overcommitment leads to rising stress and declining self-esteem. The irony? Those who most want to heal others often ignore their own needs. Sustainable compassion starts with boundaries, not burnout.
I have this one friend who absolutely amazes me. She’s fiercely loyal, always trying to help, and practically incapable of saying no. When she does manage to decline something, she’s apologizing for it moments later. She’s the kind of person who would drop everything, including her own family obligations, to rescue a friend in need.
We all love her for this huge, selfless heart. Yet lately, she’s been running on fumes, trying to accommodate everyone at the expense of her own health and family time. Being there for everyone else, at the end of the day, strips you of the energy you need to be there for yourself.
When the toll finally began to show, she reached out to me; the group’s resident “shrink.” Okay, I’m flattering myself. But because I’ve studied a bit of psychology, my friends often come to me for advice. (No, I didn’t treat her formally; therapy rules about boundaries with friends are clear.) After listening to her story, I reaffirmed what I already knew: she is genuinely an amazing soul. She doesn’t help people to look good or out of hidden motives. She helps because it feels right to be the one who can fix things. Unfortunately, not everyone needs fixing, and not every problem can be solved by one person.
She was struggling. She wanted to know how to help others without draining herself completely or drowning in guilt when she couldn’t be available 24/7. That’s when I reminded her of a concept psychologists call the savior complex.
I think we all know a “Savior.” Maybe you work with them, maybe you live with them, or maybe, just maybe, you’re looking in the mirror right now.
A Savior, or someone gripped by what we might politely call the savior complex, is the person whose impulse to help is so powerful it drowns out every alarm bell in their own life. They are the ones who would run into a burning building for a stranger.
This isn’t about being nice. It’s about being compelled, the drive to rescue, fix, or carry someone else’s burden, even when doing so leaves your own emotional reserves, bank account, or sanity depleted. It is noble, beautiful, and utterly exhausting.
The compulsion to save often starts with the best of intentions. We’ve all felt that rush of purpose when we solve a friend’s crisis. It’s validation, a clean win in a messy world. When you’re helping someone else, their problem becomes concrete, manageable, and, crucially, a great distraction from your own looming uncertainties.
But when you continuously pour from your cup into everyone else’s, you eventually run dry. And a dry well can’t help anyone. The Savior’s life becomes a paradox: they’re surrounded by people they’ve helped, yet they often feel utterly alone and unable to ask for help themselves.
And here’s the cruel twist, after many sacrifices, Saviors often end up resenting the people they saved. Not because they’re bad people, but because they’re human. When you give until it hurts, you subconsciously expect the universe or the person you helped, to give back. When they don’t, resentment creeps in, staining what was once a pure, selfless act. The “savior” becomes the “martyr,” and martyrdom, no matter how righteous, is lonely and bitter.
So my friend asked: how can she make the shift from being a Savior to being a supporter?
It starts with acknowledging a simple truth: you cannot pour from an empty cup.
We need to trade the theatrical cape for a sensible, boundary-setting vest. Being a true friend, partner, or colleague doesn’t mean sacrificing your own oxygen; it means showing up consistently and sustainably.
Think of the airplane safety talk: put your own oxygen mask on first before assisting others. It sounds selfish, but it’s the purest form of logic. If you pass out, you’re no good to anyone. When you take care of your sleep, your finances, and your mental health, you become a source of steady strength, someone whose support lasts beyond the crisis moment.
Ultimately, the best way to save the world, or even just your corner of it, is to stay well enough to keep showing up. Stop chasing the feeling of indispensability. Start embracing the quiet, radical heroism of taking care of yourself. The world doesn’t just need people willing to help; it needs people healthy enough to keep helping for the long run.
In a world often criticized for its selfishness, Saviors are a beautiful anomaly. Our job isn’t to exploit their kindness but to remind them, gently, lovingly, that even heroes need rest. Let’s make sure that incredible kindness bar never runs dry.
PUBLISHED ON
Oct 11,2025 [ VOL
26 , NO
1328]
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