When the manager emotionally runs dry, the team's capability dries up too.
A 2024 study tracked 62 managers leading change across 74 teams in a Canadian government org. As emotional exhaustion climbed, active leadership behaviors dropped. Laissez-faire patterns showed up where engagement used to be. Team psychological safety dropped. Readiness to change dropped behind that (Bonnaire, Boudrias & Vandenberghe, 2024). The cascade isn't subtle. The manager runs dry first. The team's capability runs dry behind her.
Section 4 named the role. This section diagnoses what the role costs.
The pattern has a clinical pedigree. Figley called it compassion fatigue in 1995, the kind of depletion that comes from absorbing other people's distress, not from a heavy to-do list (Figley, 1995). McCann and Pearlman called it vicarious trauma five years earlier, the way repeated exposure to other people's pain reshapes how the helper sees the world (McCann & Pearlman, 1990). Both frameworks were built for therapists and trauma workers. The clinical world spent thirty years naming this and building protections around it. Operational settings built neither.