Moral Injury and Self-Compassion: Being Kind to Yourself

How self-compassion reduces Moral Injury — Kristin Neff's research and practical practices.

Self-compassion — treating yourself with the same kindness you'd offer a good friend — is one of the most evidence-based psychological tools for moral injury.

What Self-Compassion Is (and Isn't) for Moral Injury

Self-compassion is not:

  • Self-pity (which increases moral injury)
  • Lowering standards or making excuses
  • Weakness

Self-compassion is:

  • Recognizing that struggling with moral injury is part of shared human experience
  • Being as kind to yourself as you would be to a friend with moral injury
  • Meeting moral injury with warmth rather than harsh self-criticism

The Research on Self-Compassion and Moral Injury

Kristin Neff's research consistently shows that self-compassion predicts lower moral injury, greater emotional resilience, and better wellbeing than self-esteem.

Building Self-Compassion for Moral Injury

  • Self-compassion break: 'This is suffering. Suffering is part of being human. May I be kind to myself in this moment.'
  • Inner critic reframe: What would you say to a friend with moral injury? Say that to yourself.
  • Common humanity: You're not alone in struggling with moral injury.

Related Resources

Bringwise

Turn psychology into daily habits

5 minutes a day. Science-backed insights you can actually use.

Download Free