Skip to main content
Home
Menu Close

Utility menu

  • Why join BASW
  • Events
  • Media Centre

Popular on BASW

Campaigning and influencing
World social work day
Social work stands against poverty
People with lived experience
Career stages
Cost of living crisis

Main navigation

  • About social work
    • What is social work?
    • Topics in social work
    • Professional Social Work (PSW) Magazine
  • Careers
    • Become a social worker
    • Returning to social work
    • For employers
    • Specialisms
    • Career stages
    • Jobs board
    • Work for BASW
  • About BASW
    • Campaigning and influencing
    • Governance
    • Social work around the UK
    • Awards
    • Social work conferences UK
    • International Work
    • Feedback, suggestions & complaints
  • Training & CPD
    • Professional Development
    • Professional Capabilities Framework
    • Let's Talk Social Work Podcast
  • Policy & Practice
    • Resources
    • National policies
    • Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion
    • Working with...
    • Research and knowledge
    • Standards
  • Support
    • Advice & representation
    • Social Workers Union (SWU)
    • Social Work Professional Support Service (SWPSS)
    • Independent social workers
    • Student Hub
    • Financial support
    • Groups and networks
    • Membership renewals
    • How to contact us
Professional Social Work Magazine

Professional Social Work Magazine (PSW)

Main navigation

  • Digital editions
  • Guidance for contributors
  • PSW articles
  • Advertising

Survivor's guilt - a social worker's guide to coping with Christmas

Top tips from Alasdair Kennedy

Published by Professional Social Work magazine, 13 December, 2022

Jingle smells

Children who are looked after and those that aren’t but have some intervention often feel guilty at Christmas. Guilty they are not with parents. Guilty they get presents. Guilty that they don’t get presents. Guilty they are happy. Guilty about having a social worker in their life at a time of perceived happiness and joy to the world when sometimes theirs isn’t.

Our job as care workers is to be like little elves spreading love, care, warmth and often cuddles. So increase your visits before Christmas and maybe ask around for charity donations (you’ll be surprised what you get). I once got three bikes which I took to a family of 12 children, Not my finest hour - I think it caused more Christmas tears than cheers.

At this time of year some social workers suffer from what Valent (2016) describes as “survivor guilt”. Guilty about why clients can be left in risky situations, why children are not having a Waitrose Christmas experience (other supermarkets are available). Our minds ponder as to why poverty exists, how the cost of living crisis impacts on our clients.

These structural inequalities cannot be controlled, but some aspects you can influence. For example, in 2001 I worked with a family who had no electricity, food and no cooker, which I remedied prior to Christmas using grants. There was a baby in that home I knew was at risk from neglect - what we would now call being on the ‘edge of care’ - but because of Christmas I had to take time out.

I worried about it during the whole festive period. But I had to remind myself I had flagged out of hours; my risk assessments were sound and my notes up-to-date. I had seen the baby before going on leave, and he was safe and warm with the power cards I had provided.

I said to myself, “It is only four days away from the office,” but on the 3 January I was back on that doorstep at 8am. He was fine.

We must ensure we don’t get lost in the “whys” and “what-ifs” of our job and focus on living our Christmas to the fullest, using all your self-care techniques and ensuring we have time for ourselves to take stock.

Taking stock (ings)

Christmas can actually be a good time of year for many job seekers, and if you don’t job search you'll likely miss some of those opportunities.

You may be afraid of changing jobs, and you should be. But is it better staying somewhere that is making you miserable? You might think ‘better the devil’, but in five Christmases you will still be there and still be miserable.

But I have a mortgage and commitments, I hear you say. All I am saying is ensure you find something meaningful; it is vital to have an ethic or vision for your life, a strategy, which is meaningful. Maybe use Christmas to think about what do I need to change, not to make me happy - that’s an arbitrary goal - but what tasks will get me to X destination? X might be a new manager, or to study something that inspires you. The media urges us to stuff food down our neck when in reality we should use this time when we have a decent gap to reflect. Alternatively, don’t listen to boring old me, eat, drink and dance on the table at the office party...

Silent night

Don’t just disappear. Tell clients you’re away and here’s a top tip: add an extra fake day either end of your holidays to give yourself some breathing space (but don’t tell them). This allows you time to recentre and plan, so you’re prepared when they do call you in the first week of January full of high expressed emotions, expectations and wanting a visit. Turn on your email ‘out of office,’ tell them to contact duty, and change your voice mail message, so people know you’re unreachable and when you’ll be back, again using my fake day tip.

Therefore, everyone’s expectations are aligned, and no one gets a nasty surprise. Of course, if they are on the child protection register or similar ignore this advice.

And another thing: never, ever, text a client back during Christmas. No matter how in need they are or how guilty you feel. Indeed, switch off your phone if you can. Anyway, why are you texting clients? One of my social work rules is to ban texting between social workers and clients. Context is cloudy and texts are kept forever.

Do they know it's Christmas?

Please remember the social workers and care workers who work over Christmas. One in seven of social workers will be working on Christmas day. Sometimes due to efficiency agendas they are often doing it for the good of mankind not their wallet. I recently asked a manager who wouldn’t get paid “double bubble” on Christmas day as usual due to cutbacks what she thought about it. She said she was annoyed, and her staff were annoyed. When I asked would they turn up to work some said: “Not for the workplace, but I will for the kids.” Now that’s commitment - that’s who should be on the New Year’s honours list.

Alasdair Kennedy is an interim social work manager and runs the popular Sociable Social Worker YouTube channel

Date published
13 December 2022

Join us for amazing benefits

Become a member

Have a question?

Contact us

BASW: By your side, every step of the way

British Association of Social Workers is a company limited by guarantee, registered in England. 

Company number: 00982041

Wellesley House, 37 Waterloo Street, 
Birmingham, B2 5PP
+44 (0) 121 622 3911

Contact us

Follow us

Copyright ©2023 British Association of Social Workers | Site by Agile Collective | Privacy Policy

  • About social work
    • What is social work?
      • What social workers do
      • People with lived experience
      • Regulators & professional registration
      • World Social Work Day
    • Topics in social work
    • Professional Social Work (PSW) Magazine
      • Digital editions
      • Guidance for contributors
      • PSW articles
      • Advertising
  • Careers
    • Become a social worker
    • Returning to social work
    • For employers
    • Specialisms
    • Career stages
      • Self-Employed Social Workers
        • Your tax affairs working through umbrella service companies
      • Agency and locum social work
    • Jobs board
    • Work for BASW
      • BASW Council vacancies
      • Finance & Organisational Development Committee members
  • About BASW
    • Campaigning and influencing
      • Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Social Work
      • BASW in Westminster
      • General Election 2024
      • Relationship-based practice
      • Social Work Stands Against Poverty
      • This Week in Westminster | Blog Series
      • UK Covid Inquiry
      • Professional working conditions
      • Housing & Homelessness
    • Governance
      • BASW AGM and general meetings
        • 2025 Annual General Meeting (AGM)
        • BASW GM 2025
        • Previous BASW AGMs
      • BASW Council
        • BASW Council biographies
        • BASW Council voting 2025
        • Vacancies on Council and committees 2025
      • Staff
      • Committees
      • BASW and SWU
      • Our history
      • 50 years
      • Special interest, thematic groups and experts
      • Nations
    • Social work around the UK
      • BASW Cymru
        • BASW Cymru Annual Conference 2024
        • Campaigns
      • BASW England
        • Campaigns
          • Homes Not Hospitals
          • Social Work in Disasters
          • 80-20 campaign
          • Review of Children’s Social Care
        • Meet the Team
          • BASW England Welcome Events
        • Our Services
          • Mentoring Service | BASW England
        • Social Work England
      • BASW Northern Ireland
        • About Us
        • Consultation responses
        • Find out about the BASW NI National Standing Committee
        • Political engagement
        • BASW NI & IASW's associate membership
        • BASW NI and Queen’s University Belfast launch affiliate membership
      • SASW (BASW in Scotland)
        • About Us
        • Mental Health Officer's Conference 2025
        • Our Work
          • Cross-Party Group on Social Work (Scotland)
          • Social Work Policy Panel
          • Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion
          • Supporting refugees
          • Campaigns
        • Coalitions & Partnerships
        • Get Involved
    • Awards
      • Amazing Social Workers
        • Amazing Social Workers profiles: Week 1
        • Amazing Social Workers profiles: Week 2
        • Amazing Social Workers profiles: Week 3
        • Amazing Social Workers profiles: Week 4
        • Amazing Social Workers profiles: Week 5
      • The BASW Social Work Journalism Awards
    • Social work conferences UK
      • BASW UK Student Conference 2025
      • Social work conference programme
      • The UK Social Work Conference 2025
        • Tickets and booking
        • Programme
        • Online programme
        • Speakers
        • BASW UK conference poster exhibition
        • Exhibitors
        • Venue and travel
        • Programme
    • International Work
      • Israel and Palestine/Gaza conflict | BASW/SWU Information Hub
      • IFSW and other international social work organisations
      • Influencing social work policy in the Commonwealth
      • Invasion of Ukraine | BASW Information Hub
    • Feedback, suggestions & complaints
  • Training & CPD
    • Professional Development
      • General Taught Skills Programme
      • Student Learning
      • Newly Qualified Social Worker Programme
      • Practice Educator & Assessor Programme
      • Stepping Stones Programme
      • Expert Insight Series
      • Social Work in Disasters online training
        • Module 1: Introduction to Social Work in Disasters (Online training)
        • Module 2: Law, Policy and Best Practice (Social Work In Disasters Training)
        • Module 3: Person-centred and research informed practice within a multi-agency context (Social Work in Disasters Online Training)
        • Module 4: Responding, using theory and self-care (Social Work in Disasters Online Training)
      • Overseas Qualified Social Worker (OQSW) Programme
    • Professional Capabilities Framework
      • About the PCF
      • Point of entry to training
      • Readiness for practice
      • End of first placement
      • End of last placement
      • Newly qualified social worker (ASYE level)
      • Social worker
      • Experienced social worker
      • Advanced social worker
      • Strategic social worker
    • Let's Talk Social Work Podcast
  • Policy & Practice
    • Resources
    • National policies
    • Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion
    • Working with...
      • Older people
        • Learning resources
        • Useful resources to support social work capabilities with older people
      • Autistic people
        • An introduction to the Capability Statement
        • Capabilities Statement and CPD Pathway: Resources
          • Autistic adults toolkit
            • Autistic adults toolkit introduction
            • Feedback tool
            • Induction tool
            • Introduction to video: Sylvia Stanway - Autistic not broken
            • References
            • Reflective tool
            • The role of the social worker with autistic adults
            • Top tips
          • Organisational self-assessment tool
          • Post-qualifying training programmes
        • The Capabilities Statement for Social Work with Autistic Adults
      • People with learning disabilities
        • Introduction
        • Capabilities Statement and CPD Pathway: Resources
          • People with learning disabilities toolkit
            • People with learning disabilities toolkit introduction
            • Information sheet
            • Top tips
            • Induction tool
            • Reflective tool
            • References
            • Hair tool
          • Organisational self-assessment tool
          • Post-qualifying training programmes
        • The Capabilities for Social Work with Adults who have Learning Disability
    • Research and knowledge
      • Research journals
      • BASW bookshop
    • Standards
      • Code of Ethics
        • BASW Code of Ethics: Launch of 2021 refreshed version webinar
      • Practice Educator Professional Standards (PEPS)
      • Quality Assurance in Practice Learning (QAPL)
  • Support
    • Advice & representation
    • Insurance Cover
    • Social Workers Union (SWU)
    • Social Work Professional Support Service (SWPSS)
      • Become a volunteer coach (SWPSS)
    • Independent social workers
      • Independent member benefits
      • BASW Independents Toolkit
        • Section 1: Foundations for Independent Social Work
        • Section 2: Doing Independent Social Work
        • Section 3: Running your business
        • Section 4: Decisions and transitions
      • BASW Independents directory
      • Independents digital toolkit
      • Social Work Employment Services (SWES)
    • Student Hub
      • BASW Student Ambassador Scheme
    • Financial support
      • International Development Fund (IDF)
    • Groups and networks
      • Special interest groups
        • Alcohol and other drugs Special Interest Group
        • BASW Neurodivergent Social Workers Special Interest Group (NSW SIG)
        • Family Group Conferencing (FGC)
        • Project Group on Assisted Reproduction (PROGAR)
        • The Diaspora special interest group
      • Special Interest Group on Social Work & Ageing
      • Independents local networks
      • Local branches (England)
      • Groups and forums (Scotland)
      • Thematic groups (England)
        • Black & Ethnic Minority Professionals Symposium (BPS)
        • Children & Families Group
          • Children & Families Resources Library
          • Disabled Children's Sub-group
        • Criminal Justice Group
        • Emergency Duty Team Group
        • Mental Health Group
        • Professional Capabilities and Development Group
        • Social Work with Adults Group
        • Student & Newly Qualified Group
        • Social Workers in Health Group
      • Communities of Practice (Northern Ireland)
      • Networks (Wales)
    • Membership renewals
    • How to contact us
  • Why join BASW
    • Benefits of joining BASW
      • The BASW UK University Social Work Education Provider Affiliation Scheme
    • Membership Categories
      • Student member
      • Working (qualified less than 5 years) Membership
      • Working (qualified more than 5 years) Membership
      • Independent membership
      • Newly qualified social worker
      • Retired membership
      • Unemployed/unpaid membership
    • Membership FAQs
    • Membership renewals
    • Membership fees
  • Events
  • Media Centre
    • BASW in the media
    • BASW News and blogs