In Psychology Today it said, “we select this profession because we're perpetuating a caregiver role adopted in childhood and must confront the hopelessness of never being able to help all the people all the time” (Psychology Today). There could be a component of childhood, maybe just naturally helping people or wanting to. At an attempt to fix their broken parts by helping others. Thinking “I don’t want them to end up like me”, so you do everything in your power to help them. When you put your all, sometimes it can be too much. It was stated by Hattem that, “those people are sufficiently self-aware to realise that they have problems, and sufficiently driven to try and do something about it”(Hattem, Do Psychologists Have a Higher Probability of Becoming Crazy). They understand they’re broken and they are driven to fix others and themselves, simultaneously. When they listen to other people's problems they can see problems worse than their own or someone with the same situation but on the other side. For example, when a therapist has an alcoholic parent, and a client who was an alcoholic parent. In some cases there may be a biological component involved, depression, anxiety, anger, etc (Pardon Our Interruption). There may be a biological component to the therapist wanting this profession, such as depression. This could also cause burnout if one day those element(s) appear if something becomes triggered. If a client walks in with the same mental disabilities as the he or she would want to would want to do everything in their power to prevent the client from turning into them. Burnout can also be from a personal experience in the past and in attempt to fix their own problems, the person becomes a