Caregiver Peer Mentorship Program
Give Hope To Someone Who Needs It
Become A Caregiver Mentor
Connection Through Shared Experience
A caregiver mentor is someone who has supported a loved one with a brain injury and wants to support another caregiver. Caregiver mentors understand what it is like to juggle appointments, advocate for someone else, manage stress, and adjust to changes that no one else can see.
By becoming a caregiver mentor, you can remind another family member or caregiver that they are not alone. You can offer understanding, encouragement, and hope to someone who may feel overwhelmed, exhausted, or unsure of what comes next.
You may also discover that helping someone else gives you a renewed sense of purpose and connection.
Who Makes A Good Caregiver Mentor?
You may be ready to be a caregiver mentor if:
- You have supported a loved one with a brain injury
- You have had time to adjust to your caregiving role
- You want to support another caregiver or family member
- You are a good listener
- You understand your own feelings and limits
- You can keep healthy boundaries
- You can meet regularly with a mentee
How Caregiver Mentors Support Others
As a caregiver mentor, you may:
- Listen as another caregiver talks about their worries, frustrations, and successes
- Relate to the challenges of caregiving, including stress, burnout, changes in family roles, and feeling isolated
- Reassure someone that what they are feeling is normal
- Share ideas that helped you cope or adjust
- Remind another caregiver that they do not have to do everything alone
- Help someone find hope, confidence, and support again
You don’t need to have all the answers. Your experience, compassion, and understanding are what matter most.
What This Program Is Not
Being a caregiver mentor is not:
- Counseling or therapy
- Crisis help
- Medical or legal advice
- Case management
- Resource Facilitation
Your role is to support another caregiver through shared experience, encouragement, and listening.
Why People Choose To Become Caregiver Mentors
Many caregiver mentors say the program helps them:
• Feel more purpose in their own life
• Turn a hard experience into something meaningful
• Stay connected to others who understand
• Recognize how much they have learned and grown
• Make a real difference for another caregiver
Sign Up To Be A Caregiver Mentor
This project was supported, in part by grant number 90TBSG0073, from the U.S. Administration for Community Living, Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, D.C. 20201. Grantees undertaking projects under government sponsorship are encouraged to express freely their findings and conclusions. Points of view or opinions do not, therefore, necessarily represent official Administration for Community Living policy.
Have A Question?
Contact MenDi McCuiston
Peer Mentoring Program Coordinator, Brain Injury Association of Nebraska
Our Affiliations
Brain Injury Association of Nebraska is fortunate to work alongside likeminded associations – all driven to help educate the communities we live in.
























