The social justice approach counseling aims to improve the oppressive state of the client, and the process requires a lot of effort. Therefore, counseling psychologists are prone to burnout, and adjusting burnout has become an inevitable challenge for counseling psychologists. The purpose of this study was to explore the experience of burnout, the strategies and the adjustment process of coping with burnout among counseling psychologists with the social justice approach. This study invited three counseling psychologists as research participants and adopted the narrative research method. This study revealed the advocacy experience from multicultural counseling and social justice counseling perspectives. The research outcomes of the burnout experience of the participants were as follows: (1) The continuous work of social advocacy increases the frequency of professional burnout. (2) Unlimited advocacy work and advocates who are on the verge of limits. The coping strategies were as follows: (1) The understanding and action of multiple perspectives is a sharp tool to overcome the "powerlessness and hopelessness"; (2) Accepting one’s limit and finding meaning in self-care. In addition, the adjustment processes of the participants were as follows: (1) Be aware of professional burnout; (2) Pause/reduce advocacy works; (3) Self-reflection/thinking period; (4) Sort out good and bad experiences in professional burnout; (5) Find the new advocacy beliefs; (6) Restart advocacy work.