Breaking Through the Fog: How to Overcome Emotional Numbness
Emotional numbness can be described as feeling desensitized or disconnected from your emotions, your environment or surroundings. In life, there are different events that impact our emotions. Think about birthdays, holidays, large life events, relationship milestones, and losses. When a person experiences emotional numbness, they aren’t reacting to these moments and may well be protecting themselves from feeling them. Emotional numbness can be a defense mechanism, a place we go within our nervous systems to protect us from feeling all these emotions.
How to Protect Your Peace: Six Tips to Inner Harmony
Are there certain topics that trigger your anxiety? Is there an environment or atmosphere that consistently overwhelms you? When we take care of ourselves, we need to be aware of places, people and things that cause us to feel badly. This is what ‘protecting your peace’ is all about. Knowing what might bring you down is important in managing your own well-being and emotional health. If you have difficulty protecting your peace, see below for a few tips:
Four Tips for Staying Social and Connected in the Colder Months
With inclement weather, colder temperatures and the increased desire to stay inside, it can be hard to reach out and stay connected to friends and family. As a result, we may be missing out on essential social interaction. Withdrawal and isolation, particularly during the colder months, can negatively impact both our emotional and physical health. However, with a bit of planning, creativity, and commitment, you can maintain, even strengthen your social connections. See below for four tips on how to remain social and connected during colder times:
Six Self-Care Tips For The Colder Months
As the days grow shorter and temperatures drop, the transition toward winter often brings changes in mood, energy levels and overall well-being. While winter can be a time of holiday cheer and days off work, it can also be a time of darkness, isolation, and sadness. That’s why it's crucial to incorporate self-care into our routines. Here are six practical self-care tips to help you take care of yourself during the winter:
Three Important Reasons To Take A Mental Health Day
You may, upon occasion, feel a sense of dread towards work, become annoyed with a coworker, or just feel overwhelmed by all your responsibilities. When that happens, and it probably happens to everyone at one time or another, it’s likely the right time to take a mental health day– time to rest and relax, in order to be a more productive and happier, healthier person. Taking care of your mental health is as important as taking care of your physical health. Addressing your mental health is not a luxury, it is a necessity.
Navigating Compassion Fatigue: A Caregiver's Guide to Self-Care
Being a caregiver often feels like a full-time job. Whether you are a parent caring for your children, a child caregiving for a family member or an older parent, a teacher, a nurse or a nanny, caregivers are important players who are especially susceptible to burnout. After a while, there might come a point where you hit the wall and the energy, compassion and wherewithal it takes can be seriously depleted. This is where compassion fatigue comes in, and it’s more common than you think.
Three Visualization Techniques to Calm Anxiety
You might be familiar with visualization techniques, a very helpful way of managing anxiety and panic. What's really cool about visualization approaches is that they engage the same neural networks as if you were watching the action in real time. Studies have shown that visualization exercises can help regulate emotions, increase feelings of relaxation and reduce physiological stress responses - and the best part is that it’s so easy to do. Here are three visualization techniques to try next time you find yourself in a moment of anxiety or panic:
Five Tips to Build a Morning Routine for Better Mental Wellness
An important way to boost your mental wellness is by establishing a consistent morning routine. For many people who struggle with mornings or long days, this might sound like a difficult feat. However, by starting your day with intention and positivity, you may set the tone for the remainder of the day. By prioritizing your mental health from the minute you get up, you invest in a happier, healthier self.
Grounding Techniques to Overcome Panic Attacks
Panic attacks are overwhelming and can make anyone feel that they are trapped in a vortex of fear, physical sensations, and racing thoughts. In those intense moments, regaining control seems impossible. But grounding techniques are an effective way to refocus your attention away from anxiety and back to the present moment.
Academic Stress and Success: 5 Strategies to Support Your Teenager
Teenage years are critical for growth, learning, and self-discovery, but they are often fraught with academic stress. Many teenagers struggle to find the balance between schoolwork, extracurricular activities, and social expectations, which causes stress and can have a negative impact on their academic performance and emotional well-being. As a parent or guardian, it can be difficult at times to know how to best support your teenager with academic stress. In this blog, we will discuss practical strategies for reducing academic stress and promoting success. From developing effective study habits to creating a supportive home environment, these suggestions will help you confidently and carefully support your teenager through the ups and downs of their academic journey.
Getting to Know Your Emotions
We all experience numerous emotions each day but we can’t always pinpoint how or what we are feeling. Some emotions may be fleeting, while others may impact the rest of our day. While we may be able to acknowledge an unpleasant mood or feeling, we oftentimes have trouble identifying the source of this feeling. Fortunately, our thoughts are fueled by emotions, and vice versa. For each thought ask yourself, what is the emotion? When you can practice this, you can connect more deeply with yourself.
ARFID: What To Know
When speaking about eating disorders we usually hear about Anorexia Nervosa, Binge Eating Disorder and Bulimia, but what is ARFID? ARFID stands for Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder. ARFID most commonly develops in early childhood, however, an individual can experience onset at any point over the course of their life. ARFID can share a few characteristics with other eating disorders such as nutritional deficiencies and low weight, however, it has some differences as well. How is ARFID different from other eating disorders?
Building Resilience: Strategies to Bounce Back from Adversity
While life can be full of joyful moments, we will inevitably face difficult times. Job losses, health issues, break ups, illness, the list goes on. As we go through life, we can expect to encounter adversity, and this can take a toll on our mental health. That’s why it’s important to build resilience in one’s life. Resilience enables us to endure difficult life events and hopefully grow stronger. Developing resilience, by definition, is challenging but not impossible. If you are looking to establish resilience in your life, see below for a few suggestions:
Creativity as a Therapeutic Tool: Exploring Your Creative Outlets
In today's fast-paced world, finding constructive ways to take care of our mental health is critical. While traditional therapy has an important role, people are discovering the healing power of creativity as part of their journey toward a sense of wellbeing. Engaging in creative activities can help reduce stress, encourage mindfulness, process emotions, and improve overall health. There are endless ways to tap into your creative side — visual art, music, writing, dancing, photography and many other modalities. When you pursue a creative activity, your brain functions similarly to how it would during meditation or yoga. The state of ‘creative flow’ allows us to relax, press pause and momentarily melt into a moment of relaxation and calm.
Coping with Transitions: How to Support Your Teenager Through Transitions
In the age of adolescence, teenagers normally face impressionable and formidable life transitions. As a parent, you might be wondering how you can support your teenager in the face of these transitions. Whether it’s leaving for college or going to a new school, losing a friend or going through a breakup, change is an inevitable condition your teenager will face. Transitions are both predictable and unexpected, but one thing remains constant: the crucial role a parent plays in providing a solid support system. If you are wondering how you can help your teenager through big transitions, see below for a few suggestions:
Commonly Asked Questions During Your First Therapy Appointment
So you’ve done the grueling research and chosen a therapist with whom you’d like to schedule an introductory session. You can expect your therapist to ask you some questions in an attempt to get to know you better, assess your issues and learn more about your therapeutic goals. Often, your first therapy session will be a continuation of an initial intake call, where you are still getting to know one another. Many people feel anxious about their first therapy appointment – and that is totally understandable. You might not know what to expect and it may seem odd and uncomfortable to disclose personal information to someone you have just met. Be assured that your therapist knows the initial session is for preliminary information and not about diving deep into your darkest thoughts right off the bat, so there is no need to worry. If you are wondering what types of questions your therapist may ask you during the first appointment, here are a few examples:
Mental Health in the Workplace: Addressing Workplace Stressors and Avoiding Burnout
For many of us, work can be a major source of stress, anxiety, and pressure. Mental health is often negatively impacted by long work hours, strict deadlines, interpersonal conflicts, and/or ongoing pressure to perform at one's best. Compromised mental health inevitably leads to a variety of issues, such as lack of engagement, limited productivity and poor performance, as well as compromised communication. Studies have shown that depression can interfere with one’s ability to complete physical job tasks about 20% of the time and reduce cognitive performance about 35% of the time. See below for a few suggestions on managing mental health in the workplace:
Four Yoga Poses for Stress Relief
Life can get stressful! Whether it’s work, dating, family or just trying not to sweat through your new shirt in the hot subway on the way to your office, stress often creeps into our lives and our bodies. Have you ever been going through a rough patch and started to cry in your pigeon pose or maybe even warrior two? Most of our stress and negative emotions are stored in our hips. By doing hip openers we’re letting go physically and emotionally. Below are four great yoga poses to slide into on days when life is feeling extra tense. You may want to have a box of tissues handy, just in case.
How To Find The Right Therapist
If you are currently reading this, you are likely looking for tips to find the right therapist. With so many therapists out there, finding the right person to work with can feel like a needle in a haystack. However, it’s not impossible to find a suitable therapist for yourself. Here are a few things to be thoughtful about when seeking a therapist:
Preparing for the Anxieties of Sleep-Away Camp
For many young people, going to sleep-away camp is a memorable rite of passage. It's an opportunity to make friends, seek out new and fun activities, and live in a different environment away from home. Going to sleep-away camp might be your first time away for an extended period and this can provoke anxiety. While pre-camp jitters are normal, there are some ways to create a smooth transition to sleep-away camp and have a rewarding and positive experience.