Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Winter Break Survival Tips for College Students

Winter Break Survival Tips for College Students

From Mental Health America posted December 23, 2015
After the stress of finals is over, many students are excited to return home for winter break. It can be a special time for family, friends, and a familiar place. Unfortunately, going home can present its own challenges. Whether it is adjusting to living at home again or not having anything to do, winter break—a time to recuperate after the past semester— can sometimes feel more overwhelming than school. Here are some common issues and ways to address them to help you make the most of your break.

Strapped for cash?

College is known as a time when many are low on money. If you want to fill your time and save up while you are doing it, winter break is a great opportunity. Many retailers offer seasonal employment to help with the holiday rush. You could also reach out to former employers or workplaces to see if there are any shifts available: they likely have lots of requests for time off at this time of year. Another option is babysitting—many people need sitters while they shop or visit friends or family. Any of these can be a way to spend your time and can put you in a better position for the upcoming semester.

Too much time?

After being pulled in so many directions at school, it can be hard to adjust to having so much free time. This can bring boredom, frustration, or a worsening of symptoms for those with mental health disorders. While it is important to take time to relax, making a plan or list of things you would like to do over break is a good way to fill up your schedule. You could make plans to see friends you have been away from or take time to visit relatives. If you enjoy reading, you may have only had time to read books for your classes. Break can be a great time to read any books that interest you. Volunteering for causes important to you is an option that allows you to feel good and to add experience you may be able to call on later. Whether you prefer to be at the gym, painting, or watching movies, winter break is an opportunity to fill your time with things that make you feel good.

Family problems?

Returning from school can add an additional layer of stress to a time of year often known for family conflict. Now that you have been living away from home, it might be frustrating to transition backto your family’s rules or to spend so much of your time there. Family gatherings can also be difficult and full of listening to arguments or answering questions you may not want to be asked. While you cannot change those around you, you can take steps to take care of yourself. You can plan ahead by thinking about what questions or conflicts typically come up and how you might respond (or not respond) to them. You can make a list of coping skills that work for you including texting an understanding friend, breathing exercises, or going for a walk. Finally, make sure to reward yourself. If you feel something is going to be challenging, plan to do something you enjoy or find relaxing afterwards. This way you can have something to look forward to and a way to deal with any leftover stress.

Worried about your mental health?

Many people experience a worsening of symptoms around this time of year for a variety of reasons. If you are in treatment, you can work with your provider on how to best support you. If you are not in treatment or think you may be experiencing symptoms of a mental health disorder, break allows you time to focus on how you’re feeling, what you might need, and how to make a plan moving forward. Mental health conditions, such as depression or anxiety, are real, common and treatable. And recovery is possible. If you are having trouble sleeping, experiencing racing thoughts, or just want additional information, take one of MHA’s screenings and check out our resources on a variety of mental health issues.
 

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Stress, depression and the holidays: Tips for coping

Stress, depression and the holidays: Tips for coping

Stress and depression can ruin your holidays and hurt your health. Being realistic, planning ahead and seeking support can help ward off stress and depression.
By Mayo Clinic Staff
The holiday season often brings unwelcome guests — stress and depression. And it's no wonder. The holidays present a dizzying array of demands — parties, shopping, baking, cleaning and entertaining, to name just a few.
But with some practical tips, you can minimize the stress that accompanies the holidays. You may even end up enjoying the holidays more than you thought you would.

Tips to prevent holiday stress and depression

When stress is at its peak, it's hard to stop and regroup. Try to prevent stress and depression in the first place, especially if the holidays have taken an emotional toll on you in the past.
  1. Acknowledge your feelings. If someone close to you has recently died or you can't be with loved ones, realize that it's normal to feel sadness and grief. It's OK to take time to cry or express your feelings. You can't force yourself to be happy just because it's the holiday season.
  2. Reach out. If you feel lonely or isolated, seek out community, religious or other social events. They can offer support and companionship. Volunteering your time to help others also is a good way to lift your spirits and broaden your friendships.
  3. Be realistic. The holidays don't have to be perfect or just like last year. As families change and grow, traditions and rituals often change as well. Choose a few to hold on to, and be open to creating new ones. For example, if your adult children can't come to your house, find new ways to celebrate together, such as sharing pictures, emails or videos.
  4. Set aside differences. Try to accept family members and friends as they are, even if they don't live up to all of your expectations. Set aside grievances until a more appropriate time for discussion. And be understanding if others get upset or distressed when something goes awry. Chances are they're feeling the effects of holiday stress and depression, too.
  5. Stick to a budget. Before you go gift and food shopping, decide how much money you can afford to spend. Then stick to your budget. Don't try to buy happiness with an avalanche of gifts.
  6. Try these alternatives:
    • Donate to a charity in someone's name.
    • Give homemade gifts.
    • Start a family gift exchange.
  7. Plan ahead. Set aside specific days for shopping, baking, visiting friends and other activities. Plan your menus and then make your shopping list. That'll help prevent last-minute scrambling to buy forgotten ingredients. And make sure to line up help for party prep and cleanup.
  8. Learn to say no. Saying yes when you should say no can leave you feeling resentful and overwhelmed. Friends and colleagues will understand if you can't participate in every project or activity. If it's not possible to say no when your boss asks you to work overtime, try to remove something else from your agenda to make up for the lost time.
  9. Don't abandon healthy habits. Don't let the holidays become a free-for-all. Overindulgence only adds to your stress and guilt.
    Try these suggestions:
    • Have a healthy snack before holiday parties so that you don't go overboard on sweets, cheese or drinks.
    • Get plenty of sleep.
    • Incorporate regular physical activity into each day.
  10. Take a breather. Make some time for yourself. Spending just 15 minutes alone, without distractions, may refresh you enough to handle everything you need to do. Find something that reduces stress by clearing your mind, slowing your breathing and restoring inner calm.
    Some options may include:
    • Taking a walk at night and stargazing.
    • Listening to soothing music.
    • Getting a massage.
    • Reading a book.
  11. Seek professional help if you need it. Despite your best efforts, you may find yourself feeling persistently sad or anxious, plagued by physical complaints, unable to sleep, irritable and hopeless, and unable to face routine chores. If these feelings last for a while, talk to your doctor or a mental health professional.

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

How to be Stress Free During the Holidays

How to be Stress Free During the Holidays

By Penny Sitler, Executive Director of Mental Health America of Licking County

The holidays are a time of peace, togetherness and joy, right? Then why are so many people more stressed now than any other time of year? There are lots of reasons and while we know it’s unrealistic to think we can completely eliminate the stress, here are some suggestions to help minimize the effects on how you feel.

We put a lot of pressure on ourselves to make everything perfect for the holidays – the decorations, food, gifts, etc. Don’t be too hard on yourself. Getting organized will help a lot. Make a list of tasks from most important to least, and concentrate on the highest priority items first. Ask for help with the shopping, wrapping, baking and other preparations. Part of the joy of the holiday is being together so have a friend or family member help get everything ready. You can turn what feels like work into a fun time that will become a cherished memory to remind you of the joy of the holidays.

It’s okay to say no – really! If you don’t feel like you have enough time to get something done, just let people know rather than losing sleep or overdoing it. Everyone else is in the same situation and they’ll understand if you have to miss a gathering or not participate in one more cookie exchange.

The holidays can cost a lot of money but they don’t have to. If you don’t have money to spare, enjoy the things that don’t cost anything. Share in the beauty of others’ decorations by doing a tour of neighborhood lighting displays. The Licking County Courthouse is a beautifully lit gem at this time of year that you can enjoy by walking around the courthouse square. Bundle up and take a walk in the snow or take your children sledding. The exercise and fresh air will do you good and there’s nothing prettier than a fresh snowfall. The stores are all dressed up for the holidays. Head to the local mall and walk the hallways while enjoying the sights and sounds of the season. People often don’t remember the gift you gave them last year, but they will remember time spent together doing something special. If you need help providing food for your family or yourself, there are so many opportunities to eat a holiday meal at area churches. The food pantries are also well stocked for holiday needs.

Perhaps you don’t have family close by and you’re feeling sad or lonely. If you feel isolated during the holidays, take steps to join in activities that are happening all over the community. Ask a neighbor or friend if they need help with gift wrapping or clearing a walkway. If you know of someone who is alone during this time, invite him/her to a meal or other gathering. There are lots of volunteer opportunities at agencies, churches, etc. during the holidays. You can help serve a meal, purchase and organize gifts or deliver items.  Helping someone in need is a great way to lift your mood, and you’ll be working side by side with others as well. You never know – one of those people may become a new friend.

The weather and lack of sunshine can affect your mood. We all need a little sunshine in our lives to keep up our spirits. Putting brighter than usual light bulbs in a lamp and sitting near or under it will help. We often feel cooped up during the winter months. Even if there is snow on the ground, put on some warm boots and get outside for a walk every day. Exercise will help you feel better and more energetic.

Give yourself a time out if you’re feeling overwhelmed by the swirl of activities. Fit in a bit of quiet time each day. Reading, meditating, putting your feet up for a few minutes or enjoying a hobby like knitting or writing in a journal will give you some much needed peace during a hectic time.

To make the most of the holidays, be sure to eat well, get plenty of rest and exercise, and take time to enjoy the beauty of the season. Stress and depression, though common during this time of year, don’t have to ruin your joy. Remember to be flexible and willing to change to find new, more satisfying ways of handling the challenges.

Best wishes and happy holidays!


Monday, December 7, 2015

After case closes, work to heal victims begins

After case closes, work to heal victims begins

Posted in The Newark Advocate December 6, 2015
by Bethany Bruner
Mackenzie Peterson, Psy.DNEWARK - Mackenzie Peterson, a psychologist practicing in Granville, treats some victims in sexual abuse cases. She said about one-third of her caseload involves patients who have dealt with some type of sexual abuse.
"Especially with children, what I've found is that (the impact) is all encompassing," she said. "It has an impact on most areas of their life."
Peterson said victims can have trouble paying attention and difficulty in school and they tend to have strained social interactions because of the damage to their ability to trust others.
The ability to trust is not just something the victim is working to regain.
Peterson said in counseling, her role is to help the whole family unit, especially when a suspect is someone who was a part of the family in some way.
Victims need recognition that they are not to be faulted or blamed for what happened to them, Peterson said.
"It has a huge impact when (the victim doesn't) feel total support," she said. "It leaves a shadow of a doubt that it is their fault."
Licking County Prosecutor Ken Oswalt said family's non-verbal behaviors can send signals of blame to the child, even if an adult's words tell them otherwise.
"If you're moping around the house and you used to be a sunny-dispositioned person, the child will connect that mom's sad because dad isn't here anymore and the child will react to that," he said.
Newark Police Detective Steve Vanoy said children and families in Licking County also have resources available with the Kid's Team and Kid's Place. The Kid's Team is comprised of officials from social services, law enforcement, medical providers and others to provide comprehensive support to families and victims through all stages of the criminal process and its aftermath.
"That's what is really great about Licking County," he said. "We have a system in place."
Kid's Place allows law enforcement officials to have a kid-friendly space to use for forensic interviews of children and allows medical professionals to see the child in one place, instead of different doctor's offices.
Other counties and hospitals also have similar multi-faceted teams in place and both Greene County Prosecutor Stephen Haller and Kyle Rohrer, First Assistant Prosecutor in Delaware County, mentioned these resources as being key for victims to begin to heal.
"This doesn't have to define them," Peterson said. "With treatment and the proper support and with some kind of consequence (for the perpetrator), they're able to heal and move on."

Monday, November 30, 2015

Pataskala man grateful for healthy life in recovery

Pataskala man grateful for healthy life in recovery

Posted in The Newark Advocate November 25, 2015

NEWARK - When John Moore was released from prison in June, the only possessions he had were a pair of prison-issued shoes, a shirt and a pair of sweatpants.
After years of addiction and two years of incarceration, he'd lost everything. But the last five months have brought people and opportunities into his life that have helped him turn things around.
On Thursday, Moore is looking forward to eating Thanksgiving dinner with his mother instead of having bland food in the prison cafeteria.
But he's also thankful that he's found a life that makes him happy. The Pataskala man said he can't stop smiling, laughing and cracking jokes
"I wouldn't change anything that happened," he said. "It all happened for a reason. It made me a different person."
A native of Columbus, Moore had a successful career, traveling across the country moving furniture.
But 15 years ago, he started using drugs, and his life spiraled out of control.
"It was bad," he said. "I was going downhill so fast."
In April 2013, he was sentenced to four years in prison for committing first- and second-degree drug felonies.
In November 2012, he got caught making methamphetamine within 1,000 feet of a school, according to court records.
Serving time at the Pickaway Correctional Institution, he realized he needed to turn his life around. He began participating in treatment programs and anger management classes.
He earned 19 certificates while in prison and had a variety of jobs.
At the end of May, he was granted judicial release. Shortly after he was left prison, he was offered a bed at Spencer House, a halfway house in Newark.
Moore had been through rehab programs before, but he said Spencer House made the biggest difference for him.
His counselor, Julian King, helped him immensely, he said, and the other participants were supportive.
"All those guys, I had never met any of them before, and they are some of the coolest people I've ever met," he said.
He also met Donna Gibson, Bridges Out of Poverty and parent support coordinator with Mental Health America of Licking County.
She got him into a program called Getting Ahead and began talking with him about his goals.
With her encouragement, he started thinking about getting his GED certificate and going to culinary school. His ultimate dream is to open his own restaurant.
Gibson also helped him get a job through LGS Staffing, working at Accel Inc. at the New Albany Personal Care and Beauty Campus.
Several county agencies formed a partnership with LGS over the summer to help people with barriers to employment get jobs in New Albany. They arranged bus transportation to take workers from Newark to New Albany and back again at the end of their shifts.
Moore said he knows other people with felony records who have struggled to find jobs because of their backgrounds. But the people at LGS were willing to listen to his entire story, and gave him a chance.
Things have gone so well, he was offered another job opportunity with Limited Brands in Reynoldsburg.
He's living in Pataskala with his mother, but has still been taking the bus from Newark with some of his friends from Spencer House.
"That bus helps a lot of people," he said. "A lot of us don't have licenses right now."
For the last few weeks, Moore also has been moving furniture on the weekends and is thinking about picking up a third job.
He wants to help out his mother and support his 6-year-old daughter. Thinking of her keeps him motivated to continue his recovery.
"I know that I could lose everything," he said. "I'm slowly getting back what I've already lost."
Putting his life back together hasn't been easy. But Moore said he's grateful to have a second chance, to be out of prison and to be surrounded friends and family members who are supportive of his sobriety.
"What I'm going through totally changed my life," he said. "I can't go back to the way I was. I don't want to. I like my freedom too much."
ajeffries@newarkadvocate.com
740-328-8544
Twitter: @amsjeffries 

Monday, October 19, 2015

Faith column: A safe place to go

Faith column: A safe place to go

From The Newark Advocate October 18, 2015
by Jeff Gill
Jeff Gill Faith Works.jpg
"Arsenic and Old Lace” is opening at Licking County Players this weekend. It’s a funny, frenetic play about a family, one that has some, um, mental health issues in it.
It’s one of my favorite plays, which tells you my tastes aren’t quite Shakespearean; another of my most beloved stage productions is “Harvey” and not just because I so enjoyed watching my brother Brian play Elwood P. Dowd at our high school a few (ha!) years ago.
“Harvey” and “Arsenic” come from either end of the World War II era, and they have certain qualities that identify them as being of that time and place in American life, not least of which is that, while life is fairly modern in some ways, communications are still a bit rudimentary. Transportation is motorized, but with some qualifications. And then there’s that question of mental health in both shows.
Central to the plots of each (no spoilers here!) is the reality of having someone put away in an asylum or institution of some sort. If the right relatives come together and file the right paperwork, you can have someone carried off by those legendary “nice young men in their clean white coats.”
And if you have an ear to cultural trends in dramatic dialogue, you might just pick up on the fact that between 1939 and 1944 the United States was not feeling terribly good about the whole process. Maybe even there’s a theatrical sense here that it was simply too easy, and too few professional checks and balances were involved, and that good if eccentric people could be taken advantage of by sharp operators or greedy relations.
As a pastor, I’ve heard enough true stories from family members of those days to believe that it was, in fact, a process that was open to abuse and misuse, sometimes with good intentions but not occasionally because some younger folk got tired of waiting for Great Aunt Hattie to kick off and inherit her house.
So things changed. Commitment, and especially involuntary commitment, became much more challenging. The standard became one of “threat of harm to self or others,” and that threat had to be fairly imminent.
Now I can also say, as any pastor or church leader can probably tell you, it’s not unusual these days to be asked to join in an awkward family conversation about “taking the car keys,” or even “it’s time to leave this house and move somewhere you can be safe.” Sometimes those conversations are expected, more than younger family realized, and they go well; other times, you start to see signs of what adult children and grandchildren have been seeing, and the concern grows even as the resistance to any change hardens. But you can’t force the situation, and everyone leaves the meeting a little more worried.
But I wouldn’t go back. The idea that any two or three nieces and nephews being able to put a senior citizen into confinement and getting to dispose of their property was never a good situation, and while I’ve had my own moments of wishing I could just force a circumstance, those days of institutions for people who believe they have tall invisible sentient rabbits talking to them are long gone.
We have a renewal coming up in a couple of weeks for the county Mental Health and Recovery levy on Election Day. I have no concerns about Licking County affirming the work that’s being done right now, in emergency services and available care. The agencies that serve the mental health needs of our area work hard, do well, and help people reach recovery and stability every day.
Beyond that, I do wonder about what it will take to extend services, to make mental & behavioral health a more fully integrated part of our overall health system. There are conversations going on right now in our United Way task forces and community boards and various constituency groups to look at how we align and combine services, so that physical health and healing can be seen as a whole, with not only mental health but spiritual health and community health all playing their part in also seeing our bodies and our lives and our families find healing and wholeness.
A broken leg calls for certain interventions, and ongoing care, and some awareness even after the cast is off; an emotional or cognitive ailment needs much the same, and they can show up together (think of after a car accident, for instance), with interventions and care and awareness bringing healing to the whole self. An institution is still not going to be the answer for many, for most.
It’s about a healthy community, and that will take all of us.
Jeff Gill is a writer, storyteller, and pastor in Licking County; tell him what stories have helped you understand wholeness in your life at knapsack77@gmail.com, or follow @Knapsack on Twitter.

Monday, September 14, 2015

Faith Works: 2-1-1 and when things just don’t fit

Jeff Gill Faith Works.jpg
Article found in The Newark Advocate September 9, 2015

               Depression is a funny thing.
Not funny ha-ha. But you can be depressed, deeply depressed, even clinically depressed, and still laugh. It rings hollow inside your own head, but it’s not that difficult to keep up the appearances.
It’s funny, it’s odd, it’s downright strange how depression can creep up on you, like a slowly developing storm cloud, going from a lovely day to gloom and darkness without you noticing until the rain starts to fall. Depression can come on like distant thunder, or a sudden clap of lightning out of a blue sky. It comes in like the tide, except when it’s a tidal wave that barely gives notice that the beach beneath your feet will disappear beneath you, the sky coming down with a roar. We all know a death, a loss, the end of a relationship or job can trigger it, but when your psyche is thrown off balance, you can be pitched into a serious depression by the cancellation of a TV show or the distant assassination of a foreign dictator.
Scientists and doctors keep investigating depression. It has a biochemical component, your internal chemistry and flow of hormones pulling you down one way, your sugar and sodium and potassium tugging in another, and somewhere in there are the key compounds that turn a mood into a crisis.
Head injuries can cause depression. Stroke. Surgery, even successful surgery. Addiction certainly doesn’t help, especially to substances that are themselves “depressants,” but any addictive behavior can dance the mournful gavotte of a depressive episode.
It’s not your fault any more than a broken hip is your fault; yes, you left that bowling ball bag out in the hallway and tripped over it, but who would say to you on the ground, or in the squad, or at the hospital, “Hey, that broken bone is your fault!”
Depression, when it becomes serious, when it gets severe, is isolating, disrupting and desolating. Hope that seems obvious to someone sitting right next to you is invisible to you. And solutions get twisted, warped, confused at best and suicidal at worst.
Maybe you’ve called 2-1-1 to get information about a social service, or to find a phone number for a program you or a friend needs. Pathways of Central Ohio has been known as the Crisis Center and the Suicide Hotline and a number of names they may never even have actually had, but they’re not only still at 740-345-HELP (4357), they and their Crisis Hotline and Information & Referral Services can be reached simply by calling 2-1-1.
If you have someone you’re worried about, you can call 2-1-1 for support and guidance. Clergy and professionals, that means you, too. We don’t know everything, and the folks at Pathways answering those 2-1-1 calls have access to pretty much everything, plus training that can come in handy when you’re feeling overwhelmed by someone’s need.
When there’s a weapon at hand, an active threat or you think someone’s taken something to hurt themselves, you still call 9-1-1. That’s basic. But if you need to talk, you need to talk to someone about how to talk to someone else, and as anyone is trying to figure out how to get help, 2-1-1 is ready and waiting.
In Licking County, this summer has been bracketed by two high-profile, much-discussed suicides. In late May, a pastor, and as August ended, a student leader in college. Both were people who gave help to others, who knew something about where to find help, and had gotten basic training in knowing when sadness was turning into depression, and what to do about it. Knowing that even those sorts of people were vulnerable to the worst depression can do to a person is shocking, even scary to the rest of us.
We have to keep saying to each other, over and over: it’s okay to need help. It’s fine to admit you’re at the end of your rope. There are resources that can help you…can I make the call for you? There is no single, lasting solution to this, anymore than we can guarantee an end to broken hips. It takes awareness, understanding, and the ongoing willingness to affirm treatment and celebrate recovery.
For Seth, for Wendell, we keep reaching out to put our arms around each other, and to listen, and when necessary, to call for help.
Jeff Gill is a writer, storyteller, and pastor in Licking County; he’s called 2-1-1 before and will again! Tell him where you think we can help each other in our community atknapsack77@gmail.com

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

From The Executive Director

penny-sitler-offinger-management-company
By Penny Sitler, Executive Director


As we transition from summer to fall, there’s a definite change in the air. I welcome the cooler days and crisp nights and anticipate the fall harvest bounty that we’ll find at local farmer’s markets. Along with those transformations comes a new school year and holiday festivities will be upon us before we know it. Not everyone looks forward to these changes… One in four adults and one in three youth experience a mental health issue in any given year but on average it takes people ten years to seek the help they need to live their lives fully despite that challenge. MHA is encouraging everyone to act B4Stage4. We wouldn’t wait until Stage 4 to treat other medical conditions, so why do we wait when it comes to our mental health? National Depression Screening Day is October 8 – stop by our office to take a mental health screening or go to MHALC.org to do a screening online and encourage your friends and family to do the same. It’s so important for everyone to understand their mental health and to make it a priority in life. Mental Health America of Licking County is here to help find the resources you need.
 Speaking of change, MHALC’s Board of Trustees and staff have been working on a new strategic plan for the agency. With the help of a wonderful facilitator, Bobbi Noe, we have put lots of thought into the services we provide for Licking County and how they fulfill our updated mission which is to promote good mental health and wellness through education, prevention and advocacy, and to eliminate the stigma of mental health issues.
 I am so proud of all of the great work MHALC’s dedicated staff is doing to enhance the mental health of Licking County. Their jobs are not easy but they are so passionate about what they do, we routinely share laughter and tears over their successes. Here are just a few examples of recent changes they’ve been instrumental in achieving. Buses are taking Bridges Out of Poverty program graduates to jobs at the New Albany Beauty Park, thanks to coordinator Donna Gibson’s collaboration with United Way and Ohio Means Jobs. Since having Becky Lawrence, Licking Valley Middle School counselor as an extern through the Summer Teacher Externship Program at MHALC in June, the Girls In Progress program with coordinator Shari Johnston and the Suicide Prevention program with coordinator Justina Wade will have a presence at Licking Valley Middle School for the first time. YES Club has recently welcomed new director Bethanne Leffel-Ployhar, LISW and all of us at MHALC look forward to the fresh perspective and renewed energy she brings to the program. While change can sometimes be intimidating, it also signals growth. Here at MHALC, we embrace change as it means we can offer new ideas and programming to the community. We can always use your help to sustain these programs since we don’t charge anyone for the help we offer, so feel free to make a change in your giving. MHALC is a cause worthy of your time, talent and treasure!  Here’s to your good mental health! 



 

 

 































































Thursday, August 20, 2015

Parent Connection: Reduce Back to School Anxiety

Parent Connection: Reduce Back to School Anxiety

Article Found in Depression and Bipolar Alliance (DBSA) e-Update August 2015

It’s nearly time to go back to school! Like any change, a new school year can cause anxiety, particularly so for a child living with a mood disorder. Here are some tips on ways to reduce back to school anxiety:
  • Get to know your child’s classmates. Plan a playdate, attend an activity center near their school, text, skype, or find other ways to socialize with the children they will be spending the school year with.
  • Start your school schedule early. Gradually change bed and waking times to avoid a sudden, harsh change.
  • Set daily expectations. Practice homework at a relaxed pace to prepare for the school year’s work load. 
  • Plan a visit to school before it starts to introduce your child to their teacher, classrooms, and other areas of potential anxiety: locker assignments, the lunchroom, bathroom locations, etc.
  • Talk to teachers regarding any specific supplies or requirements for their classroom.
  • Create a memory book of summer activities as a fun way to close the summer and prepare for classroom sharing.
  • Consider planning a fun activity for the first weekend after school starts to blend summer and school. Celebrate the first week back.
  • Discuss past experiences and feelings about the upcoming year. Does your child remember being anxious last year? What helped calm those feelings?
  • Prepare, but don’t over prepare. With some children, discussing the school year is helpful. For others it is not. It may be helpful to avoid counting down the days to the new school year or to have other conversations highlighting this big transition.
  • Stay flexible. After a few days or week of school, organizational systems and other needs may change.
A special thank you to the parents from the Balanced Mind Parent Network (BMPN), a program of DBSA, for sharing their thoughts and ideas on reducing back to school anxiety. BMPN guides families raising children with mood disorders to the answers, support and stability they seek. Go to the BMPN website to learn more.
Depression and Bipolar Support AllianceParent Connection appears each month in the DBSA eUpdate. Here, parents and guardians can expect to find up-to-date information and resources about parenting children and adolescents with depression and bipolar disorder. We also feature news about Balanced Mind Parent Network online support communities, theFamily Helpline and other family-focused programming.

Thursday, August 13, 2015

10 Tips For Raising Resilient Kids

10 Tips For Raising Resilient Kids

Article Found in Psych Central

While adulthood is filled with serious responsibilities, childhood isn’t exactly stress-free. Kids take tests, learn new information, change schools, change neighborhoods, get sick, get braces, encounter bullies, make new friends and occasionally get hurt by those friends.
What helps kids in navigating these kinds of challenges is resilience. Resilient kids are problem solvers. They face unfamiliar or tough situations and strive to find good solutions.
“When they step into a situation, [resilient kids] have a sense they can figure out what they need to do and can handle what is thrown at them with a sense of confidence,” said Lynn Lyons, LICSW, a psychotherapist who specializes in treating anxious families and co-author of the book Anxious Kids, Anxious Parents: 7 Ways to Stop the Worry Cycle and Raise Courageous and Independent Children with anxiety expert Reid Wilson, Ph.D.
This doesn’t mean that kids have to do everything on their own, she said. Rather, they know how to ask for help and are able to problem-solve their next steps.
Resilience isn’t birthright. It can be taught. Lyons encouraged parents to equip their kids with the skills to handle the unexpected, which actually contrasts our cultural approach.
“We have become a culture of trying to make sure our kids are comfortable. We as parents are trying to stay one step ahead of everything our kids are going to run into.” The problem? “Life doesn’t work that way.”
Anxious people have an especially hard time helping their kids tolerate uncertainty, simply because they have a hard time tolerating it themselves. “The idea of putting your child through the same pain that you went through is intolerable,” Lyons said. So anxious parents try to protect their kids and shield them from worst-case scenarios.
However, a parent’s job isn’t to be there all the time for their kids, she said. It’s to teach them to handle uncertainty and to problem-solve. Below, Lyons shared her valuable suggestions for raising resilient kids.
1. Don’t accommodate every need.
According to Lyons, “whenever we try to provide certainty and comfort, we are getting in the way of children being able to develop their own problem-solving and mastery.” (Overprotecting kids only fuels their anxiety.)
She gave a “dramatic but not uncommon example.” A child gets out of school at 3:15. But they worry about their parent picking them up on time. So the parent arrives an hour earlier and parks by their child’s classroom so they can see the parent is there.
In another example, parents let their 7-year-old sleep on a mattress on the floor in their bedroom because they’re too uncomfortable to sleep in their own room.
2. Avoid eliminating all risk.
Naturally, parents want to keep their kids safe. But eliminating all risk robs kids of learning resiliency. In one family Lyons knows, the kids aren’t allowed to eat when the parents are not home, because there’s a risk they might choke on their food. (If the kids are old enough to stay home alone, they’re old enough to eat, she said.)
The key is to allow appropriate risks and teach your kids essential skills. “Start young. The child who’s going to get his driver’s license is going to have started when he’s 5 [years old] learning how to ride his bike and look both ways [slow down and pay attention].”
Giving kids age-appropriate freedom helps them learn their own limits, she said.
3. Teach them to problem-solve.
Let’s say your child wants to go to sleep-away camp, but they’re nervous about being away from home. An anxious parent, Lyons said, might say, “Well, then there’s no reason for you to go.”
But a better approach is to normalize your child’s nervousness, and help them figure out how to navigate being homesick. So you might ask your child how they can practice getting used to being away from home.
When Lyons’s son was anxious about his first final exam, they brainstormed strategies, including how he’d manage his time and schedule in order to study for the exam.
In other words, engage your child in figuring out how they can handle challenges. Give them the opportunity, over and over, “to figure out what works and what doesn’t.”
4. Teach your kids concrete skills.
When Lyons works with kids, she focuses on the specific skills they’ll need to learn in order to handle certain situations. She asks herself, “Where are we going with this [situation]? What skill do they need to get there?” For instance, she might teach a shy child how to greet someone and start a conversation.
5. Avoid “why” questions.
“Why” questions aren’t helpful in promoting problem-solving. If your child left their bike in the rain, and you ask “why?” “what will they say? I was careless. I’m an 8-year-old,” Lyons said.
Ask “how” questions instead. “You left your bike out in the rain, and your chain rusted. How will you fix that?” For instance, they might go online to see how to fix the chain or contribute money to a new chain, she said.
Lyons uses “how” questions to teach her clients different skills. “How do you get yourself out of bed when it’s warm and cozy? How do you handle the noisy boys on the bus that bug you?”
6. Don’t provide all the answers.
Rather than providing your kids with every answer, start using the phrase “I don’t know,” “followed by promoting problem-solving,” Lyons said. Using this phrase helps kids learn to tolerate uncertainty and think about ways to deal with potential challenges.
Also, starting with small situations when they’re young helps prepare kids to handle bigger trials. They won’t like it, but they’ll get used to it, she said.
For instance, if your child asks if they’re getting a shot at the doctor’s office, instead of placating them, say, “I don’t know. You might be due for a shot. Let’s figure out how you’re doing to get through it.”
Similarly, if your child asks, “Am I going to get sick today?” instead of saying, “No, you won’t,” respond with, “You might, so how might you handle that?”
If your child worries they’ll hate their college, instead of saying, “You’ll love it,” you might explain that some freshmen don’t like their school, and help them figure out what to do if they feel the same way, she said.
7. Avoid talking in catastrophic terms.
Pay attention to what you say to your kids and around them. Anxious parents, in particular, tend to “talk very catastrophically around their children,” Lyons said. For instance, instead of saying “It’s really important for you to learn how to swim,” they say, “It’s really important for you to learn how to swim because it’d be devastating to me if you drowned.”
8. Let your kids make mistakes.
“Failure is not the end of the world. [It’s the] place you get to when you figure out what to do next,” Lyons said. Letting kids mess up is tough and painful for parents. But it helps kids learn how to fix slip-ups and make better decisions next time.
According to Lyons, if a child has an assignment, anxious or overprotective parents typically want to make sure the project is perfect, even if their child has no interest in doing it in the first place. But let your kids see the consequences of their actions.
Similarly, if your child doesn’t want to go to football practice, let them stay home, Lyons said. Next time they’ll sit on the bench and probably feel uncomfortable.
9. Help them manage their emotions.
Emotional management is key in resilience. Teach your kids that all emotions are OK, Lyons said. It’s OK to feel angry that you lost the game or someone else finished your ice cream. Also, teach them that after feeling their feelings, they need to think through what they’re doing next, she said.
“Kids learn very quickly which powerful emotions get them what they want. Parents have to learn how to ride the emotions, too.” You might tell your child, “I understand that you feel that way. I’d feel the same way if I were in your shoes, but now you have to figure out what the appropriate next step is.”
If your child throws a tantrum, she said, be clear about what behavior is appropriate (and inappropriate). You might say, “I’m sorry we’re not going to get ice cream, but this behavior is unacceptable.”
10. Model resiliency.
Of course, kids also learn from observing their parents’ behavior. Try to be calm and consistent, Lyons said. “You cannot say to a child you want them to control their emotions, while you yourself are flipping out.”
“Parenting takes a lot of practice and we all screw up.” When you do make a mistake, admit it. “I really screwed up. I’m sorry I handled that poorly. Let’s talk about a different way to handle that in the future,” Lyons said.
Resiliency helps kids navigate the inevitable trials, triumphs and tribulations of childhood and adolescence. Resilient kids also become resilient adults, able to survive and thrive in the face of life’s unavoidable stressors.

Friday, July 31, 2015

Mental Health Stigma and Your Identity — I Am Not My Illness

Blog Post from Health Place America's Mental Health Channel on January 4, 2015 by Andrea Paquette 

I have a mental illness, but this does not make me any different than anybody else. It is stigmatizing for me to think otherwise. There are hidden stigmatized trenches in the way we perceive and think about our identity, and I also feel it is necessary to point out that just because you have a mental illness, you need not single yourself out as abnormal. You just plain have a mental illness and really it is not that big of a big deal.

Mental Health Stigma and My Identity

Your identity can be altered by mental health stigma, but it doesn't have to be. Saying I am not my illness is the first step in getting rid of self-stigma.
Eight years ago, I finally, and fully, understood that it was actually okay to have mental health challenges. I recall speaking in front of a very large crowd for the first time, and I shrugged my shoulders and simply said, “My name is Andrea and I have bipolar disorder, but I have learned that I am not bipolar disorder.” Some people from the audience stared at me in awe, others smiled and some winced, but I continued and said, “I have bipolar, so what?” That was my defining moment where I finally learned that bipolar disorder did not define me. It was actually not as big of a deal, as I had created it to be in my own mind. Before this realization, I often viewed myself as a victim of my illness and felt self-stigmatized, but I soon discovered that there are millions of mental health survivors, numerous success stories and countless human victories. I am just one of many.

Mental Health Stigma, Identity and Knowing I Am Not My Illness

I am fully aware that I have a lot to do with bipolar disorder. I created and lead the Bipolar Disorder Society of British Columbia, have a published piece on my personal story, deliver mental health presentations, facilitate support groups, write mental health blogs, my bipolar journey has been featured in the media and I deal with bipolar disorder every single day. Because I do all of this, does this mean I actually am bipolar? Definitely not, I simply have a brain illness; and just because I have chosen to surround myself with things that are indeed related to bipolar, these things will never be able to define who Andrea actually is.
It is impossible to be an embodiment of an any illness and I have, personally, chosen to shape my life and how I live it. I do not consider that anyone with a physical illness would define their worth and identify in their condition, so why should it be any different for someone who has a mental illness?
You can also connect with Andrea on Google+FacebookTwitter, and at BipolarBabe.com.