Maintaining Good Mental Health

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May is Mental Health Awareness Month, a time to bring more attention to mental health and end the stigma.

According to Mental Health America (MHA), while 1 in 5 people will experience a mental illness during their lifetime, everyone faces challenges in life that can impact their mental health. These last couple years have seen an increase in people seeking support for their mental health and wellness.

Mental health plays a big role in your overall well-being. When you’re mentally healthy, you are able to enjoy your life and the people in it, feel good about yourself, keep up good relationships, and deal with stress. It’s normal for your mental health to shift over time – we all face difficult situations in our lives. Creating positive habits is a great way to support your mental health when you’re doing well and helps you build skills to use if you do face symptoms of a mental health condition.

Nutirition

The quality of food you eat can impact your overall physical and mental health. Your gut is often called “the second brain” and communicates with your actual brain – physically through the vagus nerve and chemically through hormones and neurotransmitters (chemical messengers that carry signals between cells). The bacteria, viruses, and fungi that live in the gut are called the “gut microbiome” – eating nutritious foods is the number one thing you can do to keep your gut microbiome healthy and protect your brain.

Learn more at mhanational.org/food and mhanational.org/gut-brain.

Sleep

Your health heavily depends on how rested you are. Sleep plays a role in your moods, ability to learn and make memories, organ health, immune system, and other bodily functions like appetite, metabolism, and hormone release. It also helps the body re-energize its cells and clear out toxins. Quality of sleep matters, not just how many hours you get.

Learn more at mhanational.org/sleep.

Exercise

Staying active benefits many aspects of health and can prevent physical and mental health symptoms from worsening. Making time for exercise and movement each day improves self-esteem, brain function, and sleep and has been found to lessen social withdrawal and stress. Getting exercise doesn’t have to be intimidating!

Stress Management

Dealing with stress is a normal part of life – we all experience it during times of too much responsibility, too little sleep, or external worries like money or relationships. In most cases, stress comes and goes fairly quickly, and the body can return to its typical state. However, consistently high stress – because you are unable to relieve your stress or are constantly facing stressful situations (chronic stress) – can negatively impact attention, memory, and how you deal with emotions in the long term. Learn more at mhanational.org/stress.

Coping Skills

Coping skills are activities or strategies you can use to reduce or tolerate tough feelings. No one thing works for everyone, so it might take a few tries to figure out what helps you. Test out a range of techniques so that you’re prepared for those times when your well-being starts to slip. You may want to keep a running list (on your phone or on paper) of what works for you, like calling a friend or doing an at-home workout. This makes it easier to get started when you’re in a tough mental state.

If you’re starting from scratch, MHA has resources for “Building Your Coping Toolbox.” Learn more at mhanational.org/coping-toolbox and mhanational.org/manage-emotions.

Social Support System

Having people in your life who you relate to and can lean on goes a long way in improving your mood and general well-being. Humans are social beings, and our brains are wired to seek connection. Having people to support you during times of hardship protects your long-term mental health. Not only can a strong social support system often prevent mental health concerns or symptoms from developing into a diagnosable mental health condition – a strong social support system has also been shown to improve overall outcomes in recovering from a mental health condition.

Find your people:

  • Connect with people over shared hobbies and interests – it’s less intimidating to make new friends when you already have something in common.
  • Consider community service or volunteering. Giving back is a great way to feel less alone – you’ll meet new people and likely learn about local events and resources.
  • Focus on quality relationships – having one person you really trust will serve you better than many surface-level connections.

 

Learn more at mhanational.org/social-connections

Arizona Women’s Counseling provides support not only to those who are suffering from diagnosable mental health conditions but also to people who struggle with daily stressors in these challenging times. In addition to offering individual and group counseling to people in Arizona, we also offering wellness workshops, classes, and retreats on topics such as stress management, mindfulness, self-care, burnout, and compassion fatigue. If you’d like to be notified of our wellness services, please join our email list.

Thank you Mental Health America for providing information contained in this article.

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