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Tips for Boosting Your Mental Health

Need a mental health boost? Unsure where to start? It might be easier than you think to give yourself some emotional relief and get in a better headspace.

Mental health is as important as physical health

First, recognize and realize that mental health is every single bit as important as physical health. In assigning mental health the importance it deserves, it can make it far easier and more motivating to seek out and build support to manage your own mental health.

Put together your mental health care team

You have medical support, right? A doctor and an OBGYN? A legal team like a lawyer and CPA? Then I suggest you model your mental health care in the same proactive way and gather around you the support you need even before you need them: a therapist, a psychiatrist, a clergy counselor, whatever this means for you, curate and gather your mental health care team. Many of us need someone who is not our significant other/friend/parent to talk to about life's toughest stuff. Get your team in place so you can count on them for that.

If you believe medication may be of support to you, seek it out

Please don't be dissuaded by any stigma or shame about potentially needing short or long-term pharmacological support if that's what your brain chemistry needs. Talk to your doctor or psychiatrist if you feel this may be an option you would like/need.

Take very good care of your physical health

Always rule out any underlying physical conditions that may be contributing to your mental health and, of course, visit your doctor regularly to make sure your body is functioning well. Make sure you've got a solid, nutritional plan established that works well for your own body's unique chemistry (consult with a nutritionist if need be for this!).

Move your body daily in moderate, invigorating ways that feel good and enlivening for you. And get enough sleep! I can't stress this enough: everything in life – including our mental health – becomes more challenging when we don't get enough sleep. Avoid mood-altering substances as much as possible and in ways that you specifically need depending on your own brain chemistry.

Build nourishing relationships in your life

Seek out and spend time with those with who you feel seen, accepted, and celebrated. Whether this is friends, a loving partner, a women's group, your therapist, your spiritual community, or your family, make a point of intentional, regular contact with those nourishing relationships in your life. And, also note that this tip may sometimes mean withdrawing from or decreasing contact with those relationships in your life that feel painful, challenging, and unsupportive.

Plan time for play, joy, and adventure

Between the often grueling demands of work and adulting, days can fly, weeks can bleed into one another, and the months pass. Play, joy, and adventure are fundamental needs each and every one of us has, so intentionally building time and resources into your life to support the pursuit of this is, I believe, wonderful for your overall mental health.

Of course, the way that play, joy, and adventure manifest for each of us will be unique, so find out what sparks your joy, what helps reconnect you to old childhood hobbies, what breaks up your daily routines, and discover what feeds your soul and lights up your life and then do more of it regularly.

Create, teach, or serve

I read somewhere once that ultimately what fulfills the majority of us could be lumped into the categories of creating, teaching, or serving. So I would encourage you to consider how you can weave one or more of these roles into your life regularly, or if you already have this as a part of your life, reconnect back to the part of it that lights you up and inspires you.

Spend time in nature

If there's a panacea for more ills, I'm not sure what it might be. Connecting to nature in whatever way feels good to you – be it gardening or sitting in the sunshine, long coastal bike rides, or hikes through your local park – can support mental health in profound ways. Nature is therapeutic so I encourage you to get outside often.

Limit time spent on social media

Or at least be curious about how you can better use it. I know, I know, no one really likes to hear this and yet we all know it: social media can often have a negative impact on our self-esteem and therefore our mental health. So be mindful and curious about what impact social media has on you, and if it doesn't feel supportive, consider limiting time on it, and/or be curious about using it in ways that feel more supportive.

Connect to something bigger than yourself.

Whether this is God and Church, AA, or Spirit and Universe, or the Women's Spirituality Movement, or another institution or practice that feeds you, guides you, and inspires you, spending time connecting to something bigger than ourselves and cultivating faith and purpose can often support our mental health significantly. Whatever your personal preferences or practices, I encourage you to cultivate the role of this in your life as a support for your mental health.

And if you would like even more resources and suggestions to support your mental health and help you get through this hard time, I invite you to explore the ways you can work with me personally and/or utilize one of my e-books or online products to support you in your journey.

 
Disclaimer: This article and accompanying content (links, etc) is for informational and discussion purposes only and should not be construed as psychotherapy or psychotherapeutic advice of any kind. Annie Wright Psychotherapy assumes no liability for the use or interpretation of any information contained in this post. The information contained in this post is intended for discussion purposes only and should not be an alternative to obtaining a professional consultation from a licensed mental health professional in your state based on the specific facts of your clinical matter. Annie Wright is licensed to practice psychotherapy in the State of California only.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
After coming from and then healing her own extensive relational trauma background, Annie became a licensed psychotherapist - specifically a trauma therapist who specializes in relational trauma recovery - and, in addition to her clinical work with clients, she also founded and runs a boutique, trauma-informed therapy center in Berkeley (www.evergreencounseling.com) where she oversees a staff of 20 clinicians and 5 operations staff who deliver top-notch clinical care to clients across California and Florida.

Moreover, she's a published mental health writer with over 200+ essays on her personal blog (www.anniewright.com) centered around recovering from childhood trauma. Annie's writing and opinions have been featured in Business Insider, Forbes, NBC, Buzzfeed, and The Huffington Post, to name but a few.