What's a small change that improved your mental health?
What's a small change that improved your mental health?
April is stress awareness month. What little changes have you made that have helped?
What's a small change that improved your mental health?
April is stress awareness month. What little changes have you made that have helped?
I have ADHD, and one thing that really helped me a lot was to try and build my life and my home around things that encourage the behaviors I want to engage in.
An example; the Clio Greek yogurt bars I've been eating for snacks are expensive, yes. They have wrappers which have to be thrown out, which is terrible. There's a million reasons I hate eating them. But they taste good, and the convenient packaging means that when they're in the house, I eat those instead of cheaper, less healthy candy or cookies or, and I'm very guilty of this- skipping the snack.
I have non-diabetic hypoglycemia. I can't keep skipping my snacks/meals because I'm distracted or don't want to bother with food. My doctor cannot be any clearer about the damage I'm doing to myself.
I had to accept that yes, these have wasteful packaging. Yes, they cost more than other snacks. But I'm almost 40 and I've spent my entire life proving over and over again I can't just will myself to behave differently. I need to accept that this is a medical condition, not a failure, and give myself grace.
There's about a million other things like this, but the vibe is, I will do my best. I will hold myself accountable when I fail. But I will no longer beat myself up for not being a person I've never been.
Forgot to take my vitamins for a few days? Take them now, and move forward. You aren't to blame. They taste delicious and you want to take them, so failing to do so is obviously not your fault. (Setting an alarm to take them only works for a few days before I start dismissing the alarm without actually noticing it.)
These are all things to work around. Not to hate myself for.
I have been working as a caregiver, usually for adults with developmental and intellectual disabilities, for years. If I wouldn't be mad at a person with a disability diagnosis for displaying the symptoms that are out of their control, it's hypocritical of me to do that to myself.
That's a great way of doing things! The whole world was designed for neurotypical people, our way of doing things wasnt considered. People understand a wheelchair user saying they can't carry a heavy box upstairs, but they don't understand a neurodiverse person saying they do X because they're diverse. You're finding your way through a system that was designed for a different person.
None of these are small changes per se, but here are some things that can help, and which can be worked towards with small and persistent changes.
First, covering some of the basics:
https://www.nih.gov/health-information/emotional-wellness-toolkit
Beyond that, what helped me immensely was:
Because loving-kindness was so effective for me, I want to actually write out the section from TWIM that was so helpful. From that TWIM PDF linked above:
If you can get past the corniness and all the various forms of resistance that come up, generating good feelings and holding onto them is a pragmatic tool you can develop and build that can lead to increased happiness and mental well-being.
I feel like therapy should be mentioned, I have seen a dozen or so therapists over decades, but for the most part I never found therapy particularly helpful. At times therapy was actually quite harmful (usually by accident, not due to ill intent by the therapist). I still believe therapy can be helpful and that people should seek out a therapist, I just can't say that it every helped me that much.
Journaling also should be mentioned because it can be helpful, but in my life journaling was a tool that brought me a lot of harm as well as some good. So I guess just be careful about having journals, know that they can be taken from you and weaponized against you (even in ways you wouldn't have ever expected). It took me over a decade to finally journal again, and now I use it for very limited purposes. I still feel I can't be honest or vulnerable with my own thoughts on paper, so my writing remains more analytical and pragmatic than emotional. Sometimes I have found writing poetry one way to help be vulnerable that way without feeling threatened.
Dandelion thanks so much for typing that out! It's brilliant information for us all, really detailed and helpful. I journal sometimes too... do you have any old ones you read? I have mine but don't tend to read them
I burned most of my journals after a step-parent took one of them and read it in front of my family to punish and humiliate me. After that I didn't journal for a long time. One of my journals from when I was 10 - 13 years old or so survived, and I have that one. I read it a few years ago, and was surprised at how lucid I was.
I started journaling again a couple years ago, but it's usually just about analyzing my dysphoria - basically just talking down the "brainworms".
You should try reading your older journals sometime, it can be quite cathartic. I feel a sense of loss at having burned my journals, I feel like I poured myself into them and now my memory makes it difficult to recall what I was like accurately. Having an artifact like that would be useful for when I'm trying to do some personal archaeology, or even just for fun.
Thanks for creating this community, by the way. We are lucky to have you. 💞
Holy shit, I need to start meditating again, this may just give me final push to start doing it 👍
I agree with with your comment and couldn't put it better! I will add (for myself) making/creating art really helps me, and also baking healthy food. Both take me into a chilled out zone.... also me and the bf are going to get e-bikes so we can get out and about, fresh air, exercise and greenery, whilst not killing ourselves, (but you don't necessarily need an e-bike for that)
Also, I'm really sorry that your private journal was weaponized against you, no-one should have to experience that
I think meditation can be a very powerful tool, but like any treatment it can also have side effects. It's worth familiarizing yourself with those so you can recognize them and navigate them well (sometimes this means meditating less, or stopping entirely). When I meditate regularly I experience insomnia, which is very common with monks who meditate and on meditation retreats.
Anyway, I just don't want anyone to hurt themselves. Most of the time recommending meditation is safe because rarely do people put in the effort and time and make enough progress that they start having side effects, but you never know and it's better to start with informed consent.
I used to make art a lot, but I lost it somewhere along the way. I would like to return, but life hasn't always been so permitting.
Baking is great too, I love cooking and baking!
I should have added taking hot baths to my list. I'm not sure how much it actually improves my mental health, but there are supposedly studies that show it helps, and I feel overall like it's possible it helps me (I certainly choose to do it a lot, esp. when I want to relax or feel better).
Riding bikes sounds really nice - I miss that feeling of freedom.
And no worries about the journal, it was a long time ago and I was so dissociated by then that it was more just another thing to endure than anything else. Life is much better as an adult with freedom from parents. 😄 Every year is better than the last.
Tea instead of coffee
By far the best thing I've done for my mental health is exercise, I do it minimum 3 times a week. I really notice when I've not trained for a few days, I'm flat or anxious.
I also find keeping busy really helps, it's distraction and stops me wallowing.
I did a one day guided meditation course from someone who knew what they were doing ... it has helped me sleep well ever since and generally avoid burnout when I'm under serious stress.