Tips for Starting a Journaling Practice

We have published a few short posts about benefits of journaling. Done regularly, this practice has physical benefits—for example, it really helps strengthen the immune system. Emotionally, it helps us to organize our thoughts, explore and articulate our emotions, and better appreciate our lives by helping us focus on positive experiences and attitudes.

You may ask, What parent has time to spend on journaling? With any regular practice—as with yoga, exercise, meditation—it can be hard to overcome the idea that we don’t have time to do what may be good for us. There are some effective strategies that can get you started, and you may wind up asking yourself how you’d for so long overlooked the pleasures of this way of spending a few minutes with yourself every day.

Continue reading Tips for Starting a Journaling Practice

How to Help Your Teen Cope with Emotional Outbursts

The SOVA Project is happy to feature this blog post written by one in our team of fantastic SOVA Ambassadors—these are young people who help create meaningful blog posts for us to share.

As someone diagnosed with depression, I will sometimes have outbursts. Everything catches up to me at once, and I will feel so sad and frustrated. All I want to do is sit in my room and cry. However, that’s typically not a viable option. The longer I’ve dealt with outbursts, the more I’ve learned about how to stop them in their tracks. For this post, I’ve compiled a list of what helps me, in hopes that it can help someone else!

Continue reading How to Help Your Teen Cope with Emotional Outbursts

OCD Confessions

The SOVA Project is happy to feature this blog post written by one in our team of fantastic SOVA Ambassadors—these are young people who help create meaningful blog posts for us to share.

What do you think when you hear OCD (or Obsessive Compulsive Disorder)? Until I was diagnosed at age 15, I always associated the term with clean rooms, color-coded binders and a fear of germs. It took me years to figure out I had OCD, because hand-washing and organizing things have never been my main compulsions. To help others who may be in this situation, I thought I’d share a narrative I wrote to describe one of my worst OCD themes, one that most people do not associate with OCD.handcuff

Alone at my grandparents’ house one summer, I remember lying on the floor in the foot of space between the bed and wall, urgently whispering confessions to my mom, my phone pressed against my ear. After each confession, I felt a wave of relief, a temporary release, but almost instantly I began to search for the next thing to feel guilty about. It pressed in on my skull and I could feel the next worry waiting there before I even knew what it was. My heart started racing and guilt flooded me as the thought came to my mind. A bad thought. And then I knew I had to tell her. Continue reading OCD Confessions

Is Your Teen Handcuffed To The Phone?

Teens all get upset when their phones fall into puddles, or when they have to put their phones away during class. But do you think your teen is too attached to the phone?

Some people feel intense discomfort when they’re separated from their phones. Researchers have named this state of mind “nomophobia.” Its important to note that this is not a medical diagnosis right now, but a term some researchers are using to describe a trend.

It stands for “no mobile phobia.” People who experience nomophobia feel like their phone is like an extension of their body, so taking the phone away makes them feel as though someone just walked away with their hand! They may describe this as feeling addicted to their phones.

One recent study found that “dependent personalities”—people who have an excessive need for affirmation from others, and who fear separation—are the most likely to feel distressed when they’re not allowed to use their phones. Also, women showed significantly stronger feelings of attachment than men did.

The study’s good news is that there is one discipline that may ease these feelings—mindfulness.

(Is there any mental health condition that mindfulness does not help?!)

There are many ways to improve one’s mindfulness. In this study, participants practiced meditation. In general mindfulness helps people who struggle with unhealthy attachments, whether it’s to their phone, a loved one, a substance, an outcome of a situation, and so on. Plus, practicing mindfulness can decrease adolescents’ stress, increase their focus, and improve their memory.

Psychology Today recommends some other strategies to help with nomophobia, and as parents can help by modeling these for your children:

Continue reading Is Your Teen Handcuffed To The Phone?

A Parents’ Guide To Fostering Teens’ Self Esteem

appraisal03

Studies have found that teens today have the same level of anxiety as psychiatric patients did in the 1950s, and the difficulties of managing this anxiety can diminish healthy self-esteem, leading in turn to depression. We hear so much about how we need to support our teens in gaining a high level of self-esteem.

But what does “self-esteem” mean, anyway?

One clue to understanding any idea is to look at how its words evolved. We often think that holding someone in “high esteem” is to love them, so we often think of having “self-esteem” as loving ourselves. But let’s look at the older meanings, too.

“Esteem” was first used as an English word that meant “worth.” It came into English from very old French and Latin words that meant “to appraise” and “to estimate”—can you hear how “esteem” and “estimate” sound similar?

So self-esteem can mean how we “appraise” ourselves or “estimate” our “worth.” It’s like our selves—our bodies, minds, spirits—are like a house full of valuables, and we are the appraisers, estimating how much our house and all its contents are worth.

Here are two helpful new understandings we can draw from just looking at the words:

Self: We get to be the appraisers. Nobody else but we ourselves. If our teen gives the power to appraise her estates to somebody else, then she gives away her own power to “estimate” her “worth.”

Appraisal: Estimating our worth depends on having realistic attitudes. If our teen looks at her “riches” and sees only what’s missing—what she thinks should be there and isn’t—then she doesn’t do an accurate job of appraising her worth. But if she can look at her riches and appreciate what she does have, then she has a better chance of building on that accurate appraisal.

Hear how the words “appraise” and “appreciate” sound the same?—they come from the same ancient Latin roots, too.

Habits that can “depreciate” teens’ sense of themselves:

Continue reading A Parents’ Guide To Fostering Teens’ Self Esteem

How To Help Our Teens Make Stress Work For Them

The SOVA Project is happy to feature this blog post written by one in our team of fantastic SOVA Ambassadors—these are young people who help create meaningful blog posts for us to share.


It seems to me our generation sees stress as a burden that weighs us down and prevents us from being happy. We’ve heard for our entire lives that stress is a bad thing that can even make us sick. But more recently, researchers have been finding that stress can actually be good for you.

Kelly McGonigal, a health psychologist and author of The Upside of Stress: Why Stress Is Good for You, and How to Get Good at It, gave a TED Talk in 2013 called “How to Make Stress Your Friend.” She talked about the health benefits of learning mental and emotional stress-management skills.

Her talk has more than 15 million views on the TED site and 5 million more on YouTube—that’s how many people want to know how they can manage stress better!

I think her talk can really help young people, especially students with mental health difficulties. Here are some points she makes—but if you want the entire picture, listen to the whole talk.

Continue reading How To Help Our Teens Make Stress Work For Them

A Feminist View on Mental Illness

fem logoThe SOVA Project is happy to feature this blog post written by one in our team of fantastic SOVA Ambassadors—these are young people who help create meaningful blog posts for us to share.

In a recent gender studies class, we read Fiona Rummery’s “Mad Women or Mad Society: Towards a Feminist Practice.” Part of this work explores the connection between a woman’s assumed role as the homemaker and her increased risk of mental health issues. I wanted to share a few points made by the author that I think are very interesting.

First, femininity has emphasis on serving others and ignoring a woman’s own needs. We all have heard the saying that a mom never gets a day off, but this undoes self-care and easily leads to burnout, anxiety, and depression. If a woman begins to experience such an issue, it is frowned upon for her to assume the sick role, a term that describes the acceptable behavior and expectations a person can receive when they are ill.

For example, if you are a student you are expected to show up for class and complete assignments.  However, if you end up in the hospital because you broke your arm while running, your professors most likely would not expect you to come to class and might allow you to submit assignments after the due date. Your injury excuses you from your normal responsibilities. You have taken on a new role: the sick role.

Continue reading A Feminist View on Mental Illness

Self-care: Sleep matters, too!

zzzz

How can we take care of others if we don’t—or won’t—take care of ourselves?

Flight attendants instruct us that, in the event of crisis, we must put our own oxygen masks on before trying to help anyone else. It seems counterintuitive, but it’s so true! Self-care is all about accepting ourselves and being grateful for what we have—rather than always wanting things faster, better, more.

One simple but important component of taking care of ourselves is taking care of our sleep.

Continue reading Self-care: Sleep matters, too!

How to Help Get Rid of Holiday Anxiety

The SOVA Project is happy to feature this blog post written by one in our team of fantastic SOVA Ambassadors—these are young people who help create meaningful blog posts for us to share.

It can be difficult to expect ourselves to act happy during the holidays.

The holidays are a great time to kick back, reunite with family, and hang out with friends. However, along with all the fun, the holidays can be an anxious time for many people. Because of the social nature of the holidays, if you have depression it can often feel tiring to act happy all the time around family. If you have anxiety, it can be difficult to be in long social situations day after day and find alone time to recharge.

We’re bound to feel some of that holiday nervousness, but there are resources and support available to those of us who would like to alleviate at least some of our holiday anxiety. Here are three situations that you may relate to in feeling nervousness towards the season.

Continue reading How to Help Get Rid of Holiday Anxiety

How Teens Cope With Digital Stress

Cyberbullying

Teens live with their phones in their pockets, and this has created tons of entertainment for you—but it has also created stress. Teens deal with cyber-bullyingdigital self-harm, fake accounts, and many other problems that can contribute to anxiety and depression.

Most research on digital stress focuses on coping with social stress and cyber-bullying. But other online problems also exist, including digital impersonation, smothering, and hacking.

A super interesting article in the Journal of Adolescent Research looked at hundreds of teens’ posts online. They found out five ways that teens cope with “digital stress” and reduce their anxiety when they scroll through their feeds. Here’s a rundown of these strategies:

Continue reading How Teens Cope With Digital Stress