Mental health interviews with world-class psychiatrists & psychologists, providing mental health advice packed with actionable takeaways and clear explanations of the most complicated mental health topics.
Some examples of what they do:
Going through heartbreak
When a client comes to therapy after a breakup, one major mistake therapists can make is “brightsiding” – minimizing the pain with clichés like “you’re better off” or “plenty of fish in the sea.” Good therapy means validating the grief, whether the relationship lasted weeks or decades. Heartbreak includes both the loss of the person and the loss of imagined futures. Therapists must stay present with the pain without being overwhelmed or dismissive, offering authentic support without judgment. The hurt is real, and there’s no quick fix – just the human process of grieving.
Work performance and mental health
Short summary:
- Don’t diagnose: It’s not the role of employees or managers to diagnose depression.
- Look for changes: Depression at work can show through consistent changes – lateness, lower energy, social withdrawal, missed deadlines, lower performance, poor appearance.
- Pattern over time: One bad day doesn’t mean depression – you need to observe a pattern over weeks.
- Distinguishing depression vs trauma: Depression = apathy, tiredness, poor focus. Trauma = hypervigilance, anxiety, panic.
- Ask, don’t assume: If you notice repeated changes, ask kindly if everything is okay. Don’t accuse.
- People notice: Coworkers and managers can often sense when something is off.
- Being seen helps: Feeling noticed and supported can make a big difference for someone struggling.
- Mental health days matter: Just like we accept taking time off for physical illness, mental health breaks should be normalized to prevent burnout.
Narcissistic Friends: How to Spot the Signs and Manage the Relationship
A selfish friend can be fun until you need real help.
0 Comments