Posts tagged Mental Health
Using your senses to relax
 
 

May is Mental Health Awareness month and it is an important time to reflect on simple ways we can support our mental health. Turning to the body is a one way to improve your mental well-being.

For this, we can use to the five senses to help us tap in and connect with ourselves on a deeper level to foster our mind-body connection.

 
 

Our senses play an important role in connecting ourselves to our body and can provide self-soothing techniques that we can do to bring calm to our body and mind. Here are some ways that help both adults and children support their mental health by using the 5 senses.

  1. Touch. Our skin is the body’s biggest organ, with our hands holding hundreds of thousands of neurons making it very sensitive to external stimulus. When you’re presented with an anxious situation, a simple method is to run your hands under cold water. This will help cool down the body in an instant. Weighted blankets are also great options, especially for kids! Weighted blankets reduce anxiety, promote better sleep, reduce tantrums, and help children with ADHD. We like this one.

  2. Taste. We can turn to our favorite comfort foods, or home cooked meals, in highly stressful or anxious times. While it’s best to avoid junk food or use food for comfort all the times, we can all seek a little pleasure in a warm meal, cup of tea, or even a ginger candy to sooth our nerves.

  3. Smell. Aromatherapy treatment has many positive benefits on improving our mental well-being. Lavender essential oil is beneficial for calming, citrus scents help boost mood, and peppermint can aid in upset stomach. If you don’t have access to oils, simply taking a breath of fresh air, or smelling flowers in a garden, can shift the energy in your body from an anxious state to a calm state. Try these kid-approved aromatherapy products from Aura Cacia.

  4. Sight. In yoga, the term pratyahara, translates to withdrawal of the senses from external stimuli. You can use an eye pillow during savasana in class or follow a guided meditation before bed (find one here)! For kids, coloring mandalas or practicing color therapy is a great way to begin withdrawing the senses and focusing on a calming task at hand.

  5. Sound. Sound therapy, and the effects of sound frequencies, has proven to increase mental well-being and support our emotional state. We can listen to relaxing music, recite mantras, or play guided meditations to help calm the body. Try our Yogi Beans meditations for kids are here on Insight Timer!

 
 

Learning to be more in tune with your five senses will help deepen your mindfulness practice and give you tools to have when you need. All of the techniques above will help reconnect you to your body and provide self-care through the five senses.

 
 
Impact of COVID-19 on children
 
 

Impact of COVID-19 on poor mental health in children and young people ‘tip of the iceberg’

Children and young people could feel the impact of COVID-19 on their mental health and well-being for many years to come, UNICEF warned in its flagship report today.

According to The State of the World’s Children 2021; On My Mind: promoting, protecting and caring for children’s mental health – UNICEF’s most comprehensive look at the mental health of children, adolescents and caregivers in the 21st century – even before COVID-19, children and young people carried the burden of mental health conditions without significant investment in addressing them.

Read Full Article, UNICEF

 
Exercise benefits for children
 
 

Even light physical activity among adolescents was linked to better mental health as they got older, new research shows.

Recent research on the link between physical activity and depression risk in adults has suggested that exercise may offset the genetic tendency toward depression. Adults with genetic risks who exercised regularly were no more likely to develop depression than those without the genetic propensity.

Read Full Article, New York Times

 
Are you over-scheduling kids?
 

As a mom to two young girls I know what goes into putting together and managing your child’s schedule.  (It’s a lot!)   A question I often ask myself is how do I make sure I balance my children’s schedules so amongst school and extra-curricular activities they also have enough time to just “be” - oftentimes it’s the unscheduled moments where a child’s creativity can thrive and they learn what their interests are.

With school ending at 3PM and activities starting anywhere as early as 4PM the afternoons where we have an activity can feel like rush hour.  Get home - wash hands - have snack - complete homework- off to activity - come home - eat dinner -bath- relax-off to bed and then start the cycle over again.  It is not a pace of life I wish to instill for my girls or myself for that matter!

My girls are 8 and 5 and their interests vary.  What’s worked for us is to limit their activities to 2 weekday activities and then piano lessons on the weekends. (The teacher comes to our home which makes it easy!)  Once the two activities are chosen that is it for season,    Even if the other kids are playing soccer or trying a cooking class and we have a little FOMO we stick with what we chose and don’t add more to the schedule.  We also all agreed that when we start something we finish it out for the semester and if we don’t want to continue we take what we learned and move on from it.

I believe the open space we leave in our child’s schedule allows them time to decompress,  daydream, and relax, which is so important.  Even if I get the occasional “I’m bored”  I always remind my girls  that boredom breeds creativity. (Ha, that sounds like such a mom thing to say!)  By finding balance between the doing and just being  we teach our children that life isn’t about rushing or doing what everyone else is doing - rather some of the best moments come from the unscheduled and unstructured spaces in our day.