I Found the Most Effective Way to Help My Kids Manage Stress
And made a worksheet you can use too
“Too bad that you’re retired,” the nurse told my psychiatrist mom as he gave her the Pfizer booster shot. “Students here are really struggling with their mental health. We could use more help.”
Conversations like this one, which my mom shared with me after driving home from the vaccination center on Princeton University’s campus, feel ubiquitous right now. Just that day, I read about the advice Venus Williams got from her mother on caring for her “whole self,” and attended a Zoom with the dean of my son’s new high school, who told parents that back-to-school orientation would include a session on “self care.”
Everyone is either talking about how they’re trying not to lose it or to help young people keep it together. And with good reason. A recent global study of how the pandemic has affected more than 134,000 college students around the world found that some common struggles include “fear of themselves or others in their social network contracting the virus, apprehension about the changes in coursework delivery and unclear instructional parameters, overall loneliness, compromised motivation, and sleep disturbances, as well as anxious and depressive symptoms.”