Mental Health Resources for Wellbeing
Welcome to the collection of mental health resources, a space designed to support your reflection, learning, and personal growth. Here you’ll find evidence-based articles, practical tools, and guidance based in current psychological research. Each one is written to help you explore topics like neurodivergence, relationships, emotional regulation and resilience. Whether you’re beginning your mental health journey or deepening your understanding, we hope to offer you something to help you on your journey forward.
Love Languages: Personalising Communication
The concept of love languages highlights the unique ways individuals express and receive love. These five styles—Words of Affirmation, Quality Time, Receiving Gifts, Acts of Service, and Physical Touch—reflect how we feel valued in relationships.
Each person’s emotional needs differ. While one partner may feel cherished by heartfelt words, another might value shared time or thoughtful gestures. Misunderstandings can arise if these differences aren’t acknowledged. For instance, you might feel unappreciated when your efforts go unnoticed or struggle to connect if your partner’s expression of love doesn’t align with your expectations.
By recognising and adapting to your partner’s love language, you can foster deeper emotional intimacy and strengthen your relationship. Understanding these styles not only enhances communication but also nurtures genuine connections tailored to individual preferences.
Attribution Error
The quote “We don’t judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree” highlights the importance of respecting individual abilities and limitations, avoiding unrealistic expectations of others. Attribution theory helps us interpret others' actions by considering intent, awareness, and capacity, which can lead to more empathetic and accurate responses. By acknowledging possible misunderstandings, unintentional errors, or personal limitations, we can approach relationships with compassion and build healthier connections free from misattributed motives or undue expectations.
Decision Making
A decisional balance sheet is a structured tool to weigh the pros and cons of making a change versus staying the same, helping you evaluate all aspects of a potential decision. By examining the benefits and drawbacks of both options, reflecting on values, and prioritizing what matters most, this approach fosters clarity and confidence. It encourages honest self-assessment and strategic preparation to align your choices with your goals and values, making change—or staying the same—a more intentional decision.
Managing Unhelpful Thoughts
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) focuses on identifying and managing "unhelpful thoughts"—negative thinking patterns that affect our emotions and behaviors. These include automatic thoughts (like “I’m not good enough”) and core beliefs about ourselves or others that can limit our perspectives and actions. CBT techniques encourage challenging these thoughts, fostering healthier viewpoints and responses. Examples of strategies include using a gratitude journal to counter mental filtering, fact-checking assumptions to avoid jumping to conclusions, and creating a "responsibility pie" to help with personalization. With practice, these tools can promote a more balanced and positive self-view, empowering individuals to respond constructively to life’s challenges.
Six Stages of Grief
Grief is a complex and deeply personal response to loss, spanning multiple stages that include denial, bargaining, anger, depression, acceptance, and post-traumatic growth. Each stage provides a way to process and gradually adapt to the new reality, often leading to personal growth and resilience. While grief can forever change us, it also offers the possibility of finding new purpose and strength through healing.
Warning Signs
Mental health struggles often begin with subtle changes, and if noticed early, we can prevent more serious issues. Recognising your personal warning signs—such as shifts in sleep, eating habits, social interactions, or sensory sensitivities—and developing tailored strategies can help you manage your mental health more effectively.
Building a toolkit, creating a support system, and using tools like mnemonics or safety plans can empower you to respond to your mental health needs before it becomes a crisis.
From Surviving to Thriving: Let Go of Perfectionism
As we reflect on milestones, perfectionism often leads to a harsh self-evaluation that stifles growth and fosters anxiety, procrastination, and self-doubt. While it may seem like a drive for excellence, perfectionism stems from a fear of rejection or failure, often rooted in early experiences of conditional acceptance. Strategies like Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and Schema Therapy suggest shifting from rigid ideals to a "good enough" mindset, focusing on progress and self-compassion rather than flawlessness. By embracing imperfection, celebrating small wins, and valuing the process, we can let go of perfectionism and build a life grounded in balance, authenticity, and joy. Reclaiming this freedom allows us to truly thrive and connect with what matters most.
H.A.L.T - Vulnerable Emotions
Discover the H.A.L.T. strategy—a mindful approach to recognising emotional vulnerabilities by addressing Hunger (body chemistry), Anger (pre-existing emotions), Loneliness (lack of connection), and Tiredness (physical limitations). By pausing to reflect on and serve your core needs, you can build resilience, maintain emotional balance, and respond to life's challenges with clarity and care. Help yourself navigate everyday stress and current holiday pressure!
Managing Sensory Overload
Sensory overload can significantly impact daily life, especially for neurodivergent individuals and those with heightened sensitivities. Practical strategies such as tracking triggers, modifying environments, and using calming tools can help manage sensitivities to taste, touch, smell, light, noise, and social interactions. By experimenting with these personalised approaches, you can create a supportive environment that promotes comfort, balance, and well-being.
Build Empathy in Relationships
The PANDA is often used in neurodivergence, but can be adapted to promote empathy in relationships by encouraging flexibility in thinking, increasing understanding, and forgiving interactions. It includes picking battles wisely to focus on what truly matters, managing personal anxieties to prevent harsh reactions, negotiating collaboratively, using gentle language, and reframing mistakes as learning opportunities. By adopting this approach, we create a compassionate environment where mutual understanding and stronger connections can thrive.
Very Mindful
Incidental mindfulness is the practice of finding calm and focus in everyday moments, like waiting at traffic lights or standing in a queue, by being fully present without adding extra tasks to your day. Through simple techniques such as tuning into your breath, observing your surroundings, or noticing body sensations, you can transform mundane pauses into opportunities for stress relief and self-connection. With consistent practice, these mindful moments can enhance emotional resilience, focus, and patience, enriching your overall wellbeing.
The Minnesota Experiment
The history of psychological research includes ethically controversial studies, such as the Minnesota Starvation Experiment, which highlighted severe physical, psychological, and behavioural impacts of prolonged calorie restriction. Participants in the 1944 study faced physiological issues like heart problems and digestive difficulties, as well as psychological effects like depression, food obsession, and social withdrawal. The study revealed the deep and lasting effects of starvation on mental health, underlining the importance of balanced nutrition and the risks of severe dietary restriction.
A Meaningful Apology
A meaningful apology goes beyond simply saying "I'm sorry." It involves acknowledging the impact of your actions, providing an explanation without making excuses, offering to make amends, and committing to changes that prevent the same mistakes from happening again. By taking responsibility and showing a willingness to grow, an apology can help rebuild trust and strengthen relationships.
Acceptable level of risk
Trauma can significantly alter our perception of danger, leading to heightened anxiety, avoidance behaviours, and challenges in relationships and decision-making. This heightened vigilance often persists even after the initial danger has passed, narrowing the areas where we feel safe and increasing feelings of guilt or shame. By learning to identify acceptable levels of risk and using mindfulness to separate past trauma responses from present realities, we can work toward reducing the impact of fear and regaining a sense of control.
Listening to Pain
Emotional connection in relationships thrives on active listening and validation, not quick solutions or minimisation. When our partner shares their pain, they're often seeking empathy and understanding, not fixes or dismissive reassurances, which can make them feel misunderstood or isolated. By truly listening, validating emotions, and avoiding defensive responses, we build trust and deepen intimacy, creating a more supportive and resilient relationship.
Boundaries
Boundaries are essential for personal well-being and to help shape our interactions with others. They span areas such as physical, emotional, intellectual, and time-related limits, ensuring our needs are respected and our values are upheld. Recognising unhealthy patterns, like overextending ourselves or constantly putting others' needs first, are signals we may need for stronger boundaries. Boundaries can be built through self-awareness, clear communication, and setting consequences this helps us to build healthier relationships and a more balanced life.
Interoception: The Hidden Sense
Beyond the basic five senses, we have three "hidden senses"—vestibular (balance and movement), proprioception (body awareness), and interoception (internal bodily sensations). Interoception is crucial for recognising needs like hunger, thirst, and emotions, and can be challenging for neurodivergent individuals, impacting self-regulation and emotional awareness. Practices like mindful body scans, interoception exercises, and routines can help enhance this awareness, supporting a stronger connection between mind and body and building resilience and well-being.
Polyvagal Theory
Polyvagal Theory explains how our nervous system, particularly the vagus nerve, impacts our emotional and physical responses, influencing states of safety, stress, and shutdown. The vagus nerve helps us stay calm when we feel safe but activates "fight or flight" or "shutdown" modes in response to perceived danger, often subconsciously through a process called neuroception. Understanding these states can help us recognise and regulate our nervous system responses, promoting resilience, healing, and improved social connections.
Disclaimer
The information on this website is provided for general educational purposes only. It is not intended as, and should not be taken to be, personalised psychological advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
If you are experiencing psychological distress or mental health concerns, please seek professional support from a registered psychologist, your general practitioner, or another qualified health professional.
If you are in crisis or require immediate assistance, please call 000 in an emergency or contact Lifeline on 13 11 14.