Beginning Therapy, Mental Health Topics Thriveworks Comes to Greensboro, NC: Quick, Flexible Online Counseling Options Offered During COVID-19 by Taylor Bennett on Sep 14, 2020 Greensboro, NC. September 14, 2020 —Thriveworks Counseling opens its newest office in Greensboro, NC to provide crucial mental health help and support during the pandemic. Currently, the office offers telephone counseling and video counseling session; they hope to open for in-person sessions soon. Thriveworks Counseling isn’t like other counseling practices….
Coping Skills, Mental Health Topics How hearing loss impacts mental health and how to cope by Dr. Pauline Dinnauer, AuD on Sep 14, 2020 Human beings are innately social creatures. Communication is the core of civilization, the glue that holds society together. When we’re cut off from other people in some way — when we can no longer communicate as effectively as we once did — it can be devastating. We can no longer…
Coping Skills, Mental Health Topics, PTSD The long-term impacts of 9/11: How to cope with PTSD after almost two decades by Madison Bambini on Sep 10, 2020 September 11, 2001 was a tragic day in American history. When the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon happened, it shook the whole country. It was even worse for those who were there to witness it in person. Innocent bystanders, employees just trying to get to…
Feelings & Emotions, Grief & Loss, Mental Health Topics Grappling with difficult emotions that might arise on 9/11: Grief, sadness, fear, and anger by Taylor Bennett on Sep 10, 2020 As September 11 approaches, many Americans brace for impact. After 20 years, we have come to expect the grief, the sadness, the fear, the anger. Or, even an overwhelm of all of these emotions at once. For some—especially those who lost loved ones on this fateful day—it never gets easier;…
Family, Mental Health Topics, Research A new study finds that levels of oxytocin, “the love hormone,” are significantly lower in adults who were children when their parents divorced by Taylor Bennett on Sep 10, 2020 Quick Summary A new study from Baylor University “Parental divorce in childhood is related to lower urinary oxytocin concentrations in adulthood” finds that oxytocin levels are significantly lower in adults whose parents divorced when they were children. Researchers say that this might help to explain the difficulty that many children…
COVID-19, Media Use, Mental Health Topics Adapting to online learning: Why teachers are struggling to keep up by Madison Bambini on Sep 8, 2020 Whether you’re familiar with the popular TV series Schitt’s Creek or not, you’ve probably seen the viral video that’s going around right now. It’s a short clip from season 2, episode 2 where mother and son duo, David and Moira, attempt to cook a family meal together. In the scene,…
Alcohol & Drugs, Children, Teens, & Adolescents, Mental Health Topics, Research Study says early cannabis use in teens can have negative effects on their cognitive functioning by Madison Bambini on Sep 4, 2020 A new study says that using cannabis as a teen or adolescent can have negative impacts on cognitive functioning, especially verbal memory. Researchers at the University of Colorado School of Medicine tested and analyzed siblings (unlike other similar studies) to rule out familial factors. The study used interviews and neuropsychological…
Children, Teens, & Adolescents, Mental Health Topics, Parenting The 3 things successful homeschooling parents do differently by Diane H. Wong on Sep 2, 2020 People new to or considering homeschooling often wonder what it takes to become a homeschool teacher—what makes a mom or dad qualified to teach their children? I believe any parent willing to invest their time and energy into their children’s education can successfully homeschool, but are there traits or actions…
Children, Teens, & Adolescents, Loneliness, Mental Health Topics Isolated kids become lonely, unsociable adults by Taylor Bennett on Aug 31, 2020 Quick Summary A new study “A prefrontal-paraventricular thalamus circuit requires juvenile social experience to regulate adult sociability in mice” suggests that social isolation in childhood has a harmful impact on adult brain functioning and more specifically, in an area of the brain that’s responsible for regulating social behavior. In addition…
COVID-19, Grief & Loss, Mental Health Topics, Work & Careers Grief in the workplace: Managing sadness about working from home by Madison Bambini on Aug 31, 2020 Rewind to January 2020. You were in the office, working with great coworkers and an awesome boss, learning more and more each day. Everything made sense and everything felt right. Then, all of a sudden, a pandemic spread across the globe and ruined all of your plans. Sounds like a…
Mental Health Topics, Relationships, Stress Divorce burnout: Effects on divorcees and their future relationships by Venchele Saint Dic on Aug 27, 2020 The sorrow felt when reading about the number of divorces leaves you with nothing short of blaring emotions. Divorce leaves you drained in an uphill battle without end with dried air in your lungs. During the pandemic, it has been difficult for singles to engage in face-to-face interactions. Social engagement…
Mental Health Topics, Women's Issues How can women empower one another? Modeling self-acceptance, lending encouragement, and offering support by Madison Bambini on Aug 25, 2020 Women have long been facing unique struggles and not just in terms of mental health. Women have been fighting and pushing for more equality and acceptance in the United States and other countries. Since gaining the right to vote in 1920, women have made a lot of progress over the…