5 Mental Health Tips for Valentine's Day

Published:
February 2, 2022

 


5 Mental Health Tips for Valentine’s Day


Here are five ways you can focus on your mental health and make this Valentine’s Day the best one yet:

 

1. Celebrate your most important relationship – the one you have with yourself!

The relationship you have with yourself will be your longest relationship in life, so it’s important to treat yourself well. If you are not spending Valentine’s Day with a significant other, plan your own night. Think about what reenergizes you. Take a bath, spend some time with a good book or plan your own at-home spa night. Buy yourself chocolates or flowers. Valentine’s Day is a time to feel loved, so show yourself how much you love you.

 

2. Invest in all your relationships.

Valentine’s Day is a day for love, but not just romantic love. Send Valentine’s Day cards to your family and friends, small gifts of love to your nieces and nephews, or maybe bake cookies for a neighbor. Make the day a day of gratitude so the people in your life feel your appreciation.

 

3. Practice mindfulness.  

Meditation and mindfulness can be found in a variety of forms. Find a mindfulness app or a free podcast, turn down the lines, and focus your attention on your breath and your emotions. If sitting quietly and journeying through meditation does not sound helpful, consider coloring in a calming book or writing a journal entry. Doing this regularly has been shown to reduce feelings of anxiety and stress and can help you cope if emotions become too strong.

 

4. Seek support if necessary. 

If you are really struggling this Valentine’s Day, speak to a trusted family member, friend or therapist, and get the help you need. If you consider harming yourself or others, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-8255.

 

5. Turn off social media.

You love to see your family and friends happy, but consider avoiding social media for the days leading up to Valentine’s Day. It can be difficult to see others having something you want and turning off social media will give you time to focus on what’s really important this holiday. Always remember that a person’s social media page is often their “highlight reel,” never showing the full story, and usually finding the best parts of their life to show the world.


 

 

(This article is from Embark Behavioral Health. You can visit their original article here.) 

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