5. Finding Self-Help Apps
Smartphones and teens seem to go hand-in-hand. Your teen can use apps to help with their mental health.
In today’s digital age, smartphones are an extension of teens themselves. Apps are a great resource that can significantly improve their mental health. Some popular ones include:
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- Pacifica – Pacifica gives teens the ability to track their mood throughout the day. If they notice they are feeling anxious, they can use audio exercises to calm their anxiety. It also has tools to record thinking patterns to help teens notice areas where they could change their thinking to improve their mental health.
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- Happify – Happify allows teens to create goals for their mental health, and then provides activities and strategies to help them meet those goals. These tools include games that teens may find enjoyable and motivating. This app is available free, and offers additional features for a small upgrade.
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- Unique Daily Affirmations – Sometimes, all a teen needs is a little positive word to improve their mental health. This app provides positive affirmations every day, and instructions for repeating it to themselves.
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- Hydro Coach – Staying hydrated has a big impact on mental health. Hydro Coach notifies users when it’s time to drink more water, making it easier to track this important health metric and ensure they are getting the water in.
Apps work because they are on a teen’s phone, and teens use their phones regularly. The notifications from the app keep the teen on track with the various tasks and provide positive motivation throughout the day.
6. Having Self-Compassion and Acceptance
The cornerstone of teen mental health is a positive life outlook, beginning with self-acceptance. Teens can learn to love themselves and their bodies and all of the positive qualities they have.
They can also practice self-compassion, giving themselves grace when they make mistakes.
Learning to view mistakes as a chance to learn and improve, rather than a failure, is a key way to create self-compassion. For teens who have trauma, recognizing trauma’s role in their lives is also helpful in giving themselves compassion.
7. Reading Self-Care Books
Self-care books aren’t just for adults. There are several books that are quite helpful to teens, writing on a level they can understand and helping them embrace better self-care. Some good choices include:
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- A Growth Mindset for Teens by Sydney Sheppard – This book provides practical lessons to help teens move from fixed to growth mindset, which is very helpful in developing a positive sense of self.
The Role of Adults in Teen Self-Care
For adults supporting a teen with past trauma, modeling self-care is among the most effective strategies. Be someone who speaks to themselves with compassion and acceptance.
Demonstrate healthy coping mechanisms, so your teen can see their application in real life.
As you parent and teach teens how to embrace self-care, remember that there is nothing that is perfect. Many teens are striving for the perfection they see on social media and television, and there is no such thing as perfection.
By showing your own faults, and your acceptance of them, you can help your teen build a healthy context for real life and the highly edited versions they see in the online world.
Adults can also teach teens to prioritize rest, nutrition, and exercise. It’s one thing to tell your teen that these things are important, and it’s another to actually spend time doing them.