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Taking care of your mental health

Your mental health is health. Learning to notice when you're running on empty — and knowing how to get help — is a core adulting skill, not a weakness.

Dad's Quick Take

Pay attention to the signs of stress and burnout, take care of the basics (sleep, movement, connection), and know that help is available and often covered by insurance. Reaching out early is a sign of strength, not failure.

Signs to pay attention to

Persistent exhaustion, trouble sleeping, losing interest in things you used to enjoy, irritability, or feeling overwhelmed for weeks at a time are worth noticing. They're common, they're human, and they're treatable.

The basics that genuinely help

Finding help

Many health plans cover therapy — check your insurer's in-network providers, ask a doctor for a referral, or look into telehealth options. If you're ever in crisis or thinking about harming yourself, you don't have to handle it alone — in the U.S. you can call or text 988 (the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) any time, day or night.

Dad's take

Asking for help is one of the most grown-up things you can do. You'd tell a friend to reach out — extend yourself the same kindness.

Common questions

Is therapy only for a crisis?

No. Plenty of people see a therapist for everyday stress, transitions, and growth — like a coach for your mind. You don't have to be in crisis to benefit.

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