Proactive approaches to mental wellbeing

Life gets busy quickly. For many adults, each week is a constant mix of work commitments, raising kids, managing a household, settling bills, catching up with loved ones, and a bunch of other responsibilities.
In the middle of everything, mental health often ends up on the backburner. We delay restorative rest until much later, or until we’re already on the brink of burnout. But mental wellbeing isn't something that waits until we're ready. It needs regular attention, just like any other part of life we care about.
If this sounds unrealistic, don’t worry, you don’t need to get everything sorted right away. Take it one small habit at a time. Here are some tips:
1. Make self-care non-negotiable
1.1. Treat routines as protective habits
Having small, grounding habits in your day can give you a sense of control. A walk in the morning, having a slow breakfast, turning off your phone at dinner, or keeping a regular bedtime can help you feel that you’re actually living - not just getting dragged by responsibilities.
Try to name routines that feel calming and restorative for you, and then focus on them.
1.2. Don’t skip micro-breaks
Don’t wait for the weekend or a holiday to rest. Even five minutes to stretch, step outside, or take a few deep breaths can help you reset.
If your day feels packed, look for little windows where you can pause and check in with yourself. These small breaks add up.
2. Build your emotional toolkit
2.1. Get to know your triggers and stress signals
Everyone has moments when their body or mind starts sending up little warning signs. You might feel more irritable than usual, find it hard to sleep, or notice you're tuning out during conversations.
Try to notice when these things show up and what tends to bring them on. The more familiar you are with your early signs of stress, the easier it becomes to manage tough moments before they take over.
2.2. Revisit your support circle
Meaningful relationships are a core part of mental wellbeing, but not every connection is worth holding onto.
Some relationships energise you, while others leave you feeling depleted. It’s okay to re-evaluate how much time and energy you give to people who drain you or repeatedly cross your boundaries, and spend more time with people who make you feel understood.
3. Rethink how you use psychological support
3.1. Speak to a psychologist before things get heavy
You don’t have to be in crisis to seek mental health support. The benefits of seeing a psychologist go beyond crisis support - they also have to do with building your emotional resilience, maintaining helpful thought and emotional patterns, and having steady support as you work on your self-growth goals.
With or without a mental health diagnosis, psychological support can be helpful to anyone.
3.2. Revisit therapy as your life shifts
Your mental health needs can change with different life stages. Support that helped during a career setback might not feel quite right during a parenting challenge or after a major transition. It’s completely valid to return to therapy when things feel different, even if nothing feels wrong.
If you've already built a connection with a psychologist, continuing with that same person can give you a sense of trust and continuity. But if your needs have shifted, it’s also okay to find a psychologist who brings a fresh perspective. What matters most is finding support that fits where you are now.
4. Be more protective of your time and headspace
4.1. Set simple boundaries that serve you
Your time and energy aren’t endless, and it’s easy to feel stretched when too much piles up at once. Try setting limits that make sense for your life. This could be finishing work at a set time, turning off notifications in the evening, or keeping one part of your home work-free.
Boundaries don’t need to be strict; they simply protect your space so you can properly recharge and show up better for the things that matter to you.
4.2. Choose what you let in
The things you watch, read, and hear each day affect how you feel. Constant noise or negativity can slowly wear you down!
Try to spend more time with things that feel calming, interesting, or uplifting, and spend less time on those that aren’t actually helpful. You get to choose what fills your headspace.
5. Create time for what’s meaningful to you
5.1. Do more of what feels rewarding
It’s easy for daily responsibilities to crowd out the things that give you a real sense of meaning. But even a small amount of time spent on something that matters to you can help you feel more grounded and less stretched.
This might mean helping your child with their homework and actually enjoying the time together, or spending half an hour in the garden without your phone. It could also be getting involved in a local group, volunteering in an animal shelter, or making space for something creative, like sketching, writing, or playing an instrument you haven’t touched in years.
5.2. Let your values guide your choices
Your values are your compass. When you take time to reflect on them, they can help you make decisions that feel aligned, even in stressful moments.
Asking yourself what you care about most or what kind of person you want to be can bring more clarity into your daily life. It also makes it easier to say yes to the things that matter and no to the things that don’t.
Caring for your mental health defines how you show up every day - at work, at home, for yourself, and for your loved ones.
And while pausing to reflect and adjust your routines might feel like a waste of time sometimes, burning out and reaching a crisis point is actually more expensive time-wise and money-wise. Thankfully, you can protect yourself against crises starting today using the simple yet deeply transformative tips above.
























