Mental health awareness needed as holidays approach, emotional wellness tips provided

Mental health conditions are at an all-time high, but there is hope (Courtesy, pxhere.com)

By Deborah Reed

WKTV Managing Editor

deborah@wktv.org

Jacklyn Eding provides emotional wellness tips as holidays draw closer (Courtesy, Supplied)

Millions of Americans experience symptoms of mental health conditions, with depression and suicidal thoughts currently at an all-time high. As the holiday season draws closer, awareness of this issue is crucial.

Jacklyn Eding, LLMSW and Wedgwood Christian Services (WCS) Trauma-Focused Therapist, says she has seen an increase in more mental health concerns surrounding depression and anxiety. 

“We are seeing more suicidal thoughts and suicidal behaviors and higher depression due to external stimuli that we take in every day, but also due to the higher stress and demands of our environment and what’s around us,” said Eding.

Children and adolescents are seeing higher demands at school, but lower teacher numbers to provide that instruction.

Adults are experiencing lower paying jobs and/or higher expectations on their workload.

Continued effects of the pandemic

While an overarching societal issue, Eding says COVID has had a sizable impact on mental health.

“We all went through essentially our own traumatic experience with COVID,” said Eding. “We all went through a very, very high period of stress that – for the most part – we couldn’t really overcome. There was nothing for us to do, we couldn’t go out places. It was all very different for us.

“We are still feeling the effects of COVID. Even to this day, some people still have high anxiety due to illness, some people just have less employment. It’s definitely a contributing factor.”


Eding continued to say that her younger clients are struggling and behind in school due to struggles with online schooling. Infants and toddlers are struggling to learn how to be separated from a caregiver for an hour and know that caregiver will come back.

“That is a big time for emotional attachment development, and just attachment in general,” said Eding. “As families try to grow and develop healthy attachment styles, it’s definitely harder when there is no opportunity for a child to have that opportunity to experience independence for a short while with the knowledge that their caregiver will be coming back.”

Light at the end of the tunnel

But Eding says she does see a decrease in anxiety and depression on the horizon – though it will take time to reach it.

“I do see it coming back down,” says Eding. “There are a lot of options and encouragement for mental health right now. It’s no longer that mental health and mental illness have a negative stigma. It’s becoming a lot more prominent, and people are becoming more aware that if they really want to talk to someone after they see these symptoms, it is okay to seek help. And it’s okay to seek help for your children, it’s okay to seek help for your spouse.


“It’s becoming more normalized, which is great. And it’s encouraging to see, because I believe that is going to be a big part of that anxiety and depression decreasing.”

WCS has clients ranging from three or four years of age with play therapy, up to 90 years of age.

“We have all walks of life, and emotional wellness is one of the biggest things that we see, especially from a young age, is needing more education on it,” says Eding.

One example would be the need to dispel the myth that kids need to be happy all the time.

“It is how to handle the discomfort of challenging feelings, how to know when they are getting too big and how to cope with that, especially in a world where there is so much going on,” says Eding.

What can we do to help?

“The big one is being there to offer support when needed,” says Eding. “Being there to listen, to guide, to heal.”

Being present and aware of what is going on and offering to talk or get help with someone struggling is key.


In an age of technology where we are consumed by our phones, having family dinners to check in with loved ones and offer support where needed is important.

Looking for signs and symptoms to identify when someone might not be doing well, that they may be struggling more than usual, is another way to support loved ones.

You are not alone

Letting them know they are not alone is also essential.

“They are not alone in their experiences, they are not alone in what they are feeling,” says Eding. “There are more people than not who experience the same symptoms who don’t exactly know what they are going through, but know how hard it is to not understand what is happening and be able to reach out for help. Even if that is just a friend, or a loved one, or just calling the National Crisis Line.

Being present and aware is important (Courtesy, pxhere.com)

“They are supported, they are understood, and they shouldn’t be afraid to reach out if they don’t understand, or if they just need someone to talk to or someone to help them.”

WCS offers a wide range of services in a variety of fields.

“We support all cultures, we are very accepting of everyone and are open to every stage and every walk of life,” says Eding. “We are always looking to support the mental wellness of all clients.”

Eding notes 10 easy-to-execute tips people can do to better handle emotions, especially during the upcoming holiday season:

  1. Listening to your body
  2. Self-care
  3. Mindfulness
  4. Exercise
  5. Sleep
  6. Laughter
  7. Self-talk
  8. Connections
  9. Deep breathing
  10. Seeking help

Other available resources

WCS currently does not have a waitlist for their services. Their intake line is 616-942-7294.

In crisis times, those with Medicaid insurance can reach out and talk with someone through Network180 Mobile Crisis Response Services.

The National Child Traumatic Stress Network has a variety of information regarding child trauma, anxiety and depression.

“It’s a hard time,” says Eding. “No one can deny that the world today is not the same as it used to be. There are a lot of stressors and a lot of things environmentally and mentally that are challenging, that seem bigger than who we are as a person. And for those, it is always great to reach out and get help.”

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