Tag: health

  • The Silent Pandemic: Rethinking Mental Health Access

    The Silent Pandemic: Rethinking Mental Health Access

    Digital Mental Health: A Revolution for Youth Wellbeing

    “I think a lot… and I wish I didn’t exist, so I wouldn’t have to keep feeling this way.”

    This isn’t a line from a tragic novel. It’s the raw, unfiltered answer of a medical student in an African country—one of many we spoke to years ago in a mental health survey that asked: Have you ever thought about harming yourself?

    I still can’t bring myself to share her full response. Or those of her peers—each one echoing pain so deep it feels dangerous to read. Just seeing their words on paper filled me with tension, grief, and fear.


    Are We Paying Attention—Or Ignoring a Silent Pandemic?

    The World Health Organization confirms: depression and anxiety are among the leading causes of illness and disability in young people aged 10–24.

    These aren’t abstract statistics.

    They’re sitting next to our children in classrooms. They’re the siblings of our coworkers. They’re in our neighborhoods. They may even be our own sons and daughters—hiding behind silence.

    And yet, access to mental health care remains broken—even in wealthy nations. In low- and middle-income countries, it’s nearly nonexistent. Shortages of professionals, crushing costs, and deep-rooted stigma block the path to help.

    If the current system isn’t working—why do we keep clinging to it?


    A Glimpse of Hope: What Students in Sudan Told Us

    Years ago, we surveyed university students in Sudan about digital mental health tools. The results were striking: over 70% said they were willing to try a teleconsultation for mental health treatment.

    Why? Because it’s private. Affordable. Accessible.


    What Digital Mental Health Could Look Like

    • Imagine a young man in a remote village, miles from the nearest clinic, scrolling through his phone at night—exhausted, hopeless. But instead of despair, he opens an app and finds cognitive behavioral therapy in his language, voice messages from a counselor, a safe space to breathe.
    • Picture a female university student overwhelmed by academic pressure and family expectations, too afraid to speak aloud—yet texting anonymously with a therapist through a secure platform.
    • Or a rural mother, isolated and struggling with postpartum depression, listening to guided mindfulness sessions on her basic smartphone while her baby sleeps.

    The Tools Are Here—Why Aren’t We Using Them?

    Digital mental health—mobile apps, teletherapy, AI-supported chatbots, online CBT—can bridge gaps no traditional system ever could.

    It bypasses borders. It slashes costs. It reaches anyone with a mobile phone. And believe me: billions have one.

    So why aren’t global institutions acting?
    Why aren’t we building regulated, scalable, equitable digital mental health systems—as widespread as social media, as accessible as WhatsApp?

    All we need is imagination. Will. Coordination.


    Final Call to Action

    The suffering is real. The tools are here.
    The time for transformation is now.

    👉 If you believe in a future where no young person feels invisible in their pain—share this post, start the conversation, and push for digital mental health innovation.

    Sara


  • Feeling Guilty for Not Feeling Guilty: Lessons from Lockdown

    Feeling Guilty for Not Feeling Guilty: Lessons from Lockdown

    Survivor’s Guilt: Thriving in Crisis

    January 2020. COVID-19 was gathering its full force, preparing to strike the world like nothing we had seen before.

    At the time, I was working a full-time job—physically and mentally demanding—while quietly battling a number of scattered health issues. What I really needed, more than anything, was rest. Deep rest. A pause. A chance to breathe, reflect, and heal.

    And then, as if on cue, the world changed.

    Every news channel, every screen, every conversation became consumed by the pandemic. Uncertainty and fear spread as fast as the virus itself. Governments scrambled to respond to an unprecedented crisis. People were scared—of the unknown, of getting sick, of losing loved ones, of losing their livelihoods. You saw it all. The anxiety was everywhere.

    Then came the lockdown. 🚪

    Overnight, everything stopped.

    To most of the world, it felt like a crisis.
    To me? It felt like a gift from God. ✨

    My 40 hours of in-person work each month shrank to just four hours online. No commuting. No errands. No social obligations. Just home. Just silence. Just time.

    For the first time in months—maybe years—I had space. My body began to recover. My mind slowed down. I slept better. I breathed deeper. I was, honestly… happy. 😌

    While the world grieved, I was at peace.
    I was thankful. Even joyful.
    And that joy came with a quiet shadow: guilt.

    People around the globe were suffering—getting sick, losing jobs, losing family members, stranded across borders. Lives were unraveling.
    And here I was… grateful. At peace. Healing.

    So I asked myself: Shouldn’t I be sad? Shouldn’t I feel more empathy?

    🧩 The Psychology of Feeling Guilty for Not Feeling Guilty

    What I was experiencing was a subtle form of survivor’s guilt—not because I survived a tragedy while others didn’t, but because I thrived in circumstances that crushed so many.

    Survivor’s guilt isn’t limited to war zones or natural disasters. It shows up in quieter ways:

    • The person displaced by conflict who finds safety and opportunity abroad 🌍
    • The business owner whose services suddenly become essential during a crisis 💼
    • The freelancer who flourishes during an economic collapse while others lose everything 💻

    Sometimes, in the middle of a global storm, one person finds shelter. That doesn’t mean they’re ignoring the rain—it just means they’re finally dry. ☔

    When we feel okay—even good—during a collective crisis, our minds often rebel. On one side: gratitude for the unexpected relief. On the other: a quiet, insistent voice whispering, How can you feel this way when others are suffering?

    This is what psychologists call meta-emotion—an emotion about your own emotions. In my case, it wasn’t just happiness I was feeling. It was guilt about being happy.

    A loop formed:
    You’re not sad. You should be sad. Therefore, you’re failing.
    As if our emotional states must always mirror the global mood.

    But here’s the truth: emotions are not moral judgments.

    💡 What Was Really Happening Inside Me

    🧠 Cognitive Dissonance
    My internal reality—relief, rest, recovery—clashed with the external one: a global tragedy. My brain struggled to reconcile the contradiction: How can I feel good when the world feels bad?
    The easiest resolution? Guilt. My mind punished me for not following the expected emotional script.

    🧠 Social Norms and Emotional Expectations
    Society assumes that during collective trauma, everyone should feel sorrow, anxiety, or grief. When we don’t, we feel like we’re failing a moral test. But emotions aren’t moral choices. They’re responses to personal context.

    🧠 The Gift of Reduced Allostatic Load
    For people with chronic stress or health issues, the lockdown wasn’t just a disruption—it was a decompression:
    • Less commuting = lower cortisol 🚗
    • Fewer social demands = reduced cognitive load 🗓️
    • More sleep = better immune function 😴

    The pandemic was a tragedy.
    But for some of us, it was also a rare moment of stillness—of breath, of recovery, of unexpected grace. 🌱

    By the end of the year, my health was better than it has ever been. 💪

    Because healing doesn’t have to wait for permission.
    And peace doesn’t have to apologize for existing—
    even in the middle of a storm. ⛈️

    And that doesn’t make us bad.
    It makes us human. ❤️

    — Sara


    💬 Did you feel something similar during the pandemic—or during another crisis? I’d love to hear your story in the comments. Let’s start a conversation. 🌍✨


  • Embracing Chaos: Tips for Mental Resilience

    Embracing Chaos: Tips for Mental Resilience

    Do You See Chaos Everywhere?

    Does the world seem like a raging jungle to you, full of confusion… mystery… and evil?

    Do you feel like you’re walking on quicksand, unsure of what will happen in the future, tomorrow, today, or even the next moment?

    This is how things feel right now for many people.
    You turn on the TV, and you’re bombarded with news of violence, killing, and destruction. The places that escaped wars were struck by earthquakes, fires, and floods.
    You look at your phone screen, and all you see are economic collapses and societal disasters… call them what you will.
    Crises… crises… crises everywhere.
    How do you find balance amidst this chaos?

    The first step is to realize that chaos is a natural part of life. Instead of fighting it, try to accept it.
    Perhaps chaos, as harsh as it may seem, is a form of divine cosmic order that restores balance. But because our knowledge and understanding are limited, we perceive it as chaos.

    1. Accept Chaos as Part of Life

    Learn how to adapt to changing circumstances instead of trying to control everything.

    2. Don’t Give In to Frustration

    Don’t let negative news pull you into a spiral of fear and despair. It’s your right to stay strong.
    Never lose faith that everything will pass, and you will not only get through these times but may even emerge stronger and wiser.
    Staying calm amidst chaos isn’t a luxury; it’s a necessity. Focus on what you can control.

    Strategies for Feeling Safe in a Turbulent World

    Create a daily routine that gives you a sense of stability and accomplishment.

    • Make your bed every morning.
    • Stick to the five daily prayers (for Muslims).
    • Set aside time for reading.
    • Regulate your sleep schedule and reduce screen time.

    Practice Mindfulness
    Make meditation or conscious breathing part of your daily routine. You can set an alarm every few hours to remind yourself to pause, take a deep breath, and feel the movement of your chest with each inhale and exhale.
    Take daily moments to connect with your senses:
    👀 Look around clearly, notice colors and shapes.
    👂 Listen to the sounds around you.
    👅 Taste your food mindfully—don’t eat in a hurry.

    Practice Gratitude
    Every day, think about the things you’re grateful for, no matter how small:

    • The ability to breathe.
    • A cold glass of water.
    • A moment of peace in a busy day.
      You can even write these blessings down daily and read them aloud.

    Spend Time in Nature
    If possible, go outside. Walking among trees or even sitting on your balcony can help restore your inner balance.

    Seek Support
    Don’t hesitate to reach out to friends or family when you feel confused or anxious. Sharing your feelings can bring comfort and a fresh perspective.

    Surround Yourself with Positive People
    Don’t remain alone amidst the chaos; build a support network that gives you strength and stability.

    And finally… cultivate resilience.
    We all have the ability to process events and deal with them flexibly. We cannot change the world, but we can accept it and live in it with honesty, generosity, and love

                    Best regards,

                                        Sara