Resilience
For teenagers
This section covers some general tips on:
- Boosting how you think to build your resilience
- Some tips on building your academic resilience
- Some tips on developing digital resilience
- An introduction to MINDYOUR5 – a five a day wellbeing plan which, if followed, will help contribute to resilience and positive mental health
Boosting how you think to build your resilience
10 tips from Dr Krause, Consultant Clinical Psychologist, to help you think in a more resilient way:
Some tips to build your academic resilience
School life and school work affect us all differently. However, in general, there are some common themes. Many young people tell us that they find balancing the amount of school work with the other things they do difficult. Some find homework annoying or hard. Others find the focus on exams and the experience of exams difficult. Some find friendships at school challenging.
Here are a few tips to help you get through:
Boosting digital resilience
The amount of screen time you spend will sometimes be a sensitive subject especially if you think the adults around you focus too much on this. Be honest with yourself in terms of screen use. Here are some tips for sensible use:
- Monitor how much screen time you actually spend and give yourself a limit per day. According to research more than 5 hours a day is linked with poor mental health
- How much multitasking do you do (for example, watching a movie whilst scrolling your messages)? Stick to one task at a time – it helps you to concentrate and helps you to be more accurate about the time you actually spend on screens
- Try and do something physical in between screen time (have breaks after 45 minutes)
- Set some limits for yourself – for example, no eating and watching a screen
- Set up regular times to see friends or family face to face
- Set up regular activities to do some non-screen activities – for example a card game, board games, chess
- Set up ‘digital detox periods’ – may be a weekend per month?
- Notice how too much screen time affects your mood and learn to manage this by cutting down on screen time and doing something active as soon as you come off a screen and before you see people
MINDYOUR5
Each of the sections above contribute to the MINDYOUR5 model to help you build your resilience.
To be truly resilient you need to look after all of you and that means also looking after your physical health, keeping active in a number of different ways, learning to get the best of your emotions and learning to make the best of the various relationships in your life.