Stay connected, and get outside: A counsellor's advice to get through another pandemic winter
CBC
Maintaining good mental health can be a challenge, especially in stressful times.
And for many Northerners, these are indeed stressful times — with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, economic uncertainty, a changing climate, political polarization and, of course, several dark, cold months of winter ahead.
But Joseph Graham says there are some simple ways to shore up your mental well-being. Graham is the director of clinical services at Northern Focus Counselling in Whitehorse, and he spoke to Yukon Morning host Elyn Jones about self-care in difficult times.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
There's a lot going on, but let's start with the darkness. What effect does that have on people's mental health?
We're going into what they call "the tunnel" in northern European countries, but the darkening, darkening, darkening. So the effect is that our brain doesn't sense that daylight and we feel, well, that seasonal affective disorder, that feeling of being trapped, or no light.
And it just takes a bit of extra intention to get out and to feel the sun in your face every day at some point. I know not every job allows you to get that easily, but if you do have a coffee break or a lunch break, [try] to feel the sun in your face for that moment. Or try to take a bigger section in the middle of the day to get out and then go back and work a little bit later if you have to, or something like that.
My personal practice is to try to feel the sun on my face or, you know, the bright and outdoor environment on myself every day at some point, as what I call a "constitutional" — in the same way we all have to go to the bathroom every day, we also have to be outside.
And that sense of being outside helps us feel connected to nature, and that helps us feel more peace or at ease. When we're disconnected with nature or with other people is when we suffer the most. So the theme of connection is important in keeping our mental health in good shape.
Lack of connection — that's certainly been something right through the pandemic, that as we distance socially sometimes from people, that causes stress for us. What are some of the other implications that COVID-19 has for our mental health?
In the addictions field — it's the best kind of model that people are approaching it with — addiction is synonymous with disconnection. So then, you know, the cure is more connection.
So yeah, now that we're in more isolated lifestyles, we have to put a concerted, intentional effort to become connected, and that will help us. So that connection again is those phone calls, and digital connections, and even playing video games with your friends is a way of connecting, unlike like maybe playing games by yourself.
Otherwise, connection can be having that experience in nature, which helps us feel connected. So that's another kind of daily practice — connecting with people, and connecting with the outdoors, in nature.
And combining that, I suppose going for a walk with a friend or doing something outside with a friend could kind of double up on some of that connection?