today’s agenda bell-ringer introduction to mental health feeling situation cards discussion...
TRANSCRIPT
Today’s Agenda
Bell-ringerIntroduction to Mental Health
Feeling Situation CardsDiscussionHealth-Up
BELL-RINGERThink about a strong feeling you have experienced and write a paragraph about it. The paragraph should include
• The feeling that was experienced.
• The cause of that feeling (death, loss of friend, bad test grade, gossiping etc)
• How did you react to that feeling?
• Once you finish the paragraph, circle the FEELING, underline the CAUSE and draw a box around the REACTION.
MENTAL AND EMOTIONAL HEALTH
“Mental health is ____________________ to overall health”
MENTAL HEALTH
You must be mentally and emotionally healthy to really be healthy; physical fitness is important but does not define a healthy person.
MENTAL HEALTH
NAMI (national alliance of mental illness) defines mental health as feeling comfortable with yourself. Feeling good about your relationships with others
Being able to meet the demands of life
This is a life long process
EMOTIONAL HEALTH
Being emotionally mature means being able to live with one’s true selfAcceptance of one’s self despite flaws and limitations
Emotional maturity is essential to emotional health
People who are emotionally healthy can express emotions in healthy ways and cope with circumstances in daily life
WHY SO IMPORTANT?
It affects your relationship with others
It affects how you learn
It can lead to other problems such as mental instability or risky behaviors (drugs, alcohol, sexual promiscuity, etc)
It may lead to mental illnesses
It can help you cope with life's difficulties
COMPONENTS OF MENTAL HEALTH
How you think
How you feel
How you act
THINKINGFEELING
ACTIONS
THINKING
The cognitive component to mental health
It’s important to recognize thoughts and determine if they’re reasonable for the situation
FEELING
The emotional/sensory component of mental health
Thoughts produce feelings
ACTIONS
Behavioral component of mental health
Actions can be healthy or unhealthy
INFLUENCES-INTERNALHormones, heredity, physical health, fitness
•Self-efficacy: belief in whether you can or cannot do/accomplish something
•Self-esteem: one’s sense of self respect and self worth
• Learned Helplessness: response to continued failure where people give up and fail to take action to help themselves
• Personality: None static/always changing throughout our lives. Helps us learn to control emotions, develop relationships and problem solve
INFLUENCES- EXTERNAL
Uncontrollable factors
Parents
Peers
Environment
ACTIVITY TIME!
With your group you will complete your assigned feeling card.
• What are you feeling?
• What caused this feeling?
• How could they react to the feeling?
DISCUSSION
• Which feelings are most difficult to respond to?
• What happens when we react to strong negative feelings without thinking?
• Is there more than one positive reaction to feelings? Why or why not?
JOURNAL REFLECTION
In what circumstances to do you have the most difficult time expressing your feelings?
Today’s Agenda
Video Mental Disorders
Group ProjectJournal Reflection
BELL-RINGER
• The emotional/sensory component of mental health is called what?
• What is self-efficacy?
WHAT IS NORMAL?
It's often difficult to distinguish normal mental health from mental illness because there's no easy test to show if something's wrong. Mental health conditions are diagnosed and treated based on signs and symptoms, as well as on how much the condition affects your daily life.
MENTAL DISORDERS
The brain is the body organ that controls feelings, behaviors, and thoughts. Changes in the brain’s activity result in changes in each of these responses. These changes can be
either short term or long term. A mental illness is a health condition that changes a person’s thinking, feelings, or behavior (or all three) and that causes the person distress and difficulty in functioning.
1 in 4 Americans suffer
NEUROSIS
Neurosis is a term generally used to describe a nonpsychotic mental illness which triggers feelings of distress and anxiety and impairs daily functioning.
(depression, anxiety, obsessive behavior)
PSYCHOSIS
Psychosis- a mental illness that causes a person to lose contact with reality.
• Hallucinations • Difficulty functioning in school, work or home life.• It is treatable
SIGNS/SYMPTOMS
Hallucinations
Confused Thinking
Changed Behavior
False Beliefs
• Strong beliefs or ideas, which are not real to others.• Examples: believe to have special powers,
think they are being followed or having a sense of communicating through TV or radio.
TYPES OF MENTAL DISORDERS
Anxiety Disorders:
• Phobia• Strong fear of something specific
• Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)• Persistent thoughts, fears, or urges. Need of
rituals• Panic Disorder
• Attacks of sudden unexplained feelings• Generalized Anxiety Disorder
• Worry and tension for no reason
MOOD DISORDERS
Bipolar Disorder
• Extreme mood changes/behaviors
Conduct Disorder
• Patterns of behavior that violate rules and rights of others. (stealing, aggression, vandalism, arson)
Schizophrenia
• Person loses contact with reality. (Delusions, hallucinations)
Personality Disorders
• Unable to regulate emotions. Feel awkward and distressed in social situations
EATING DISORDERS
Anorexia nervosa
Bulimia nervosa
Binge eating
JOURNAL REFLECTION
Do you believe you are in a good state of mental and emotional health? Why or why not?
Name one external influence affecting your mental health.
ACTIVITY
Directions: We have been learning about mental health and associated disorders over the past two days. With your group you will use the iPads to access valid information pertaining to the mental disorder you were assigned.
You will create an educational awareness poster with your group explaining the disorder.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UEyWvfdcH2g&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rn1OYlYzgm8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nGSxaP1XCbc