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Home » CMHA Kelowna » Page 2

Move for your Mood

March 18, 2021 By Jessica Samuels Leave a Comment

Move to improve your mental health

Before we talk about how to improve your mental health, let’s make sure we agree on what we’re talking about. At the Canadian Mental Health Association, we notice that people use the terms “mental health” and “mental illness” interchangeably, but really, they mean different things.

Mental illnesses are disturbances in thoughts, feelings, and perceptions that are severe enough to affect day-to-day functioning.[i] Some examples are anxiety disorders or major depression, and by age 40, about half of people in Canada will have or have had a mental illness.

Mental health, however, is a state of well-being, and we all have it. Some signs of good mental health are enjoying life, having a sense of purpose, and being able to manage life’s highs and lows.

One in five people in Canada will experience a mental health problem or illness in any given year.[ii] But five in five of us have mental health that needs to be protected and promoted.

The good news is, there are things we can all do to promote and protect our mental health, and they can be as simple as putting one foot in front of the other.

Move to feel well

You don’t need to run to get a runner’s high. Any aerobic activity, such as powerwalking to the grocery store, climbing a toboggan hill or doing jumping jacks in your basement pumps up endorphins and floods your brain with feel-good chemicals.

If you’re feeling tense or trapped by your always-on monkey brain, movement can be a form of meditation, too. Ever notice how you’ve forgotten the stresses of your day after a long walk?

People who exercise report feeling less stressed or nervous, and regular heart-pumping movement can reduce tension, fatigue and anger, and improve your mood, your self-esteem and your body image. For even greater benefits, get moving outdoors! Recent studies have found people report a higher level of vitality, enthusiasm and pleasure after they have walked outside.

Move to manage illness

In people with a diagnosed mental illness, such as depression, regular physical activity can even help treat your symptoms.[iii] In the short term, vigorous exercise that really gets your heart pumping can boost your mood after just 10 or 15 minutes.

And, if you get moving regularly, this trains your brain over time to help regulate your mood and can even relieve depression.

Ride the ups and downs of life

Remember: even if you don’t have a mental illness, that doesn’t mean you’ll feel great all the time. You might experience stress, a difficult life event, or burnout. Just like anyone can catch a cold or flu, everyone experiences the ups and downs of life.

So, there’s not just the one in five of us who have mental illnesses, and “the rest of us” who don’t. There is no rest of us. There is just us—all five in five. And regular physical activity can help all of us feel better, mentally and physically.

Are you looking for mental health services or supports in your own community? Visit www.cmha.ca to find your local CMHA. If you are thinking of suicide, please visit www.crisisservicescanada.ca or call 1-833-456-4566; in QC, call 1-866-APPELLE.

[i] Quick Facts: Mental Illness & Addiction in Canada. Mood Disorders Society of Canada

[ii] https://cmha.ca/fast-facts-about-mental-illness

[iii] https://www.health.harvard.edu/mind-and-mood/exercise-is-an-all-natural-treatment-to-fight-depression

This article was written for ParticipACTION’s Move for your Mood campaign and originally appeared on the CMHA National website

Filed Under: News Tagged With: CMHA, CMHA Kelowna, depression, exercise for depression, Kelowna, mental health, move for your mood

Now is the time for universal basic income

September 16, 2020 By Jessica Samuels Leave a Comment

When the covid-19 pandemic caused sudden and unprecedented job loss, Canada moved swiftly. The covid-19 economic recovery plan – of which the CERB is a part – provided temporary income support to workers who lost jobs due to the pandemic. In the process, it may have changed the way we think about income, job loss and poverty.

Canadians are now asking themselves, and their leaders: What if everyone had enough to live, all the time?

Enter an idea that has been circulating for a long time: the Universal Basic Income.

Here’s what it is:

The idea of a Universal Basic Income is to provide a no strings attached payment to all Canadians of working age to cover their basic needs. It would be a minimum income provided to everyone, rich or poor, employed or not, and funded by our progressive tax system.

The Canadian Mental Health Association has taken a position in support of the creation of this benefit. Here’s why:

Poverty has long been shown to negatively affect mental health. With a Universal Basic Income, poverty essentially disappears, and with it, the mental health effects of being poor. At the same time, having an adequate income actually protects health — both mental health and physical health – and increases our quality of life. Not surprisingly, health-care costs would be expected to plummet and so, too, would hospitalizations related to mental health.

There is a big mental health case to be made for this old idea, and CMHAs across the country are making it. Maybe it’s an idea whose time has come. You can read the CMHA’s statement calling for a Universal Basic Income here.

*This article originally appeared on the CMHA National website

Filed Under: News Tagged With: CMHA Kelowna, CMHA National, mental health, UBI, Universal Basic Income

Mental Health For All Means Eliminating Racism

June 5, 2020 By Jessica Samuels Leave a Comment

A Word From Our Executive Director

It’s not an easy time right now. It feels as if our world is turning upside down and we see and experience so much suffering. The increasing unrest that is unfolding in the US, and even closer to home, as a result of the death of George Floyd and too many others has been occupying much of my thoughts. I’m sure yours too. It’s hard to know what to say and how to respond but I am compelled to reach out to you today to speak about the world in which we now live. I feel that to be silent is to be complicit.

At CMHA Kelowna, we believe in “Mental health for all”. That means all people, no matter their age, skin colour, sexual preference, gender, culture or beliefs, deserve good mental health. We are champions of the very things that “eliminate the barriers that can prevent people from thriving.” Injustice and inequality do not eliminate those barriers – they build them up. They are not agents of good mental health. Neither is racism.

It seems unthinkable that in the midst of COVID-19 and the overdose pandemics, we are facing a third pandemic filled with the toxins of intolerance and discrimination. Yet here we are. As an organization, it is our responsibility to stand up against racism, inequality and injustice and we are committed to doing so. Now more than ever we must try to be an ally.

There is so much to be hopeful about because of what change can bring. I encourage every one of us to reflect on our relative privilege and take steps to act with love and compassion.

Join us as we try to be agents of a mentally healthy community. One that stands together with common attitudes, beliefs, and goals so that everyone feels that they belong, that they are not alone, and that they matter. When we stand together in that community, we will feel better about ourselves and the world we’ve helped create.

Together in wellness,

Shelagh Turner
Executive Director, CMHA Kelowna

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Black Lives Matter, CMHA Kelowna, CMHA Kelowna racism, ending racism, Kelowna racism, mental health for all, racism mental health, Shelagh Turner

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