Looking for a job can be overwhelming, triggering stress and anxiety. In this blog post, a therapist provides valuable strategies to navigate the emotional challenges of job hunting. Learn how to acknowledge and validate your emotions, prioritize self-care, set realistic expectations, build a support system, practice mindfulness, focus on growth, and seek professional help if needed. With these insights, you can approach your job search with resilience and positivity, knowing that the right opportunity will come your way.
Read MoreFeeling overwhelmed after graduating college? Discover effective strategies to navigate anxiety and stress from a qualified therapist. Learn how to prioritize self-care and adopt healthy coping mechanisms to ease your transition into the real world.
Read MoreAnxiety is a common mental health issue among college students, and it can have a significant impact on their daily life. As a result, many college students in New York seek therapy for anxiety to help them manage their symptoms and improve their quality of life. New York consists of competitive schools and universities. With this comes academic, emotional, and social pressures. This commonly manifests in an overwhelming sense of anxiety for students.
Read MoreWith the school year coming to an end and summer break on the horizon, starting therapy may not be top of mind if you’re a college or graduate student. But as a therapist, I believe beginning therapy over the summer is actually the best time to take charge of your mental and emotional wellbeing. It’s a unique opportunity to be proactive with your mental health so that you can set a strong foundation when school year stress and your busy schedule ramp up again. Here are just a few of the reasons why starting therapy over the summer is a good idea!
Read MoreCollege can be both an exciting and overwhelming time. No matter where you are along your college journey, you may find yourself coping with physical and emotional exhaustion while striving to manage and succeed in all that college life offers. Read more to learn about what those coping skills are.
Read More“Where are you really from?” – Is that a question you get no matter where in the world you find yourself? Let’s talk about reframing what it means to belong. - Sohni Patel, MSW
Read MoreWhether it’s your first semester of college or your last one, it is common to feel stressed as assignments and responsibilities build up over the course of the semester. You may feel overwhelmed, spread too thin, and exhausted, without much time to practice self-care. There are several strategies that can help you in preparing for and getting through these difficult periods. Repose therapists can help you with these methods and more to manage college stress and other challenges.
Read MoreStruggling with a major life transition? Read on to learn how to manage these complex feelings of overwhelm!
Read MoreCollege is an exciting time. You’re tasting a sense of freedom and independence for the first time. It’s a time to grow and develop outside of the environment you grew up in. However, many college students experience a sense of “culture shock” when they enter campus life. They are adjusting to roommates, increasing school work, changes in academic performance, new friendships, relationships, and so much more. If you’re an international student, that may come as a double "cultural shock". You’re becoming accustomed to college and the US for the first time perhaps. This can cumulatively take a toll on your mental health and leave you struggling to move forward. At Repose Therapy, we see the magnitude of the many challenges you face. Whether you’re at NYU, Columbia, FIT, Sarah Lawerence, Barnard, SVA, Julliard, or Yeshiva, online therapy is a great place to start to get that extra support.
Read MoreCollege is a time of drastic change in the lives of young adults. Teens are required to begin a new life away from what they call home, with an increased sense of responsibility. Changes in social situations are to be expected as well as opposed to high school where young adults may have had a solid group of friends over several years. This time of transition may hold feelings of fear, anxiety, worry, and even grief. Grief surrounding the life they had before this time.
- Prerna Menon, LCSW, SIFI, CTP