Category: School & Learning

Jan 07
The Burnout Cycle: Signs You’re Overfunctioning and How to Break It

There’s a kind of tired that sleep doesn’t fix. You can go to bed early, wake up, and still feel like your body is carrying a weight you can’t name. You can take a “day off” and spend the whole day thinking about what you should be doing instead. You can be functioning, working, showing […]

Jan 06
Mental Health Apparel with Meaning: Why What You Wear Can Support Healing

There’s a moment a lot of us know well. You’re getting dressed, you catch your reflection, and something about what you’re wearing shifts your whole mood. Not because you suddenly became a different person, but because you feel more like yourself. More grounded. More confident. More seen. That’s the quiet power behind mental health apparel […]

Jan 04
Move Your Body, Calm Your Mind: Low-Pressure Movement for Stress Relief

If the phrase “exercise for mental health” makes you immediately think of intense workouts, strict routines, or pressure to “stay consistent,” I want to give you a different starting point. You don’t need a new personality. You don’t need a perfect schedule. You don’t need to punish your body into being well. You can use […]

Jan 02
What Happens in a Neuropsychological Evaluation? Step-by-Step

If you’ve been thinking about getting tested, you’ve probably asked a very real question: “What actually happens in a neuropsych eval?” Most people don’t wake up excited to do hours of testing. They come to it because something isn’t adding up. Maybe you’re overwhelmed all the time and you can’t figure out why. Maybe your […]

Jan 01
When Should You Consider a Psychological Assessment? A Simple Guide

A lot of adults walk around for years thinking, “Maybe I’m just bad at life.” They blame themselves for procrastinating, forgetting things, feeling overwhelmed by simple tasks, struggling to regulate emotions, burning out faster than everyone else, or feeling like their brain is always “on” even when they’re exhausted. Sometimes they’ve tried therapy. Sometimes they’ve […]

Dec 31
Autism in Black Girls: Masking, Late Diagnosis, and Signs to Watch For

If you’ve been feeling like something doesn’t fully add up for your daughter, student, niece, or little sister, trust that instinct. A lot of caregivers notice patterns early, but the outside world keeps explaining them away. “She’s just shy.”“She’s very mature for her age.”“She’s sensitive.”“She’s dramatic.”“She’s quiet, she’s fine.”“She’s smart, she’ll grow out of it.” […]

Dec 26
Learning Disabilities vs “Not Trying”: How to Spot the Difference and Advocate

There’s a sentence many families have heard at some point, and it can sting even when it’s said casually: “They’re just not trying.” It might come from a teacher who’s frustrated. A relative who means well. A coach who thinks tough love will work. Sometimes it even comes from inside the child, after months or […]