Monday, 6 April 2026

🧠 VERSION 1 – FULL STANDARD (Book / Training)

 

🧠 Important Insight (Research-Based)

  • Stress is a natural response to challenges and can help with focus, motivation, and survival
  • Some stress (often called “good stress”) can improve performance and alertness
  • However, long-term or overwhelming stress can harm both mental and physical health
  • Many mental health conditions are linked to trauma and chronic stress

πŸ‘‰ In simple terms:

A small amount of stress helps us — too much can damage us.



🧠 Stress, Trauma, and Mental Health

Stress is one of the most powerful influences on human health.

It affects:

  • The brain
  • The body
  • Emotions
  • Behaviour

While stress is often seen as negative, this is only partly true.


⚖️ Good Stress vs Harmful Stress

✔️ Helpful (Positive) Stress

A small amount of stress can:

  • Improve focus
  • Increase motivation
  • Help us react quickly to danger
  • Support learning and growth

This is a normal and healthy response.


⚠️ Harmful (Negative) Stress

Stress becomes harmful when it is:

  • Too intense
  • Long-lasting
  • Constant (chronic)
  • Linked to trauma

This type of stress can:

  • Overload the brain
  • Disrupt emotional regulation
  • Affects physical health

🧠 Stress and Trauma Connection

Trauma is often described as:

πŸ‘‰ Stress that becomes overwhelming and cannot be processed

Unlike normal stress:

  • It does not “switch off” easily
  • The body stays in fight, flight, or freeze mode
  • The effects can continue long after the event

⚠️ Why Stress Is a Major Risk Factor

Long-term stress is linked to:

  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
  • Physical health problems (e.g., heart issues, fatigue)

Chronic stress keeps the body in a constant state of alert, which can damage both mind and body over time.


πŸ” The Balance

It is not about completely removing stress.

Instead, it is about:

  • Managing stress
  • Reducing harmful stress
  • Building coping strategies

πŸ’¬ Key Message

Stress is not the enemy — unmanaged, overwhelming stress is.


🧠 VERSION 2 – EASY READ

🧠 What Is Stress?

Stress is how your body reacts to pressure.


πŸ‘ Some Stress Is Good

A little stress can:

  • Help you focus
  • Help you learn
  • Help you stay safe

⚠️ Too Much Stress

Too much stress can:

  • Make you feel overwhelmed
  • Affect your health
  • Causes anxiety or low mood

πŸ’₯ Trauma and Stress

Trauma happens when stress is:

  • Too big
  • Too much
  • Too hard to cope with

πŸ’¬ Message

A little stress is okay.
Too much stress is harmful.


πŸ“Š VERSION 3 – POWERPOINT

Slide 1 – Title

Stress, Trauma, and Mental Health


Slide 2 – What Is Stress?

  • Body’s response to pressure
  • Normal and natural

Slide 3 – Good Stress

  • Helps focus
  • Builds motivation
  • Keeps us alert

Slide 4 – Bad Stress

  • Too much or long-lasting
  • Causes harm

Slide 5 – Trauma

  • Stress that overwhelms coping
  • Long-lasting effects

Slide 6 – Impact

  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • PTSD

Slide 7 – Key Message

Balance is important


πŸͺ§ VERSION 4 – POSTER / LEAFLET

🧠 STRESS – QUICK GUIDE

πŸ‘ Good Stress

  • Helps you focus
  • Helps you perform

⚠️ Bad Stress

  • Too much or constant
  • Affects health

πŸ’₯ Trauma

  • Extreme stress
  • Hard to cope with

πŸ’¬ Message

Not all stress is bad — but too much can harm you


πŸ“ VERSION 5 – LEVEL 1 QUIZ

Questions

  1. Stress is always bad
    True / False

  1. Good stress can:
    a) Help focus
    b) Do nothing
    c) Only cause harm

  1. Trauma is:
    a) Normal stress
    b) Overwhelming stress
    c) No stress

  1. Too much stress can cause:
    a) Better sleep
    b) Anxiety
    c) Nothing

Answers

  1. False
  2. a
  3. b
  4. b

πŸ’¬ 

Here are a few powerful options you can use:

“Stress can help us grow—but too much of it can break us.”

or

“It is not stress itself that harms us, but when stress becomes too much and lasts too long.”

or (very strong, simple):

“A little stress builds us. Too much stress damages us.”


🧠 VERSION 1 – FULL STANDARD (Book / Training)

🧠 Stress Is Not Always Bad

Many people assume that stress only comes from negative experiences.

However, this is not true.

Stress can also come from positive or meaningful events, such as:

  • Exams
  • Driving tests
  • Starting a new job
  • Moving to a new place
  • Achieving an important goal

🎯 Why Good Things Can Be Stressful

Even positive events can create stress because they:

  • Matter to us
  • Have a result we care about
  • Require effort, preparation, or performance

For example:

  • Studying for an exam creates pressure to perform well
  • Preparing for a driving test requires focus and responsibility
  • Working toward a goal builds anticipation and expectation

🧠 The Build-Up of Stress

Stress often builds over time.

This build-up can come from:

  • Preparation
  • Anticipation
  • Pressure to succeed
  • Fear of failure

This is a natural part of working towards something important.


⚖️ Positive vs Negative Stress

✔️ Positive Stress (Eustress)

  • Motivates us
  • Improves focus
  • Helps us achieve goals
  • Feels manageable

⚠️ Negative Stress (Distress)

  • Feels overwhelming
  • Causes anxiety
  • Affects health
  • Can become harmful if too intense

🧠 Why This Matters

Understanding that stress can come from both positive and negative situations helps us:

  • Recognise stress early
  • Manage pressure more effectively
  • Support ourselves and others

πŸ’¬ Key Message

Stress is not just about bad events—it is about how much something matters to us and how we cope with it.


🧠 VERSION 2 – EASY READ

🧠 What Is Stress?

Stress is how your body reacts when something is important.


πŸ‘ Stress Can Come From Good Things

Stress is not always bad.

It can come from:

  • Exams
  • Driving tests
  • Jobs
  • Goals

🎯 Why Good Things Feel Stressful

Because:

  • We want to do well
  • We care about the result
  • We are preparing for something

⏳ Stress Can Build Up

Stress can build over time:

  • Studying
  • Practising
  • Waiting for results

πŸ’¬ Message

Stress can come from both good and bad things.
It depends on how we feel about it.


πŸ“Š VERSION 3 – POWERPOINT

Slide 1 – Title

Stress: Not Just From Bad Things


Slide 2 – What Is Stress?

  • Body’s reaction to pressure
  • Can be positive or negative

Slide 3 – Stress From Good Things

  • Exams
  • Driving tests
  • Goals
  • New opportunities

Slide 4 – Why It Happens

  • We care about the outcome
  • We are working towards something

Slide 5 – Build-Up of Stress

  • Preparation
  • Practice
  • Waiting

Slide 6 – Types of Stress

  • Positive stress (helps us)
  • Negative stress (overwhelming)

Slide 7 – Key Message

Stress depends on how we experience it


πŸͺ§ VERSION 4 – POSTER / LEAFLET

🧠 STRESS – QUICK FACT

Stress is not always bad

It can come from:

  • Exams
  • Driving tests
  • Achieving goals

Why?

Because:

  • We care about the result
  • We are preparing
  • We want to succeed

πŸ’¬ Message

Stress can help us grow when it is managed well


πŸ“ VERSION 5 – LEVEL 1 QUIZ

Questions

  1. Stress only comes from bad things
    True / False

  1. Which can cause stress?
    a) Exams
    b) Driving tests
    c) Both

  1. Stress can build up over time
    True / False

  1. Positive stress can:
    a) Help motivation
    b) Do nothing
    c) Harm only

Answers

  1. False
  2. c
  3. True
  4. a

πŸ’¬ Strong Lines for Your Book

Here are a few you can use:

“Stress is not only about bad experiences—it can also come from the things we care about the most.”

“The more something matters to us, the more stress we may feel while working towards it.”

“Stress can be part of success, not just struggle.”


🌱 Linking It All Together (Very Important Insight)

What you’ve described connects perfectly with:

  • Trauma
  • Chronic stress
  • Performance pressure
  • Mental health

πŸ‘‰ Stress is part of how humans respond to life
πŸ‘‰ Trauma is when stress becomes too much for the brain to handle
πŸ‘‰ Growth often involves managed stress

 

🧠 Important Insight (Based on Your Point + Research)

 


Trauma is widely understood as:

  • An emotional response to a distressing event that overwhelms coping ability
  • Something that can lead to long-term emotional, psychological, and physical effects

Research shows:

  • Trauma activates the brain’s stress system (fight/flight)
  • It can lead to anxiety, depression, and PTSD
  • Repeated trauma (chronic stress) has cumulative effects on mental health

πŸ‘‰ This is why many professionals now say:

“Trauma underlies many mental health conditions.”

So your observation is not strange at all — it’s actually very accurate, and modern trauma-informed care is trying to fix this gap.


✅ VERSION 2 – EASY READ (Student / Parent Friendly)

🧠 What Is Trauma?

Trauma means something very upsetting or scary has happened.

It can make it hard for a person to cope.


πŸ’₯ What Can Cause Trauma?

  • Accidents
  • Abuse
  • Losing someone
  • Bullying
  • Illness
  • Natural disasters

😟 How Trauma Can Make You Feel

  • Scared
  • Sad
  • Angry
  • Confused
  • Numb (no feelings)

🧠 How Trauma Affects the Body

  • Trouble sleeping
  • Headaches
  • Fast heartbeat
  • Feeling tired

πŸ” Types of Trauma

  • One event (accident)
  • Repeated events (abuse, bullying)
  • Many events over time

πŸ’¬ Important Message

Trauma is different for everyone.

It is okay to feel upset.

You are not alone.


🌱 Getting Help

  • Talk to someone you trust
  • Ask for support
  • Speak to a doctor or counsellor

πŸ“Š VERSION 3 – POWERPOINT (Slide Content)

Slide 1 – Title

Understanding Trauma


Slide 2 – What Is Trauma?

  • A response to a very distressing event
  • Happens when coping feels overwhelmed

Slide 3 – Causes of Trauma

  • Abuse
  • Accidents
  • Loss
  • Illness
  • Violence

Slide 4 – Types of Trauma

  • Acute (one event)
  • Chronic (repeated events)
  • Complex (multiple experiences)

Slide 5 – Effects of Trauma

  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Flashbacks
  • Sleep problems

Slide 6 – Trauma & Stress

  • Trauma activates the stress system
  • Can lead to long-term mental health problems

Slide 7 – Support

  • Therapy
  • Talking to others
  • Self-care

Slide 8 – Key Message

Recovery is possible with the right support


πŸͺ§ VERSION 4 – PRINTABLE LEAFLET / POSTER

🧠 TRAUMA – QUICK GUIDE

What is trauma?

A strong emotional reaction to a very upsetting or scary experience.


What causes trauma?

  • Abuse
  • Accidents
  • Loss
  • Illness
  • Violence

Signs of trauma

  • Anxiety
  • Fear
  • Sleep problems
  • Flashbacks
  • Avoiding things

Why it matters

Trauma can affect:

  • Mental health
  • Physical health
  • Relationships

Get support

  • Talk to someone
  • Seek professional help
  • Take care of yourself

πŸ’¬ Remember

Healing takes time — but recovery is possible


πŸ“ VERSION 5 – LEVEL 1 QUIZ (WITH ANSWERS)

Questions

  1. What is trauma?
    a) A happy memory
    b) A distressing experience
    c) A physical exercise

  1. Trauma can affect:
    a) Only emotions
    b) Only the body
    c) Mind and body

  1. Which is a cause of trauma?
    a) Watching TV
    b) Abuse
    c) Eating food

  1. True or False: Everyone reacts to trauma the same way

  1. Trauma can lead to:
    a) Better sleep
    b) Anxiety
    c) Nothing

Answers

  1. b
  2. c
  3. b
  4. False
  5. b

πŸ’¬ 

You could include a powerful line like this:

πŸ‘‰ “Many mental health conditions are not just disorders — they are responses to trauma, stress, and life experiences.”

This fits perfectly with:

  • Trauma-informed care
  • Modern psychology
  • Your lived-experience writing style 

🧠 VERSION 1 – FULL STANDARD (Book / Training)

🧠 Trauma, Memory, and “Moving On”

Many people believe that healing from trauma means:

  • Forgetting the past
  • Moving on quickly
  • Not thinking about what happened

While these ideas are often well-meaning, they are not always realistic or helpful.


πŸ’¬ The Reality of Trauma

Trauma does not simply disappear over time.

Experiences such as:

  • Bullying
  • Abuse
  • Loss
  • Relationship breakdowns

can leave lasting emotional and psychological effects.

These experiences may stay with a person in different ways, including:

  • Memories
  • Emotional responses
  • Changes in trust or safety
  • Physical stress reactions

πŸ” Remembering vs. Being Stuck

There is an important difference between:

  • Remembering the past
  • Being overwhelmed by the past

Remembering is natural.

It becomes a problem only when the trauma continues to:

  • Control daily life
  • Cause ongoing distress
  • Prevent a person from feeling safe or functioning

🧠 Trauma and the Brain

Trauma affects how the brain processes memories.

This is why people may:

  • Remember events very clearly (flashbacks)
  • Feel emotions as if the event is happening again
  • Struggle to “let go”

This is not a weakness—it is how the brain tries to protect and process danger.


πŸ’­ Why People Misunderstand

Sometimes others may think:

  • “You don’t talk about it anymore, so you must be over it”
  • “That happened a long time ago—why does it still matter?”

But in reality:

πŸ‘‰ Not talking about something does not mean it is forgotten
πŸ‘‰ It may mean a person is coping quietly


🌱 Healing Is Not Forgetting

Healing from trauma often means:

  • Accepting that the event happened
  • Learning ways to cope with memories
  • Building safety and stability
  • Moving forward without denying the past

⚖️ A Balanced Understanding

It is okay to:

✔ Remember the past
✔ Talk about it
✔ Feel affected by it

It is also important to:

✔ Find ways to cope
✔ Seek support
✔ Build a future alongside those experiences


🧠 Trauma and Mental Health

Ongoing traumatic stress can contribute to conditions such as:

  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

These are not signs of failure—they are understandable responses to difficult experiences.


πŸ’¬ Key Message

You do not have to forget the past to move forward.
Healing means learning to live with what happened—not pretending it didn’t.


🧠 VERSION 2 – EASY READ

🧠 Moving On and Trauma

People often say:

  • “Move on”
  • “Forget the past”

This is not always easy.


πŸ’­ The Truth

If something bad happened:

  • You may still remember it
  • You may still feel upset

This is normal.


⚠️ Important

Not talking about something does NOT mean:

  • You forgot
  • You are “fine”

πŸ’¬ Healing Means

  • Learning to cope
  • Feeling safer over time
  • Living your life

You do NOT have to forget.


🌱 Message

It is okay to remember.
It is okay to heal slowly.


πŸ“Š VERSION 3 – POWERPOINT

Slide 1 – Title

Trauma and “Moving On”


Slide 2 – What People Say

  • “Forget the past”
  • “Move on”

Slide 3 – Reality

  • Trauma is not easily forgotten
  • Memories can stay

Slide 4 – Common Experiences

  • Bullying
  • Abuse
  • Breakups
  • Loss

Slide 5 – Important Truth

Not talking ≠ forgetting


Slide 6 – Healing

  • Learning to cope
  • Feeling safer
  • Moving forward

Slide 7 – Key Message

You don’t have to forget to heal


πŸͺ§ VERSION 4 – POSTER / LEAFLET

🧠 TRAUMA & MOVING ON

Myth

“Just forget the past”


Reality

  • Trauma stays in memory
  • Healing takes time

Important

Not talking does NOT mean forgetting


Healing Means

  • Coping
  • Growing
  • Living with the past

πŸ’¬ Message

You can move forward without forgetting


πŸ“ VERSION 5 – LEVEL 1 QUIZ

Questions

  1. True or False: Healing means forgetting trauma
  2. Not talking about trauma means:
    a) You forgot
    b) You are coping
    c) It never happened
  3. Trauma can come from:
    a) Bullying
    b) Abuse
    c) Both
  4. Healing means:
    a) Ignoring the past
    b) Learning to cope
    c) Pretending nothing happened

Answers

  1. False
  2. b
  3. c
  4. b

πŸ’¬ 

You might like this—it reflects exactly what you said:

“People don’t forget trauma. Over time, they learn how to carry it.”

Or slightly expanded:

“Healing is not about forgetting the past—it is about learning to live with it without it controlling your life.”


πŸ“„ VERSION 1 – FULL STANDARD

 


πŸ‘₯ One-to-One and Group Support

People are different, and support should match what works best for the individual.

Some people prefer:

  • One-to-one counselling
  • Speaking privately with a counsellor or therapist

This can feel:

  • Safe
  • Private
  • Personal

Others prefer:

  • Group support
  • Being with people who have similar experiences

🀝 Group Support

Group support can help people:

  • Feel less alone
  • Share experiences
  • Learn from others
  • Feel understood

People often feel:

  • More comfortable
  • Less judged
  • Supported by others who “get it”

πŸ‘©‍🀝‍πŸ‘© Example: Support Groups

Some people attend groups such as:

  • Women’s groups
  • Recovery groups
  • Substance misuse support groups

For example:

  • People trying to stop drinking alcohol or using drugs may feel safer in group settings
  • They may feel less judged than in a one-to-one session

These groups can provide:

  • Understanding
  • Encouragement
  • Shared experience

πŸ’‘ Key Message

Different people need different types of support.

  • Some prefer private support
  • Some prefer group support
  • Some use both

πŸ‘‰ What matters is what helps the person feel safe and supported


πŸ“„ VERSION 2 – EASY READ

πŸ‘₯ Talking and Support

Some people like:

  • Talking to one person
  • A counsellor or therapist

πŸ‘‰ This is private


Some people like:

  • Talking in a group
  • Being with other people

πŸ‘‰ This can feel less lonely


πŸ‘©‍🀝‍πŸ‘© Groups

  • Women’s groups
  • Recovery groups
  • Support groups

πŸ‘‰ People share similar problems


πŸ’¬ Why Groups Help

  • You are not alone
  • You can share your story
  • You can feel less judged

❤️ Message

πŸ‘‰ Different people need different support


πŸ“„ VERSION 3 – POWERPOINT SLIDES

Slide 1 – Title

Types of Support


Slide 2 – One-to-One Support

  • Private
  • One person
  • Counsellor or therapist

Slide 3 – Group Support

  • More than one person
  • Sharing experiences
  • Listening to others

Slide 4 – Why Group Support Helps

  • Less lonely
  • Less judgement
  • Shared experiences

Slide 5 – Example Groups

  • Women’s groups
  • Recovery groups
  • Support groups

Slide 6 – Key Message

πŸ‘‰ Everyone is different
πŸ‘‰ Support should match the person


πŸ“„ VERSION 4 – POSTER / QUICK GUIDE

πŸ‘₯ Types of Support


🧍 One-to-One

  • Private
  • Talk to one person

πŸ‘©‍πŸ‘©‍πŸ‘§ Group Support

  • Talk with others
  • Share experiences

🀝 Why Groups Help

  • Less judgement
  • Not alone
  • Support from others

❤️ Message

πŸ‘‰ Everyone is different
πŸ‘‰ Support should fit the person

πŸ“„ VERSION 1 – FULL STANDARD (Book / Training)

πŸ‘₯ Group Introductions and Sharing

In some support groups, people introduce themselves to the group.

They may say things like:

  • “My name is Fred, and I am an alcoholic.”

This is often used in groups such as:

  • Alcohol recovery groups
  • Drug recovery groups
  • Other support groups for addiction

πŸ’¬ Why People Introduce Themselves This Way

This way of speaking can help people:

  • Acknowledge their experience
  • Be honest about their situation
  • Feel part of a group
  • Start the process of recovery

🀝 Feeling Less Judged

Many people find that:

  • Everyone in the group has similar experiences
  • There is less judgement
  • People understand each other

This can make it easier to:

  • Talk openly
  • Ask for help
  • Feel supported

πŸ’‘ Key Message

Support groups can feel safe because:

  • People share openly
  • Everyone is there for a similar reason
  • There is understanding and respect

πŸ‘‰ Different groups have different ways of working, but the aim is always support and recovery


πŸ“„ VERSION 2 – EASY READ

πŸ‘₯ Talking in Groups

In some groups:

People introduce themselves.


πŸ’¬ Example

“My name is Fred, and I am an alcoholic.”


🀝 Why This Helps

  • People are honest
  • People share their story
  • People feel part of a group
  • People feel less judged

❤️ Message

πŸ‘‰ Everyone is there to support each other


πŸ“„ VERSION 3 – POWERPOINT SLIDES

Slide 1 – Title

Group Introductions


Slide 2 – Example

“My name is Fred, and I am an alcoholic.”


Slide 3 – Why People Say This

  • Be honest
  • Share their experience
  • Feel part of the group

Slide 4 – Group Support

  • Less judgement
  • Shared experiences
  • Support from others

Slide 5 – Key Message

πŸ‘‰ Groups help people feel supported and understood


πŸ“„ VERSION 4 – POSTER / QUICK GUIDE

πŸ‘₯ Group Introductions


πŸ’¬ Example

“My name is Fred, and I am an alcoholic.”


🀝 Why This Helps

  • Be honest
  • Share experiences
  • Feel less alone

❤️ Message

πŸ‘‰ Groups are a place for support and understanding


πŸ’‘ 

This is a strong and respectful inclusion because it shows:

✔ Openness and honesty in recovery
✔ The structure of peer support groups
✔ How people connect through shared experience
✔ Reduction of shame and stigma

🧠 Types of Mental Health Providers

πŸ‘¨‍⚕️ Psychiatrists

  • Medical doctors who specialise in mental health.
  • Can diagnose conditions, prescribe medication, and sometimes provide therapy.
  • Often work with complex conditions such as severe depression, bipolar disorder, or psychosis.

🧠 Psychologists

  • Hold advanced degrees (e.g., Ph.D., Psy.D.).
  • Provide psychological testing, diagnosis, and talk therapy.
  • Usually cannot prescribe medication (varies by state/country).

πŸ’¬ Therapists / Counselors

  • Broad terms that include professionals who provide talk therapy.
  • They help with emotional challenges, coping strategies, relationship issues, and mental health concerns.
  • Types include:
    • Mental health counselors
    • Marriage & family therapists
    • Addiction counselors
    • School or career counselors

πŸ‘©‍⚕️ Psychiatric Nurses

  • Registered nurses with specialised training in mental health.
  • May provide therapy, support, and in some places prescribe medication.
  • Work in hospitals, clinics, or community settings.

🎨 Art Therapists

  • Use creative processes like drawing, painting, or writing to support emotional healing.
  • Help people express feelings and improve wellbeing.

πŸ‘₯ Social Workers

  • Provide counselling, support, and help with social challenges.
  • Work in community agencies, hospitals, schools, or private practice.
  • Can support people with mental health, substance use, family issues, housing, and more.

πŸ§‘‍🀝‍πŸ§‘ Peer Support Specialists

  • People with lived experience of mental health challenges who support others.
  • Often work in group settings or recovery programs.

πŸ‘©‍⚕️ Primary Care Providers

  • General doctors or nurse practitioners who can screen for mental health concerns and refer to specialists.
  • May prescribe medication or work with mental health professionals as part of a care team.

πŸ’Š Psychiatric Pharmacists

  • Specialise in medication management for mental health.
  • Help monitor effects, interactions, and guide safe use of medications.

πŸ“Œ Important Points When Choosing a Provider

  • Some professionals prescribe medication (like psychiatrists or some nurse practitioners), while others focus on talk therapy and support (like psychologists, counselors, or social workers).
  • Peer support specialists and group support can be especially helpful for people who want shared experience and community support.
  • A primary care provider can help start the process and make referrals. 

🧠 Signs and Symptoms of Depression

 

πŸ“„


Depression is a mental health condition that can affect how a person thinks, feels, and behaves.

People may experience a range of symptoms. These can vary from person to person.


⚠️ Emotional Signs

  • Low mood
  • Feeling sad or “fed up”
  • Feeling tearful (crying easily)
  • Guilt or feeling Π²ΠΈΠ½ΠΎΠ² (feeling bad about yourself)
  • Feeling empty or numb
  • Loneliness
  • Anger or irritability
  • Feeling hopeless or useless

⚠️ Behavioural Signs

  • Avoiding people or social situations
  • Withdrawing from friends and family
  • Not wanting to go out or engage with activities
  • Struggling to do daily tasks

⚠️ Physical Signs

  • Tiredness or low energy
  • Sleeping too much or too little
  • Changes in appetite (eating too much or too little)
  • Feeling restless or unable to settle

⚠️ Cognitive (Thinking) Signs

  • Difficulty concentrating
  • Negative thinking patterns
  • Lack of confidence
  • Feeling like a burden
  • Overthinking or repetitive thoughts

⚠️ Important: Not All Symptoms Are Needed

A person does not need all these symptoms to experience depression.

  • Some people may have a few symptoms
  • Others may have many

If symptoms last for more than a week or longer, it may indicate depression.


⚠️ Severe Symptoms (Support Needed)

In some cases, depression can include:

  • Thoughts of self-harm
  • Thoughts about suicide
  • Psychotic symptoms (such as hallucinations or paranoia)

These require urgent professional support.


πŸ’¬ Support and Treatment

There is help available.

Common treatments include:

  • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
  • Counselling
  • Talking therapy
  • Medication (in some cases)
  • Self-help strategies

πŸ’‘ Key Message

Depression is a real condition, but:

  • It is treatable
  • Support is available
  • People can recover and manage symptoms

πŸ‘‰ It’s okay to say it’s not okay


πŸ“„ VERSION 2 – EASY READ

🧠 Depression Signs

Depression can make people feel:


😞 Feelings

  • Sad
  • Tearful
  • Empty
  • Angry
  • Lonely
  • Hopeless
  • Guilty

🧍 Behaviour

  • Not wanting to see people
  • Staying at home
  • Not enjoying things

😴 Body

  • Very tired
  • Sleeping too much or too little
  • Eating too much or too little

πŸ’­ Thoughts

  • Hard to concentrate
  • Low confidence
  • Negative thoughts

⚠️ Important

  • You do not need all symptoms
  • Symptoms can be different for each person

⏱️ Time

  • If it lasts a long time (more than a week), it may be depression

πŸ’¬ Support

  • Talking therapy
  • CBT
  • Counselling

❤️ Message

πŸ‘‰ It’s okay to say it’s not okay


πŸ“„ VERSION 3 – POWERPOINT SLIDES

Slide 1 – Title

Signs of Depression


Slide 2 – Feelings

  • Sad
  • Empty
  • Tearful
  • Angry

Slide 3 – Behaviour

  • Avoiding people
  • Staying inside
  • Losing interest

Slide 4 – Body

  • Tired
  • Sleep changes
  • Eating changes

Slide 5 – Thoughts

  • Hard to focus
  • Low confidence
  • Negative thinking

Slide 6 – Important

  • Not all symptoms needed
  • Everyone is different

Slide 7 – Support

  • CBT
  • Talking therapy
  • Counselling

Slide 8 – Message

πŸ‘‰ It’s okay to say it’s not okay


πŸ“„ VERSION 4 – POSTER / QUICK GUIDE

🧠 Depression – Signs

Feelings

  • Sad
  • Empty
  • Angry
  • Lonely

Body

  • Tired
  • Sleep changes
  • Eating changes

Thoughts

  • Hard to focus
  • Negative thoughts
  • Low confidence

Behaviour

  • Avoiding people
  • Not enjoying things

⚠️ Important

  • Not all symptoms are needed
  • Everyone is different

πŸ’¬ Support

  • CBT
  • Therapy
  • Counselling

❤️ Message

πŸ‘‰ It’s okay to say it’s not okay


πŸ’¬ Important Note (for your work)

You included a very important line:

“You don’t need all these signs…”

This is critical in mental health education, because it prevents:

  • Self-diagnosis confusion
  • Feeling “not valid enough”
  • Misunderstanding mental illness


You mentioned:

  • psychotic symptoms (hallucinations, paranoia)

This can happen in severe depression, but it’s less common and usually described as:

πŸ‘‰ “psychotic depression”

You might want to label it clearly in your book like:

  • “In some severe cases…”

This keeps your content accurate and professional.

🧠 VERSION 1 – FULL STANDARD (Book / Training)

  🧠 Important Insight (Research-Based) Stress is a natural response to challenges and can help with focus, motivation, and survival ...