Anxiety, Depression, and Adolescent Mental Health
Nonfiction, Self-Help, Health & Wellness, Parenting
Publication Date: November 8, 2023
Publisher: MindStir Media
Want to transition from childhood to adulthood successfully? Discover how to empower yourself for a bright future.
Are you looking for help navigating the ups and downs of being a teenager? Do you have a son or daughter going through growing pains? Hoping to avoid the pitfalls of emotional, psychological, and social challenges unique to young adults? As two experts in the field, multi-award-winning author Eichin Chang-Lim, OD, MS, MA and international psychologist Lora L. Erickson, PhD, LCPC, LMHC-QS, LPC have come together in a crucial collaboration. And now they're here to share how you can take charge and live your best life.
Talking About Adolescence: Anxiety, Depression, and Adolescent Mental Health is an inspirational and easy-to-digest resource that explores top issues affecting young minds. Through a direct conversational style and engaging visuals, Chang-Lim and Erickson carefully walk you through each essential topic while providing healthy coping skills and habits to help you consistently make good choices. Equipped with the tools to succeed, teens, parents, and guardians will confidently look forward to a life of fulfillment and happiness.
In Talking About Adolescence, you'll discover:
- Passionate and well-researched information that can transform lives
- A great start to productive dialogue that will allow parents and educators to connect with teens
- How to triumphantly wade through the traps of social media
- Ways to eliminate the stigma of mental illness so any young person can be comfortable seeking support and treatment
- Key strategies to tackle self-harm, panic attacks, bullies, childhood trauma, substance abuse, neurodiversity, and much, much more!
Talking About Adolescence: Anxiety, Depression, and Adolescent Mental Health is the must-have guide to thriving during those formative years and is the first book in the Talking About Adolescence series. If you like life-changing knowledge, learning more about yourself, and gaining control, then you'll love Eichin Chang-Lim & Lora L. Erickson's comprehensive handbook.
Buy Talking About Adolescence to find self-empowerment today!
Excerpt:
Recently, I watched a news clip of Good
Morning America in which Selena Gomez was interviewed about her mental
health journey. She, her mother (Mandy Teefey), and Ms. Daniella Pierson
founded a website called Wondermind (https://www.wondermind.com)
with the desire to help others achieve mental health. I cannot honestly say I
endorse this site as of this moment because it’s too new, but I applaud their
noble goal of creating “a world where caring for your mental health is
democratized and destigmatized.”
The key and powerful words/concepts to
emphasize here are “democratize” and “destigmatize.” Mental pain is invisible,
yet real. We seek to strengthen physical health; why not treat our mental
health the same? If society could embrace the ones suffering from mental
illness, those who bear the mental and emotional pain would not have to feel
like covering it up and going through the pain silently and alone. Don’t you
think so?
In part 1, I will highlight adolescents’
most common mental challenges: depression, anxiety, disordered eating,
addictions, and some related conditions. For anyone struggling with mental
health issues, please seek help. Whatever you’re going through is not your
fault, and you are not alone.
If you know someone in a difficult
situation, give them encouragement, love, and understanding. Your kind support
may rescue someone on the verge of hurting themselves.
In an interview with Juju Chang of ABC
News for the episode of Good Morning America, Selena Gomez, her mother, and
Daniella Pierson talked openly about their journeys with mental illness.1 The key messages are:
●
Let us all talk about our mental wellness
as much as we talk about our physical health. That can be translated as “we
should be working on our mental fitness just like you work on your physical
fitness.”
●
It’s okay not to be okay.
●
Stepping away from Instagram for four and
a half years detoxed Selena Gomez’s life; it made her happier, more present,
connect more with people, and feel normal.
●
In 2020, Gomez was diagnosed with bipolar
disorder. The information about her diagnosis made her feel free and happy and
helped her develop a relationship with herself.
●
Her mother advised other parents on how
to help a mentally ill child: with love and understanding.
About the Author
Dr. Eichin Chang-Lim earned her Doctorate in Optometry, a Master of Science in Microbiology, and a Master of Arts in Psychology. She is the mother of two grown-up children, a wife, a semi-retired optometrist, and a multi-award-winning author. The genres of her books include romantic fiction, short stories, memoirs, self-help, and educational nonfiction.
Chang-Lim’s books depict the intricacies of human relationships and the striving of the human spirit. Ultimately, they evolve into inspirational tales that readers will find multidimensional and thought-provoking.
When asked about her motivation to be a writer, she replied, “Every human being is valuable; every soul is unique and special. I write with my heart and soul. My mindset is that if my writing can make a difference in even one person’s life, it’s all worth it, and that’s what love is all about.”
Currently, she is collaborating with an international psychologist and educator, Dr. Lora Erickson, to write a three-book series, Talking about Adolescence.
Book 1: Anxiety, Depression, and Adolescent Mental Health is coming soon.
Besides writing, Eichin is also passionate about acting, photography, music, and dance acrobatics. She and her husband live in Orange County, California, with their poodle mix named Gabby.
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About the Author
Dr. Lora Erickson is an international psychologist, licensed mental health clinician, and core faculty in the Master of Arts in Psychology program with The Chicago School of Professional Psychology. She earned her Bachelor of Science in Psychology from Illinois State University, her Master of Arts in Counseling from Lincoln University, and her Doctorate in International Psychology (trauma specialization) from The Chicago School of Professional Psychology. For nearly 15 years, Dr. Erickson has been teaching and providing clinical services to children, teenagers, and young adults. She is also a mother to a teen and preteen and cares deeply for young people, wanting the very best that life has to offer for them. She is also an award-winning researcher within APA (American Psychology Association) Division 52 (International Psychology) and currently holds an elected position within the APA as Early Career Psychologist Past Chair for Division 52.
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