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Mental health day is “a day off that's specifically geared toward stress relief and burnout prevention”. It is a day to recharge one’s non-physical battery.
When we exert ourselves physically, albeit from working a full day or just simply being awake, we use sleep to recharge our bodies. Whether we take a nap or flat out go to bed, the act of letting the body rest is how we recharge. But how do we recharge when we’re mentally tired? While taking a nap can help, it doesn’t fully restore our mental state of being to calm, it just puts us less stressed. Hence, you need a mental health day.
If you’re anything like me, you get stressed about the idea of trying to destress, i.e. taking a day off. Sometimes, we feel guilty or hesitant to use one of our PTO days and force ourselves to show up, even if we really could use the day off. But when we’re feeling too stressed, we only end up causing ourselves and our work to suffer.
“Knowing when to take a mental health day for yourself is crucial to maintaining your overall health and well-being” - Healthline
So yeah, don’t be afraid to take a mental health day for yourself.
Here is how you can plan a mental health day:
If you haven’t done so already, figure out the best day for you to take off. “If you feel overwhelmed, stressed, have trouble focusing or concentrating on work or at home, or are more irritable,” says Dr. Ashley Hampton. Thus, you definitely should take that mental health day immediately. But even if the stress levels aren’t high, you should still take a day off to relax your mind.
If you have a lot of days saved, take one or a few of them. A lot of companies will give you PTO or paid time off per pay period. For instance, when I worked for a mental health facility, I received one day of paid sick and vacation leave for every month I worked. So if I worked for, let’s say ten months straight with no days off, that was ten sick days and ten vacation days to take all at once or take some now and save the rest for later. And if you have too much PTO, say like a month or more, the company would force you to take some time off. So take advantage of the time off your company allows you.
For those jobs that don’t offer paid leave, most companies will shut down for the holidays. The major holidays that most companies take off for our New Year’s Day (and sometimes New Year’s Eve as well), Martin Luther King Day (unless you are Arizona, I think), Easter (Good Friday), Memorial Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas. Thus, you can plan your day off around a day that the company won’t be open and won’t have to stress out about work.
Now that you’ve scheduled your day off, plan what you’re going to do. Now you don’t need a rundown of what you’re going to do from the time you wake up to the time you go to bed. Treat this day off the same way you would a sick day, by doing “things that make you feel better.”
For me, I watch either Disney movies or Miyazaki films. And even though I’ve seen all of these before, just watching them brings me joy or reminds me of a time when I was happy. But you don’t have to do what I do. You could try an at-home spa day, or yoga, doing laundry if that’s the kind of thing that relaxes you. “Just make sure whatever you’re doing makes you feel more at ease and relaxed.”
The whole point of a mental health day is to relax the mind. While on your day off, if you decide to do laundry, only do it if it helps to relax you. Don’t do it simply because it has to be done. It will be there tomorrow, and you can get it then. And that doesn’t just go for laundry. Don’t learn how to knit or get a facial if you’re not sure it will make you feel better.
In a digital age where everything happens online, it can be hard to silence that siren song, especially when it has such a great ringtone. And we’ll create a million excuses to tell ourselves we can’t. What if someone gets hurts or needs me? What if I need to make a phone call? How will I order food? The list goes on.
However, there are ways you can silence the world within your electronic devices. One way is to silence your phone and then put it out of sight. But if that makes you uncomfortable, another suggestion is to text friends and family and let them know that you don’t want to be disturbed during the hours of so and so, on the day of so and so.
Yes, I am aware that most smartphones have a ‘do not disturb’ mode, where you won’t be bothered with texts or phone calls. However, you can still access these texts and calls by simply opening the phone. If you truly don’t want to be disturbed, ask your loved ones to give you your space unless it is an emergency. And of course, you simply could just turn off your phone.
Although, an addendum to my suggestion. Before silencing or turning off your phone and asking love ones for space, take care of all your phone needs beforehand. So tweet that tweet, send that text, make that call, order some food, play a few rounds of the game (Wordscapes for me), and then tell the world your offline before you disconnect.
A lot of the time, we’re made to believe that thinking about oneself is selfish and self-care can come across as selfishness. And that’s simply not true. Self-care, me time, a mental health day, they are all things you need to be a better you. So don’t let the opinions of others sway you from taking care of yourself. Because they are opinions, not facts. And who better to know what you need and take care of your needs than yourself.
At the end of it all, this mental health day is for you to replenish, recharge, relax, and reset yourself back to a sense of calm. So if you take a mental health day but spend the whole worrying over all the things you need to do, or things you may have missed out on doing, then it’s all for naught.
If your mental health day is adding to your stress, you’ll need to try a different approach. But you still need to take the day. So figure out what works for you and have it until. Because you need to take care of the mind just as much as you take care of the physical you.
Been doing this for years without calling it a mental health day. Glad it's becoming more accepted.
The advice about ignoring guilt is easier said than done, but so important.
Implementing these tips has helped me maintain better work-life balance overall.
We shouldn't need articles to tell us it's okay to take care of our mental health, but here we are.
The comparison between physical and mental rest really puts things in perspective.
Never considered how checking work emails could defeat the purpose of a mental health day.
Love how the article emphasizes personal choice in activities. What works for one person might not work for another.
Started sharing this article with my team. We need to normalize mental health days.
Appreciate the practical tips but wish there was more about handling work backlog after taking time off.
The guilt section really spoke to me. Still working on overcoming that.
Good point about treating it like a sick day. We shouldn't need to justify rest.
Wonder if remote work has made it easier or harder for people to take mental health days.
Taking mental health days has improved my relationships too. I'm less irritable with family.
The article could have addressed how to handle unsupportive colleagues or managers.
Important point about not forcing activities that don't actually help you relax.
Sometimes just sleeping in and doing nothing is the best mental health day activity.
People underestimate how much mental fatigue affects physical health too.
Never thought about planning my mental health day around company holidays. Smart suggestion!
Would love to see more workplaces explicitly offering mental health days separate from sick leave.
Mental health days saved my career. I was close to burnout before I started taking them regularly.
The suggestion about turning off notifications is great but hard to implement in practice.
Interesting how different activities work for different people. My friend loves running, I prefer reading.
Started keeping a list of activities that help me recharge. Makes planning mental health days easier.
The article makes a good point about self-care not being selfish. Still working on believing that.
Anyone else feel like their mental health day is ruined if someone contacts them about work?
I've learned to take preventive mental health days instead of waiting until I'm burned out.
The digital detox part is crucial. Social media really drains my mental energy.
Wish schools would normalize mental health days for students too. We all need breaks.
Never thought about how doing laundry could be relaxing but it actually is for some people!
I schedule my mental health days around weekends to get a longer break. Works better for me.
The comparison to physical rest is really helpful. We wouldn't feel guilty about resting a broken leg.
Finding it hard to believe companies would force you to take PTO. Never experienced that myself.
My productivity actually improves when I take regular mental health days. It's not time wasted.
The article could have mentioned the importance of regular mental health days, not just crisis response.
Sometimes I feel like one day isn't enough. Maybe we need mental health weeks.
Yoga and meditation have been my go-to activities on mental health days. Anyone else?
Love the suggestion about letting family know you're disconnecting. Communication is key.
The guilt part really hits home. Took me years to stop feeling bad about taking time for myself.
Started doing at-home spa days for my mental health breaks. Best decision ever.
I appreciate how the article acknowledges that different things work for different people.
The idea of planning relaxation seems counterintuitive to me. Doesn't planning create more stress?
Wonder how many people actually tell their employer it's specifically for mental health versus just calling in sick.
I've noticed I'm more productive after taking a mental health day. It's an investment in better work.
My boss actually encourages mental health days now. Times are changing for the better.
Why do we need permission to take care of ourselves? Society has really messed up our priorities.
The article makes a good point about planning ahead. Random days off aren't as effective for me.
Anyone tried meditation on their mental health days? It's been a game-changer for me.
Recently took my first mental health day and just slept. Felt guilty but honestly needed it.
I'm curious how others handle the digital disconnection part. I get anxious turning off my phone.
The point about not doing anything that doesn't serve you is crucial. I needed to hear that.
Does anyone else find it hard to actually relax on their mental health day? I end up doing chores anyway.
I wish the article had more specific suggestions for activities to do on mental health days.
True about privilege, but even small breaks during the day can help if you can't take full days off.
Not everyone has the privilege of taking mental health days though. Some of us can't afford to miss work.
The suggestion about Disney movies is spot on! I thought I was the only one who used nostalgic movies to decompress.
I've started taking one mental health day per quarter and it's helped me maintain better work-life balance.
My workplace still treats mental health days like they're not real sick days. It's frustrating.
I find it interesting that the article suggests planning the day but not over-planning it. That's a delicate balance.
The part about silencing digital noise really resonates with me. My phone is my biggest source of stress sometimes.
Absolutely! The guilt is real. I've learned that pushing through only makes things worse in the long run though.
I struggle with the guilt of taking time off. Anyone else feel this way?
Taking a mental health day has been life-changing for me. I used to push through feeling burned out but now I recognize when I need to recharge.