Wednesday, June 24, 2026

James Donaldson on Mental Health - What to Do When Your Child Is Being Bullied — and Won’t Talk About It

James Donaldson on Mental Health - What to Do When Your Child Is Being Bullied — and Won’t Talk About It

Tips on signs to look for, when to intervene, and when not to



Writer: Juliann Garey


Clinical Experts: Megan Ice, PhD , Stephanie Ruggiero, PsyD


Key Takeaways


- Sudden changes in mood, sleep, or school habits can be early signs your child is being bullied — even if they say everything’s fine.
- Many kids stay silent about bullying because they’re scared, embarrassed, or worried that speaking up will only make things worse.
- Kids are more likely to open up when parents stay calm, listen, and validate their feelings, rather than jumping in to fix the problem right away
- Spotting signs of bullying when kids don’t talk
- Reasons your child might not want to talk
- Creating space for conversation
- What to do if they still won’t talk
- When to involve your child’s school — and when not to
- Tips for talking to the school
- Helping your child respond to bullying

Bullying is something we hope won’t happen to our kids — or if it does, that they’ll come to us right away. But sometimes kids don’t tell us. They may be embarrassed, afraid it will get worse if they “snitch,” or worried we’ll overreact and make things worse. Maybe your once-outgoing child suddenly wants to stay home from school or your teen seems anxious every time a notification buzzes on their phone. You know something’s going on, but they insist everything is fine.


Before acting, it helps to know what counts as bullying. Not every unkind moment between kids rises to that level. Stephanie Ruggiero, PsyD, a clinical psychologist at the Child Mind Institute, says bullying has three defining features: It’s intentional, it’s repeated, and there’s a power imbalance — meaning the child doing the bullying has more social, physical, or emotional power. (You can read more on what’s bullying and what’s not.)


Spotting signs of bullying when kids don’t talk


Parents are often the first to notice that something is wrong, even when their child insists everything is fine. Dr. Ruggiero says to watch for:


- Physical complaints: Stomachaches, headaches, or other ailments that pop up before school
- Avoidance: Refusing to go to school, skipping activities, or faking illness
- Changes in mood: Becoming irritable, withdrawn, or unusually anxious
- Sleep issues: Nightmares, bedwetting, or trouble falling asleep
- Missing or damaged belongings: Unexplained broken glasses, lost electronics, or ripped clothing

When bullying happens online, look for:


- Hiding phones or slamming laptops shut when you walk in the room
- Sudden deletion of social media accounts or creation of new ones
- Blocking numbers or removing friends
- Extreme emotional reactions — anger, tears, panic — after a notification
- Dramatic increases or decreases in screen time

“Those changes in behavior are your clues,” Dr. Ruggiero says. “If you notice patterns that aren’t typical for your child, trust your gut.” Imagine, for example, that your eighth grader suddenly starts asking to stay home from school and spends hours scrolling on their phone, only to come away in tears. These patterns can be unsettling, and they’re often the first clue something is happening beneath the surface.


Reasons your child might not want to talk


Megan Ice, PhD, a psychologist in the Mood Disorders Center at the Child Mind Institute, says that understanding why kids stay silent is often the key to helping them open up. “Before doing anything,” she says, “I try to clarify what’s actually happening — and help parents manage their own anxiety so they can just listen and validate, not jump into problem-solving right away. Sometimes that’s enough to give the child space to talk.”


Kids’ reasons for staying quiet vary widely:


- Fear the situation will get worse: Many kids have seen or experienced school interventions that backfired — for example, being labeled a “snitch,” or having their class schedule or lunch period changed in ways that make them feel singled out.
- Shame or embarrassment: Boys, Dr. Ice notes, often feel pressure to act like they don’t care. Kids teased about personal or private issues — like hygiene, bedwetting, or body image — may feel too humiliated to talk.
- Fear of consequences: Sometimes kids keep quiet because they’ve broken a rule. “If a child was bullied after sharing a nude photo or cheating on a test, they might fear punishment as much as the bullying itself,” Dr. Ice says.
- Worry about burdening parents: Some kids hesitate to bring problems home because they sense their parents are stressed. Others don’t want to make their parents feel guilty or upset.

“Identifying what’s keeping a child silent helps parents approach them with empathy,” Dr. Ice says.


Creating space for conversation


When you suspect something is wrong, your first instinct might be to press for answers — but pushing too hard can backfire. “The goal is to make it safe for your child to share,” Dr. Ruggiero says. “That starts with being calm, present, and curious.” Here are ways to encourage conversation with your child that may make them open up more easily:


- Use open-ended questions: Skip yes-or-no questions. Instead try, “If your teacher called me, what would they say about your day?”
- Validate feelings: Say things like, “That sounds really frustrating,” or “I can see why that made you sad.”
- Get creative: For younger kids, watch their play for clues. Pretend games can give hints of what’s happening at school. “If their dolls or action figures start acting out mean behavior,” Dr. Ice explains, “that can open the door for gentle questions like, ‘That sounded unkind — does that ever happen at school?’”
- Read together: Books can be a gentle way to help little kids understand and talk about bullying. The Child Mind Institute has a list of clinician-recommended books on bullying. Dr. Ruggiero also recommends checking out the American Psychological Association’s Magination Press, which publishes psychologist-written books for kids on a range of topics. You can search their site by topic and age group to find books that fit your child’s needs.
- Communicate through writing: Older kids who struggle with verbal expression might be more comfortable writing you a note, sending a text, or even using a simple emoji to show how they feel. 
- Take advantage of side-by-side moments: Talk in the car, while walking the dog, or during another low-pressure activity. This works especially well with tweens and teens who may be hesitant to let parents in.

Avoid overreacting, panicking, interrupting and/or rushing them, or minimizing their experience. “If parents stay calm, it shows kids they can handle hard news,” Dr. Ruggiero says. “That makes kids much more likely to come to you again.”


What to do if they still won’t talk


If your child continues to shut down despite your efforts, Dr. Ice says the next step depends on what you’re seeing. “If there’s concrete evidence — like hurtful messages, damaged belongings, or visible injuries — it’s worth bringing in support,” she says. “Often the school counselor is the best first call, because they know the teachers, the social dynamics, and can quietly monitor what’s happening day-to-day.”


If your child refuses to meet with a counselor at school — maybe because they’re worried about confidentiality or being seen in that office — an outside therapist can help. “Therapy gives kids a private space to process what’s happening,” Dr. Ice adds, “and can still include coordination with the school.”


With younger children, the classroom teacher might be the right starting point, since that teacher sees all of their interactions. In middle and high school, the counselor usually has the best overview of what’s happening across classes and social settings.


When to involve your child’s school — and when not to


Many parents might be surprised to hear that involving the school may not always be the best solution for their child. “I’m often cautious about contacting schools without the child’s explicit permission, especially for middle or high schoolers,” Dr. Ice says. “If they don’t feel part of the plan, it can make things worse.”


Dr. Ice says that sometimes the child is open to limited communication with the school — for instance, agreeing to ask for more supervision at recess or using a different bathroom if that’s where the bullying happens.


Dr. Ice adds that a good rule of thumb is to involve the school when there’s a clear safety risk, repeated targeting, or when the bullying affects your child’s functioning — but to proceed more cautiously when it’s a one-time social conflict or when your child strongly resists.


“It also helps to stay curious,” Dr. Ice explains. “Sometimes parents only hear one side, and it turns out their child is doing something — like humming or joking constantly — that’s irritating peers. The goal isn’t to blame them, but to understand the full picture so you can plan the right response.”


Tips for talking to the school


When you do contact the school, frame the conversation as collaborative: You’re working together to solve a problem, not pointing fingers. Share the facts you’ve gathered, bring any screenshots or documentation, and ask what steps they can take to keep your child safe.


“If the situation doesn’t improve, escalate gradually — from teacher, to counselor, to principal, to superintendent, if necessary,” Dr. Ruggiero says. “And know your school’s anti-bullying policy so you can reference it when you’re asking for help.” Remember that schools are still responsible for addressing bullying that happens off-campus if it affects a child’s ability to learn or feel safe at school.


#James Donaldson notes:
Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.
Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.
Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.
  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticle
Find out more about the work I do on my 501c3 non-profit foundation
website www.yourgiftoflife.org Order your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,
#CelebratingYourGiftofLife: From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy


Click Here For More Information About James Donaldson



Click here to follow James Donaldson's Blog



Helping your child respond to bullying


Parents often struggle to know when to step in and when to let kids handle things themselves. “If your child’s safety is at risk, if the bullying is persistent, or if they ask for help — you step in,” Dr. Ruggiero says. “For more typical social conflicts, you can coach from the sidelines, offering ideas and encouragement while letting them practice handling things on their own.”


When helping a child plan their own response to bullies, Dr. Ice suggests walking through real-life situations together. “If they’re worried about lunchtime, talk about where they’ll sit, who they can join, and what they’ll do if someone whispers or posts something unkind. Having that script in mind — even simple phrases like ‘I don’t want to talk about that’ — makes it easier to cope in real time.”


Shifting a child’s response can sometimes make a difference. “If we can help a child respond more neutrally instead of with tears or anger, it often takes away the payoff for the bully,” she explains. For example, if a child tends to cry or lash out, have them practice staying calm and asking for a bathroom break so they can regroup. “Or, she says, they can simply turn and walk away. It’s not about pretending not to care — it’s about learning to manage those big feelings in a private, safer space so the bully doesn’t get that reaction they’re looking for.”


Dr. Ice sums it up this way: “The best approach depends on your child’s readiness. The more we include them in decisions and problem-solving, the more empowered they feel — and that confidence is often what ultimately reduces the bullying.”


Frequently Asked Questions


How can I tell if my child is being bullied if they won’t talk about it?


Watch for changes that don’t fit your child’s usual patterns — like frequent stomachaches before school, damaged belongings, sleep issues, or mood shifts. Kids who are bullied online might hide their phones, delete social media accounts, or react emotionally to notifications. Trust your instincts if something feels off.


What are my options if the school ignores bullying reports?


How do I encourage my child to open up about bullying?


Can bullying affect a child long-term if it isn’t addressed?



https://standingabovethecrowd.com/james-donaldson-on-mental-health-what-to-do-when-your-child-is-being-bullied-and-wont-talk-about-it/

James Donaldson on Mental Health - The Intersection of Technology and Mental Health: A Double-Edged Sword

James Donaldson on Mental Health - The Intersection of Technology and Mental Health: A Double-Edged Sword

In today's fast-paced world, technology has become an inseparable part of our lives. From smartphones to wearable devices, tech innovations are shaping how we live, work, and even manage our mental health. However, this relationship is complex and multifaceted, often described as a double-edged sword. On one side, technology offers unprecedented opportunities for mental health support and treatment. On the other, it poses new challenges and risks. Let's delve into this fascinating intersection and explore both the benefits and drawbacks of technology in the realm of mental health.


Table of Contents


- Introduction
- The Bright Side: How Technology Enhances Mental Health
- The Dark Side: Technology's Impact on Mental Health
- Striking a Balance: Tips for Healthy Tech Use
- Conclusion
- FAQs

#James Donaldson notes:
Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.
Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.
Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.
  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticle
Find out more about the work I do on my 501c3 non-profit foundation
website www.yourgiftoflife.org Order your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,
#CelebratingYourGiftofLife: From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy


Click Here For More Information About James Donaldson



Click here to follow James Donaldson's Blog



Blog post illustration


The Bright Side: How Technology Enhances Mental Health


Technology has dramatically transformed the landscape of mental health care, offering numerous benefits that were unimaginable a few decades ago. Here are some ways technology is enhancing mental health:


Teletherapy and Online Counseling

One of the most significant advancements is the rise of teletherapy and online counseling services. Platforms like BetterHelp and Talkspace have made therapy more accessible than ever, allowing individuals to connect with licensed professionals from the comfort of their homes. This convenience is particularly beneficial for those living in remote areas or with mobility challenges.


Blog post illustration


Mental Health Apps

There are now thousands of apps designed to support mental wellness. Apps like Headspace and Calm provide guided meditation and mindfulness exercises, while others like Moodfit and Happify offer tools for tracking mood and managing stress. These digital tools empower individuals to take control of their mental health daily.


Access to Information and Support Communities

The internet serves as a vast repository of mental health information. Websites, forums, and online support groups provide a platform for sharing experiences and advice. This access helps reduce the stigma around mental health issues and fosters a sense of community and understanding.


The Dark Side: Technology's Impact on Mental Health


Despite its many benefits, technology also presents several challenges that can negatively impact mental health. Let's explore some of these concerns:


Social Media and Comparison Culture

While social media connects us, it can also contribute to feelings of inadequacy and low self-esteem. Constant exposure to carefully curated images and lifestyles can lead to unhealthy comparisons and pressure to live up to unrealistic standards.


Information Overload and Anxiety

The digital age has ushered in an era of information overload. Constant notifications, emails, and news updates can lead to stress and anxiety. The pressure to stay connected and responsive can be overwhelming, affecting mental well-being.


Screen Time and Sleep Disruption

Excessive screen time, especially before bed, can disrupt sleep patterns. The blue light emitted by screens interferes with the body's natural sleep-wake cycle, leading to insomnia and fatigue, which can exacerbate mental health issues.


Striking a Balance: Tips for Healthy Tech Use


Finding a balance between leveraging technology for mental health benefits and mitigating its risks is crucial. Here are some tips to help maintain a healthy relationship with technology:


Set Boundaries

Create tech-free zones and times in your day to disconnect and recharge. Consider implementing a digital detox routine where you limit screen time, especially in the evenings.


Be Mindful of Social Media Use

Curate your social media feeds to include positive and inspiring content. Unfollow accounts that trigger negative feelings and engage with communities that support your well-being.


Prioritize Real-Life Connections

While online interactions are valuable, nurturing face-to-face relationships is equally important. Make time for in-person activities and conversations to foster deeper connections.


Conclusion


The intersection of technology and mental health is indeed a double-edged sword. While technology offers valuable tools and resources that enhance mental health care and support, it also presents challenges that require mindful management. By understanding both sides of the coin and adopting healthy tech habits, we can harness the power of technology to improve our mental well-being without falling into its pitfalls.


FAQs


What are some popular mental health apps?

Popular mental health apps include Headspace, Calm, Moodfit, and Happify, among others. These apps offer various features like guided meditation, mood tracking, and stress management tools.


How can I limit the negative effects of social media on mental health?

To limit negative effects, be selective about the content you consume, set time limits on social media use, and engage with positive and supportive communities.


What is teletherapy, and how does it work?

Teletherapy involves receiving mental health counseling remotely through video calls, phone calls, or messaging. It provides a convenient and accessible way to receive therapy from licensed professionals.


https://standingabovethecrowd.com/the-intersection-of-technology-and-mental-health-a-double-edged-sword/


James Donaldson on Mental Health - What to Do When Your Child Is Being Bullied — and Won’t Talk About It
Tips on signs to look for, when to intervene, and when not to

Writer: Juliann Garey

Clinical Experts: Megan Ice, PhD , Stephanie Ruggiero, PsyD

Key Takeaways

- Sudden changes in mood, sleep, or school habits can be early signs your child is being bullied — even if they say everything’s fine.

- Many kids stay silent about bullying because they’re scared, embarrassed, or worried that speaking up will only make things worse.

- Kids are more likely to open up when parents stay calm, listen, and validate their feelings, rather than jumping in to fix the problem right away

- Spotting signs of bullying when kids don’t talk

- Reasons your child might not want to talk

- Creating space for conversation

- What to do if they still won’t talk

- When to involve your child’s school — and when not to

- Tips for talking to the school

- Helping your child respond to bullying

Bullying is something we hope won’t happen to our kids — or if it does, that they’ll come to us right away. But sometimes kids don’t tell us. They may be embarrassed, afraid it will get worse if they “snitch,” or worried we’ll overreact and make things worse. Maybe your once-outgoing child suddenly wants to stay home from school or your teen seems anxious every time a notification buzzes on their phone. You know something’s going on, but they insist everything is fine.

Before acting, it helps to know what counts as bullying. Not every unkind moment between kids rises to that level. Stephanie Ruggiero, PsyD, a clinical psychologist at the Child Mind Institute, says bullying has three defining features: It’s intentional, it’s repeated, and there’s a power imbalance — meaning the child doing the bullying has more social, physical, or emotional power. (You can read more on what’s bullying and what’s not.)

Spotting signs of bullying when kids don’t talk

Parents are often the first to notice that something is wrong, even when their child insists everything is fine. Dr. Ruggiero says to watch for:

- Physical complaints: Stomachaches, headaches, or other ailments that pop up before school

- Avoidance: Refusing to go to school, skipping activities, or faking illness

- Changes in mood: Becoming irritable, withdrawn, or unusually anxious

- Sleep issues: Nightmares, bedwetting, or trouble falling asleep

- Missing or damaged belongings: Unexplained broken glasses, lost electronics, or ripped clothing

When bullying happens online, look for:

- Hiding phones or slamming laptops shut when you walk in the room

- Sudden deletion of social media accounts or creation of new ones

- Blocking numbers or removing friends

- Extreme emotional reactions — anger, tears, panic — after a notification

- Dramatic increases or decreases in screen time

“Those changes in behavior are your clues,” Dr. Ruggiero says. “If you notice patterns that aren’t typical for your child, trust your gut.” Imagine, for example, that your eighth grader suddenly starts asking to stay home from school and spends hours scrolling on their phone, only to come away in tears. These patterns can be unsettling, and they’re often the first clue something is happening beneath the surface.

Reasons your child might not want to talk

Megan Ice, PhD, a psychologist in the Mood Disorders Center at the Child Mind Institute, says that understanding why kids stay silent is often the key to helping them open up. “Before doing anything,” she says, “I try to clarify what’s actually happening — and help parents manage their own anxiety so they can just listen and validate, not jump into problem-solving right away. Sometimes that’s enough to give the child space to talk.”

Kids’ reasons for staying quiet vary widely:

- Fear the situation will get worse: Many kids have seen or experienced school interventions that backfired — for example, being labeled a “snitch,” or having their class schedule or lunch period changed in ways that make them feel singled out.

- Shame or embarrassment: Boys, Dr. Ice notes, often feel pressure to act like they don’t care. Kids teased about personal or private issues — like hygiene, bedwetting, or body image — may feel too humiliated to talk.

- Fear of consequences: Sometimes kids keep quiet because they’ve broken a rule. “If a child was bullied after sharing a nude photo or cheating on a test, they might fear punishment as much as the bullying itself,” Dr. Ice says.

- Worry about burdening parents: Some kids hesitate to bring problems home because they sense their parents are stressed. Others don’t want to make their parents feel guilty or upset.

“Identifying what’s keeping a child silent helps parents approach them with empathy,” Dr. Ice says.

Creating space for conversation

When you suspect something is wrong, your first instinct might be to press for answers — but pushing too hard can backfire. “The goal is to make it safe for your child to share,” Dr. Ruggiero says. “That starts with being calm, present, and curious.” Here are ways to encourage conversation with your child that may make them open up more easily:

- Use open-ended questions: Skip yes-or-no questions. Instead try, “If your teacher called me, what would they say about your day?”

- Validate feelings: Say things like, “That sounds really frustrating,” or “I can see why that made you sad.”

- Get creative: For younger kids, watch their play for clues. Pretend games can give hints of what’s happening at school. “If their dolls or action figures start acting out mean behavior,” Dr. Ice explains, “that can open the door for gentle questions like, ‘That sounded unkind — does that ever happen at school?’”

- Read together: Books can be a gentle way to help little kids understand and talk about bullying. The Child Mind Institute has a list of clinician-recommended books on bullying. Dr. Ruggiero also recommends checking out the American Psychological Association’s Magination Press, which publishes psychologist-written books for kids on a range of topics. You can search their site by topic and age group to find books that fit your child’s needs.

- Communicate through writing: Older kids who struggle with verbal expression might be more comfortable writing you a note, sending a text, or even using a simple emoji to show how they feel. 

- Take advantage of side-by-side moments: Talk in the car, while walking the dog, or during another low-pressure activity. This works especially well with tweens and teens who may be hesitant to let parents in.

Avoid overreacting, panicking, interrupting and/or rushing them, or minimizing their experience. “If parents stay calm, it shows kids they can handle hard news,” Dr. Ruggiero says. “That makes kids much more likely to come to you again.”

What to do if they still won’t talk

If your child continues to shut down despite your efforts, Dr. Ice says the next step depends on what you’re seeing. “If there’s concrete evidence — like hurtful messages, damaged belongings, or visible injuries — it’s worth bringing in support,” she says. “Often the school counselor is the best first call, because they know the teachers, the social dynamics, and can quietly monitor what’s happening day-to-day.”

If your child refuses to meet with a counselor at school — maybe because they’re worried about confidentiality or being seen in that office — an outside therapist can help. “Therapy gives kids a private space to process what’s happening,” Dr. Ice adds, “and can still include coordination with the school.”

With younger children, the classroom teacher might be the right starting point, since that teacher sees all of their interactions. In middle and high school, the counselor usually has the best overview of what’s happening across classes and social settings.

When to involve your child’s school — and when not to

Many parents might be surprised to hear that involving the school may not always be the best solution for their child. “I’m often cautious about contacting schools without the child’s explicit permission, especially for middle or high schoolers,” Dr. Ice says. “If they don’t feel part of the plan, it can make things worse.”

Dr. Ice says that sometimes the child is open to limited communication with the school — for instance, agreeing to ask for more supervision at recess or using a different bathroom if that’s where the bullying happens.

Dr. Ice adds that a good rule of thumb is to involve the school when there’s a clear safety risk, repeated targeting, or when the bullying affects your child’s functioning — but to proceed more cautiously when it’s a one-time social conflict or when your child strongly resists.

“It also helps to stay curious,” Dr. Ice explains. “Sometimes parents only hear one side, and it turns out their child is doing something — like humming or joking constantly — that’s irritating peers. The goal isn’t to blame them, but to understand the full picture so you can plan the right response.”

Tips for talking to the school

When you do contact the school, frame the conversation as collaborative: You’re working together to solve a problem, not pointing fingers. Share the facts you’ve gathered, bring any screenshots or documentation, and ask what steps they can take to keep your child safe.

“If the situation doesn’t improve, escalate gradually — from teacher, to counselor, to principal, to superintendent, if necessary,” Dr. Ruggiero says. “And know your school’s anti-bullying policy so you can reference it when you’re asking for help.” Remember that schools are still responsible for addressing bullying that happens off-campus if it affects a child’s ability to learn or feel safe at school.

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleFind out more about the work I do on my 501c3 non-profit foundationwebsite www.yourgiftoflife.org Order your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife: From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

Click Here For More Information About James Donaldson

Click here to follow James Donaldson's Blog

Helping your child respond to bullying

Parents often struggle to know when to step in and when to let kids handle things themselves. “If your child’s safety is at risk, if the bullying is persistent, or if they ask for help — you step in,” Dr. Ruggiero says. “For more typical social conflicts, you can coach from the sidelines, offering ideas and encouragement while letting them practice handling things on their own.”

When helping a child plan their own response to bullies, Dr. Ice suggests walking through real-life situations together. “If they’re worried about lunchtime, talk about where they’ll sit, who they can join, and what they’ll do if someone whispers or posts something unkind. Having that script in mind — even simple phrases like ‘I don’t want to talk about that’ — makes it easier to cope in real time.”

Shifting a child’s response can sometimes make a difference. “If we can help a child respond more neutrally instead of with tears or anger, it often takes away the payoff for the bully,” she explains. For example, if a child tends to cry or lash out, have them practice staying calm and asking for a bathroom break so they can regroup. “Or, she says, they can simply turn and walk away. It’s not about pretending not to care — it’s about learning to manage those big feelings in a private, safer space so the bully doesn’t get that reaction they’re looking for.”

Dr. Ice sums it up this way: “The best approach depends on your child’s readiness. The more we include them in decisions and problem-solving, the more empowered they feel — and that confidence is often what ultimately reduces the bullying.”

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I tell if my child is being bullied if they won’t talk about it?

Watch for changes that don’t fit your child’s usual patterns — like frequent stomachaches before school, damaged belongings, sleep issues, or mood shifts. Kids who are bullied online might hide their phones, delete social media accounts, or react emotionally to notifications. Trust your instincts if something feels off.

What are my options if the school ignores bullying reports?

How do I encourage my child to open up about bullying?

Can bullying affect a child long-term if it isn’t addressed? https://standingabovethecrowd.com/?p=16345

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

James Donaldson on Mental Health - We Need to Rethink Suicide Prevention, Starting Long Before Crisis

James Donaldson on Mental Health - We Need to Rethink Suicide Prevention, Starting Long Before Crisis

by Scott LoMurray


When I tell people I work in suicide prevention, they often assume I spend my days answering crisis calls or serving as a counselor. Those roles are essential. But the assumption reveals something deeper about how we, as a society, think about suicide prevention. We picture it at the moment of crisis. We rarely picture everything that comes before.


For decades, our national approach to suicide prevention has leaned heavily on intervention and treatment. We search for warning signs and utilize screening tools that inform us if someone may be struggling. We build hotlines and crisis teams. We train people to respond when someone reaches a point of such despair that they want to die. 


These tools save lives every day, and we must continue to strengthen them. But if we want fewer people to reach that point of despair in the first place, we need to expand our vision for what suicide prevention is and what it can be.


We’ve built a system that waits too long


Our current paradigm is often belatedly deployed only once a suffering person reaches a breaking point. We provide training to help people notice and support someone who may be in crisis, then attempt to plug them into a mental health system that is too often inaccessible and overburdened. We have placed the greatest weight on the most fragile moment.


The field of public health offers a roadmap for a better way. There was a time, in the 1960s and 70s, when heart disease prevention focused almost entirely on emergency interventions like CPR and cardiac surgery after a heart attack. We have drastically reduced deaths due to heart disease by 66% in the U.S. from 1970 to 2022. However, CPR training, better surgical techniques, and putting defibrillators in shopping malls were only a part of this success. Improving nutrition, reducing tobacco use, and establishing social and cultural norms around exercise created an environment that better prioritized overall health.


Mental health requires the same shift. We cannot simply counsel or legislate our way out of the crisis. Downstream interventions will always matter, but upstream prevention must become a central pillar of our national strategy, not an afterthought. The phrase “upstream prevention” comes from a classic public health parable, in which rescuers pull drowning people out of a river at the edge of a waterfall, eventually moving upstream to stop people from falling into the river in the first place. In practice, upstream suicide prevention means changing the conditions that either promote wellbeing or drive despair, not waiting to respond only once people are in pain.


The economic case for this shift is strong; when we improve the conditions that keep people well, we reduce costly emergency care, hospital stays, and crisis-driven interventions, generating returns that far exceed the initial investment.


We need a both/and model: a comprehensive approach that supports people in crisis, while also building the conditions that prevent the crisis in the first place.


Humanize before we pathologize


When we talk about mental health, we often do so through a lens of mental illness. We jump quickly to diagnosing and pathologizing, rather than understanding our struggles as a natural part of what it means to be human. 


Feelings like sadness, fear, anger, or anxiety are not negative emotions, they are human ones. And we need more dialogue about what helps us humans navigate the difficulties that life brings our way. These experiences become overwhelming when we face them alone, when our environments are unsafe or isolating, or when we lack the tools, skills, and relationships to help us navigate the storms of life when they come. 


There is a meaningful difference between the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness and the cultivation of mental health. A thriving society invests in both.


This is where upstream prevention is crucial. To shift the trend line, we must focus on the leading causes of life: connection, hope, purpose, belonging, and the sources of strength that give depth to our lives. These protective forces help us to navigate life’s hardest moments. They are not replacements for therapy or crisis care. They are the foundation that makes healing, growth, and resilience possible.


The evidence is growing, and it is compelling


This is not just theoretical. We now have promising data that demonstrates the potential of upstream approaches to make a measurable impact.


Colorado recently recorded its lowest youth suicide rate since 2007, the lowest rate in the lifetime of today’s teens. That progress wasn’t driven by a single program or policy. Instead, Colorado made upstream efforts a core part of its comprehensive strategy, not an afterthought.


Recent research findings echo this pattern. In a randomized controlled trial involving more than 6,000 U.S. high school students, Sources of Strength, an upstream, peer-led prevention program that I help lead, significantly reduced new suicide attempts by 29% over two school years. A pooled analysis combining three randomized control trials spanning over a decade with over 40,000 student years of exposure to Sources of Strength showed lower suicide mortality in participating schools compared with controls. This is the first universal intervention to demonstrate reductions in attempts and deaths amongst youth through randomized trials.


#James Donaldson notes:
Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.
Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.
Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.
  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticle
Find out more about the work I do on my 501c3 non-profit foundation
website www.yourgiftoflife.org Order your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,
#CelebratingYourGiftofLife: From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy


Click Here For More Information About James Donaldson



Click here to follow James Donaldson's Blog



These findings focus on youth outcomes, but the protective forces they highlight are universal. Trusting relationships, positive social norms, healthy coping skills, a sense of belonging, and environments where people feel valued matter at every age. When we feel supported in these ways, we navigate distress differently, whether we are 15 or 55.


The National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention recently released new guidance on moving upstream, affirming the importance of connection, belonging, economic stability, and community-level protective factors. This is real progress. The next step is translating that guidance into action at scale.


Stable housing, economic supports, safe communities, inclusive policies, supportive workplaces, and compassionate classrooms are not abstract ideals. They are fundamental components of effective suicide prevention.


A new goal for suicide prevention


Effective suicide prevention cannot be limited to keeping people alive when they are at their lowest point. Our goal must be to prevent those moments of suicidal despair from forming in the first place. It must be to help people heal, and to build lives of beauty, purpose, connection, and joy.


Progress in suicide prevention has always come from a community: survivors, people with lived experience, clinicians, researchers, educators, advocates, and policymakers who drive this lifesaving work forward. We will always need crisis lines, mobile response teams, and evidence-based treatment. But if we want to see meaningful and lasting change, upstream prevention must stand alongside these tools as a central pillar of our national approach.


If you or someone you know may be experiencing a mental-health crisis or contemplating suicide, call or text 988.


https://standingabovethecrowd.com/james-donaldson-on-mental-health-we-need-to-rethink-suicide-prevention-starting-long-before-crisis/

James Donaldson on Mental Health - Understanding Depression Through Personal Narratives

James Donaldson on Mental Health - Understanding Depression Through Personal Narratives

Depression is a complex mental health condition that affects millions worldwide. While clinical definitions and statistics provide a broad overview, personal narratives offer a more intimate glimpse into the lived experiences of those battling depression. By exploring these stories, we can gain a deeper understanding of the condition and foster a more empathetic, supportive community.


Table of Contents



1. Introduction to Depression

2. The Power of Personal Narratives

3. Common Themes in Depression Stories

4. How Sharing Stories Helps

5. Conclusion

6. FAQs


Introduction to Depression


Depression is a mood disorder characterized by persistent feelings of sadness, hopelessness, and a lack of interest in activities. It can affect how a person thinks, feels, and handles daily activities. Despite its prevalence, depression is often misunderstood, leading to stigma and isolation for those affected. To bridge this gap, personal narratives play a vital role in demystifying the condition.


The Power of Personal Narratives


Personal narratives are essential tools for understanding depression. They provide firsthand accounts of the challenges and triumphs faced by individuals living with the disorder. These stories highlight the diverse ways depression manifests and demonstrate the resilience of those who confront it daily.


Blog post illustration


Through personal narratives, individuals can share their journeys, offering insights into their emotional landscapes and coping mechanisms. This humanizes the experience of depression, moving beyond clinical descriptions to portray the raw, real-life implications of the condition.


#James Donaldson notes:
Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.
Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.
Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.
  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticle
Find out more about the work I do on my 501c3 non-profit foundation
website www.yourgiftoflife.org Order your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,
#CelebratingYourGiftofLife: From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy


Click Here For More Information About James Donaldson



Click here to follow James Donaldson's Blog



Common Themes in Depression Stories


While each person’s experience with depression is unique, certain themes frequently emerge within personal narratives. Recognizing these commonalities can help create a more comprehensive understanding of depression:


1. Struggles with Identity and Self-Worth

Many individuals with depression grapple with issues of identity and self-esteem. Personal stories often reveal internal battles with feelings of inadequacy and self-doubt, exacerbated by societal pressures and personal expectations.


2. The Impact of Isolation

Isolation is a recurrent theme in depression narratives. Those suffering may withdraw from social interactions, feeling disconnected from the world around them. Personal accounts often describe the loneliness that accompanies depression, emphasizing the importance of community support.


3. The Role of Stigma

Stigma remains a significant barrier to seeking help. Personal stories frequently highlight the fear of judgment and misunderstanding that prevents individuals from reaching out for support. Narratives that confront stigma head-on can pave the way for more open conversations about mental health.


4. The Journey to Recovery

While depression is challenging, many narratives focus on the journey to recovery and healing. These stories often include elements of hope, resilience, and the gradual process of finding effective treatment and support systems.


How Sharing Stories Helps


Sharing personal narratives about depression serves multiple purposes:


1. Fostering Empathy and Understanding

By providing a window into the experiences of those with depression, personal stories foster empathy and understanding. They challenge stereotypes and encourage a more nuanced perspective on mental health.


2. Encouraging Others to Seek Help

When individuals share their journeys, they can inspire others to seek help and support. Hearing about the positive outcomes of therapy, medication, or support groups can motivate others to take the first step towards recovery.


3. Building a Supportive Community

Personal narratives create a sense of community among individuals with similar experiences. They can connect people, offering a space for shared understanding and mutual support, reducing feelings of isolation.


Conclusion


Understanding depression through personal narratives is an invaluable approach to demystifying the condition and promoting mental health awareness. These stories illuminate the intricate realities of depression, emphasizing the importance of empathy, support, and understanding. By listening to and sharing these narratives, we can work towards a more inclusive and compassionate society.


FAQs


What is the importance of personal narratives in understanding depression?

Personal narratives provide a firsthand look into the experiences of those living with depression, offering insights that go beyond clinical definitions. They help humanize the condition and foster empathy and understanding.


How can sharing personal stories about depression help?

Sharing personal stories can encourage others to seek help, reduce stigma, and build a supportive community. It also allows individuals to express their experiences and connect with others who understand their struggles.


What are some common themes in personal narratives about depression?

Common themes include struggles with identity and self-worth, isolation, stigma, and the journey to recovery. These themes highlight the diverse experiences and challenges faced by individuals with depression.


https://standingabovethecrowd.com/understanding-depression-through-personal-narratives/


James Donaldson on Mental Health - We Need to Rethink Suicide Prevention, Starting Long Before Crisis
by Scott LoMurray

When I tell people I work in suicide prevention, they often assume I spend my days answering crisis calls or serving as a counselor. Those roles are essential. But the assumption reveals something deeper about how we, as a society, think about suicide prevention. We picture it at the moment of crisis. We rarely picture everything that comes before.

For decades, our national approach to suicide prevention has leaned heavily on intervention and treatment. We search for warning signs and utilize screening tools that inform us if someone may be struggling. We build hotlines and crisis teams. We train people to respond when someone reaches a point of such despair that they want to die. 

These tools save lives every day, and we must continue to strengthen them. But if we want fewer people to reach that point of despair in the first place, we need to expand our vision for what suicide prevention is and what it can be.

We’ve built a system that waits too long

Our current paradigm is often belatedly deployed only once a suffering person reaches a breaking point. We provide training to help people notice and support someone who may be in crisis, then attempt to plug them into a mental health system that is too often inaccessible and overburdened. We have placed the greatest weight on the most fragile moment.

The field of public health offers a roadmap for a better way. There was a time, in the 1960s and 70s, when heart disease prevention focused almost entirely on emergency interventions like CPR and cardiac surgery after a heart attack. We have drastically reduced deaths due to heart disease by 66% in the U.S. from 1970 to 2022. However, CPR training, better surgical techniques, and putting defibrillators in shopping malls were only a part of this success. Improving nutrition, reducing tobacco use, and establishing social and cultural norms around exercise created an environment that better prioritized overall health.

Mental health requires the same shift. We cannot simply counsel or legislate our way out of the crisis. Downstream interventions will always matter, but upstream prevention must become a central pillar of our national strategy, not an afterthought. The phrase “upstream prevention” comes from a classic public health parable, in which rescuers pull drowning people out of a river at the edge of a waterfall, eventually moving upstream to stop people from falling into the river in the first place. In practice, upstream suicide prevention means changing the conditions that either promote wellbeing or drive despair, not waiting to respond only once people are in pain.

The economic case for this shift is strong; when we improve the conditions that keep people well, we reduce costly emergency care, hospital stays, and crisis-driven interventions, generating returns that far exceed the initial investment.

We need a both/and model: a comprehensive approach that supports people in crisis, while also building the conditions that prevent the crisis in the first place.

Humanize before we pathologize

When we talk about mental health, we often do so through a lens of mental illness. We jump quickly to diagnosing and pathologizing, rather than understanding our struggles as a natural part of what it means to be human. 

Feelings like sadness, fear, anger, or anxiety are not negative emotions, they are human ones. And we need more dialogue about what helps us humans navigate the difficulties that life brings our way. These experiences become overwhelming when we face them alone, when our environments are unsafe or isolating, or when we lack the tools, skills, and relationships to help us navigate the storms of life when they come. 

There is a meaningful difference between the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness and the cultivation of mental health. A thriving society invests in both.

This is where upstream prevention is crucial. To shift the trend line, we must focus on the leading causes of life: connection, hope, purpose, belonging, and the sources of strength that give depth to our lives. These protective forces help us to navigate life’s hardest moments. They are not replacements for therapy or crisis care. They are the foundation that makes healing, growth, and resilience possible.

The evidence is growing, and it is compelling

This is not just theoretical. We now have promising data that demonstrates the potential of upstream approaches to make a measurable impact.

Colorado recently recorded its lowest youth suicide rate since 2007, the lowest rate in the lifetime of today’s teens. That progress wasn’t driven by a single program or policy. Instead, Colorado made upstream efforts a core part of its comprehensive strategy, not an afterthought.

Recent research findings echo this pattern. In a randomized controlled trial involving more than 6,000 U.S. high school students, Sources of Strength, an upstream, peer-led prevention program that I help lead, significantly reduced new suicide attempts by 29% over two school years. A pooled analysis combining three randomized control trials spanning over a decade with over 40,000 student years of exposure to Sources of Strength showed lower suicide mortality in participating schools compared with controls. This is the first universal intervention to demonstrate reductions in attempts and deaths amongst youth through randomized trials.

#James Donaldson notes:Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticleFind out more about the work I do on my 501c3 non-profit foundationwebsite www.yourgiftoflife.org Order your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,#CelebratingYourGiftofLife: From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy

Click Here For More Information About James Donaldson

Click here to follow James Donaldson's Blog

These findings focus on youth outcomes, but the protective forces they highlight are universal. Trusting relationships, positive social norms, healthy coping skills, a sense of belonging, and environments where people feel valued matter at every age. When we feel supported in these ways, we navigate distress differently, whether we are 15 or 55.

The National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention recently released new guidance on moving upstream, affirming the importance of connection, belonging, economic stability, and community-level protective factors. This is real progress. The next step is translating that guidance into action at scale.

Stable housing, economic supports, safe communities, inclusive policies, supportive workplaces, and compassionate classrooms are not abstract ideals. They are fundamental components of effective suicide prevention.

A new goal for suicide prevention

Effective suicide prevention cannot be limited to keeping people alive when they are at their lowest point. Our goal must be to prevent those moments of suicidal despair from forming in the first place. It must be to help people heal, and to build lives of beauty, purpose, connection, and joy.

Progress in suicide prevention has always come from a community: survivors, people with lived experience, clinicians, researchers, educators, advocates, and policymakers who drive this lifesaving work forward. We will always need crisis lines, mobile response teams, and evidence-based treatment. But if we want to see meaningful and lasting change, upstream prevention must stand alongside these tools as a central pillar of our national approach.

If you or someone you know may be experiencing a mental-health crisis or contemplating suicide, call or text 988. https://standingabovethecrowd.com/?p=16342

Monday, June 22, 2026

James Donaldson on Mental Health - How do I recognize signs and help my child struggling with mental health problems?

James Donaldson on Mental Health - How do I recognize signs and help my child struggling with mental health problems?

Big Changes and Challenges


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Irkf1HGr6g

Learn what to look for when you think your child may be struggling with their mental health. And remember that these challenges are real, common, and treatable.


#James Donaldson notes:
Welcome to the “next chapter” of my life… being a voice and an advocate for #mentalhealthawarenessandsuicideprevention, especially pertaining to our younger generation of students and student-athletes.
Getting men to speak up and reach out for help and assistance is one of my passions. Us men need to not suffer in silence or drown our sorrows in alcohol, hang out at bars and strip joints, or get involved with drug use.
Having gone through a recent bout of #depression and #suicidalthoughts myself, I realize now, that I can make a huge difference in the lives of so many by sharing my story, and by sharing various resources I come across as I work in this space.
  #http://bit.ly/JamesMentalHealthArticle
Find out more about the work I do on my 501c3 non-profit foundation
website www.yourgiftoflife.org Order your copy of James Donaldson's latest book,
#CelebratingYourGiftofLife: From The Verge of Suicide to a Life of Purpose and Joy


Click Here For More Information About James Donaldson



Click here to follow James Donaldson's Blog



https://standingabovethecrowd.com/james-donaldson-on-mental-health-how-do-i-recognize-signs-and-help-my-child-struggling-with-mental-health-problems-2/