Spring Mental Health Reset: What Young Adults in Connecticut Actually Need Right Now
Spring Mental Health Reset: What Young Adults in Connecticut Need to Know
By Denise Takakjy, LPC | Healing Hearts Healthy Minds
Spring shows up and everyone assumes you should feel better. The days get longer. Campus gets louder. Your feed fills up with people who look like they are thriving, and yet you are sitting there wondering why you feel more exhausted than you did in January.
That gap between how spring is supposed to feel and how it actually feels is worth paying attention to.
Spring Is Not a Reset for Everyone
For a lot of young adults in Connecticut, this stretch of the year is one of the hardest. The end of the semester is close enough to feel the pressure but far enough away that the finish line still feels impossible. Internship decisions have come in or they have not. Graduation is either exciting or terrifying, sometimes both in the same hour.
You have been running on whatever reserve you had since September. And now someone is telling you to feel renewed.
According to The American College Health Association 2024 National College Health Assessment, only 35 percent of college students sought mental health support in the last year. That means nearly two-thirds are managing it alone. That is not a personality flaw. That is a system asking more of people than people can sustainably give.
Burnout Does Not Always Look Like Falling Apart
Burnout is not always dramatic. It does not always look like missing class or crying in your car. Sometimes it looks like going through the motions perfectly well. Getting the work done. Showing up. Saying you are fine.
But you are flat. Things that used to matter do not pull at you the same way. You are tired after sleeping. Small things feel heavier than they should. You are doing everything right and feeling nothing from it.
Worth taking seriously before it tips into something harder to climb out of.
Why Pushing Through Makes It Worse
Burnout does not resolve itself by pushing through. It gets louder.
Research from the American College Health Association shows that only about one in five students who are struggling actually reach out for professional support. One in five. That means the majority are white-knuckling their way to summer and starting the whole cycle again in the fall.
Asking for help can feel like admitting something is wrong with you. Like weakness. Like you are making too big a deal out of stress that everyone else seems to handle fine. But there is a difference between stress that moves through and stress that settles in and starts running things.
What Support Looks Like
Not a spa day. Not a list of self-care habits that adds more tasks to your already full plate.
A space that is entirely yours. Where you are not managing anyone else's feelings. Where you can say the thing you have been holding without someone panicking or trying to fix it in five minutes.
DBT, Dialectical Behavior Therapy, gives you concrete skills for the moments when everything feels like too much. Emotional regulation. Distress tolerance. How to get through hard things without making them harder. For young adults carrying something older than this semester, something that lives underneath the burnout. EMDR virtual therapy can reach what conversation alone sometimes cannot.
You Do Not Have to Be in Crisis
Therapy is not a last resort. Feeling stuck, flat, burned out, or quietly overwhelmed is enough of a reason to reach out. Your experience counts even when it does not look dramatic from the outside.
At Healing Hearts Healthy Minds, I work with young adults between 18 and 24 across Connecticut through virtual therapy. If spring feels heavier than it is supposed to, that is worth a conversation.
Schedule a free 15-minute consultation at healingheartshealthyminds.com or call (484) 302-7298.
Serving teens and young adults ages 13 to 24 and their families via telehealth in Connecticut, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware.