Mental Health Awareness Week 2025

This year, Mental Health Awareness Week will take place from 12 to 18 May 2025.

The theme for 2025 is 'Community', and we want to use Mental Health Awareness Week to celebrate the power and importance of community.

Being part of a safe, positive community is vital for our mental health and wellbeing. We thrive when we have strong connections with other people and supportive communities that remind us we are not alone. Communities can provide a sense of belonging, safety, support in hard times, and give us a sense of purpose.

Mental Health Awareness Week Logo

Wear it Green Day

Thursday 15 May 2025

By going green, you can support the Mental Health Foundation in carrying out vital research and delivering programmes for different communities. They have all the resources you'll need to run an event, whether you’re holding a quiz at work or baking some treats for your family.

Find Out More
Wear It Green Day Logo

Why community?

This Mental Health Awareness Week we want to celebrate the communities that support us to protect and nurture good mental health.

We know that we thrive when we have strong connections with others and supportive communities around us. We also know that people who are more socially connected to family, friends, or their community are happier, physically healthier, and live longer, with fewer mental health problems than people who are less well connected.

Communities can provide us with a sense of belonging, safety, support in hard times, and give us purpose.

Top tips to look after your mental health

Here are some ways to stay mentally well

Talk about your feelings

  • Just being listened to can help you feel supported and less alone.
Contact a mental health first aider

Stay active

  • Physical activity is not only good for your body, but it’s also great for your mind.
Find an exercise that suits you

Get a good night’s sleep

  • Sleep and mental health are closely linked

Practice mindfulness

  • A way to be fully engaged and present in the moment..
View Our Guided Meditations

Eat well

  • A balanced diet can improve your sense of well-being and your mood.
View Our Recipe Directory

Keep in touch with friends and family

  • This helps you deal with the stresses of life, makes you feel cared for and offers a different viewpoint.

Talking tips

Talking to people about mental health can hugely benefit both parties, but we know that having these conversations, especially if you have never done so before, isn’t always easy. There is no right or wrong way to talk about mental health but we’ve created these tips to support you with those conversations.

Think about the time and place

Pick an environment where you feel comfortable and where you can talk without distractions. Sometimes its easier to talk side by side rather than face-to-face, so perhaps you could go for a walk in the local park or have a chat while doing another activity such as making a cup of tea or cooking.

Know your limits

  • You will have your own limits on the support that you can provide and it’s important to take care of yourself too. Give yourself time to rest and process what they have told you or what’s happened.
  • Try to help them create a support network of other friends, relatives and mental health professionals who can help them too.

Listen and ask questions

  • Make sure you give your undivided attention and listen actively when someone is talking. Let them finish their sentences and thoughts without interrupting and encourage them to talk by asking open rather than leading questions’, for example you could say “Why don’t you tell me how you are feeling?” rather than “I can see you are feeling very low”. Try to keep your language neutral and give the person time to answer

Don’t change the way you treat them

  • If someone opens up to you about a mental health problem it’s important to remember that they are the same person and won’t want to be treated any differently. Do what you usually do – behaving differently can make someone feel more isolated.

Let them share as much as they want to

  • Let them lead the discussion at their own pace and don’t pressure them to tell you anything they aren’t ready to talk about. Talking can take a lot of trust and courage and you might be the first person they have been able to talk to about this

You don’t have to have all the answers

Try not to make assumptions about what is wrong or jump in too quickly with your own diagnosis or solutions. The important thing is to listen rather than feeling like you need to fix anything,as this isn’t always realistic and it can be more helpful to the other person if you just listen and offer your support, unless they’ve asked for advice directly.

Get help

If you or someone you know is struggling with their mental health, you are not alone, and there are places you can go to get help.

Get Support

Icebreakers

Below are some suggestions that you can use as ice-breakers in work meetings, or with friends and family to gently open up the conversation around mental health

Stretching

Lead a group stretch before you tuck into your cake, to help everyone feel calmer and boost serotonin levels.

Describe how you feel today using a colour

Colours help us express our feelings when we might not have the right words.

Share nice feedback

Take a moment to write down something you admire about a friend or a colleague and share this with them It’ll be guaranteed to make their day.

How are you feeling on a scale of 1–10?

With 1 being very low and 10 being fantastic, this is a good honesty exercise, and can help you reflect on what might be going on, especially if you’re feeling a little out of sync.

Breathing exercises

The NHS recommends the following breathing exercise for stress, anxiety and panic – it take just a few minutes and can be done anywhere.

  1. Breathe in through your nose and count steadily from 1 to 5.
  2. Breathe out through your nose, counting from 1 to 5 again
  3. Repeat for 5 minutes.

If this is your first time doing this exercise, you may not be able to get to 5 straight away, so just count up to whichever number is comfortable for you

Use an emoji to describe how you feel right now?

Again, this is a good way to express emotions without using words.

You could even create a mood wall with different emojis and ask people to put their name against the emoticon that best displays their current state or mood.

Resources

Mental Health First Aiders

Find a Mental Health First Aider

Mental Health Resources

View the resources.

Suicide Awareness Training (free)

Take the training

This page is built using resources from Mental Health Foundation

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