COVID-19: Mental Health Resources

JG
4 min readMar 30, 2020

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Monday, March 30, 2020 — It’s 2:18 AM

In about five hours, another grueling week starts at the home office where we fight tooth and nail like most other companies to survive this pandemic. I can’t sleep. I also don’t feel great. I just kicked what could have been COVID, but I don’t know and can’t get tested, and feel another cold could be coming on — a sore throat. Am I getting COVID now? 97.7F, so far so good.

I read earlier “yesterday” that someone I know lost someone close to them to COVID, he was 50. Gutted. My mind is racing between my wife, my parents, her parents, and my more extended family and friends. I hope everyone stays safe or quickly recovers.

I feel a slight tightening in my chest. It’s anxiety. I never get anxiety — I never get anxiety. Funny. I guess I get anxiety during pandemics.

I know it’s a bad idea, but I check the news. A German finance minister has committed suicide as the coronavirus hits. “Click”.

“His main concern was whether he could manage to fulfill the huge expectations of the population, especially in terms of financial aid. For him, there was clearly no way out. He was disappointed, and so he had to leave us. That has shocked us, has shocked me.” Sad.

Search for “coronavirus mental health” on Google. Sure enough, there’s content, a lot of it, mostly from news outlets and blogs looking for additional eyeballs. I look through a couple of these and file them away as glorified listicles. How is this supposed to help anyone? I wonder. It’s not. Not really, at least. The CDC has a COVID-19 mental health website as well. It’s ok, better than nothing, I suppose.

The world right now is in a pretty fucked up place; we’re all going through incredibly challenging times, some more than others, it’s taxing. At least it’s not war.

It’s about 2:44 am now, and tomorrow is going to suck.

No two ways about it, but I can’t get the German guy and his family out of my head. Is there anything or anyone that could have helped him, I wonder? Looking for mental health resources during COVID19, I don’t find many. I spent some time putting that together:

Suicide Prevention Hotline:

The Lifeline provides 24/7, free and confidential support for people in distress, suicide prevention, and crisis resources for you or your loved ones, as well as best practices for professionals.

Anxiety:

Panic

  • This article shares specifics about mental health and panic associated with COVID-19. Read article

Social Distancing

Staying Mentally Healthy

Stress (from Attorneys)

Substance Use Resources

IF YOU KNOW OF MORE MENTAL HEALTH RESOURCES — PLEASE LET ME KNOW, ESPECIALLY WHERE PEOPLE CAN SPEAK TO SOMEONE, OR THERE’S SOME FORM OF FEEDBACK MECHANISM AND I WILL ADD TO THIS LIST > jace.grebski@originate.com

Doing our part

I think it’s important we all do our part. If you have a sewing machine, I know a number of friends making face masks. If you’re in any way affiliated with tech, NY has a SWAT team and problems for you to solve. I’m not sure if the list is being updated, but COVID Solutions has a small directory of services and Tech: NYC has this guide.

At Originate we’re refashioning our tools to help with mental health.

On our end, we’ll been rolling out a tool that lets companies, government, and groups easily get a sense of people’s mental health. It’s currently in engineering and should be ready within 1–2 weeks. We’ll let everyone know via our newsletter, site, and this blog. So please follow if you’re interested in it and we’ll update you as soon as we know.

It’s 3:27am.

This is Jace Grebski signing off.

If you’re having suicidal thoughts please call the Suicide Prevention Hotline: 1–800–273–8255

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JG

♡ life, live free, #beAPC. Investor #Web3/#DeFi/#Crypto, #NextGenCompute, #SpaceTech. Working on ⛵️🌎.