Navigating what may be the βnew normalβ brought on by the coronavirus pandemic has left many people grappling with unknowns. From worrying about oneβs own health and safety as well as their family membersβ well-being, adapting to a remote-work situation or job loss, juggling new family schedules, experiencing isolation from friends and loved ones β all of these changes in lifestyle came so rapidly and without any warning that itβs not surprising people are experiencing an increase in stress, depression and anxiety.
When news of COVID-19 started spreading more rapidly and locally earlier this year, Shainna Ali β10 β12MA β16PhD dealt with her own stressors before realizing that she probably wasnβt alone in feeling uncertain about the virus. As a mental health professional, she wondered what other people would be experiencing.

βNot everyone may end up being infected with COVID-19, but everyone will experience some level of a mental health effect from coronavirus,β says Ali, a mental health counselor, educator and advocate, who has a masterβs degree in clinical mental health counseling and doctorate in education with a specialization in counselor education. βOur response to stress is quite normal, but how we choose to cope with stress, thatβs the key to mental health.β
Culturally and societally, people donβt often receive training in mental wellness, says Ali. Acknowledging symptoms and learning coping techniques arenβt typically taught in school, nor are some parents comfortable with broaching this subject with their children.
βWe all experience stress, and everybody has had an increase of stress at some level as a byproduct of the pandemic,β Ali says. βAs unpleasant as that may feel, as uncomfortable as it may be in the body, it may be a big adjustment, but if you step back and think about it, it makes a lot of sense. Weβre experiencing a global pandemic. When you think about the gravity of that, the stress makes sense. Your body is reacting appropriately.β
When Ali realized the mental health consequences a global pandemic would have, she started thinking about countering the effects
βIf the average person isnβt in counseling or is unable to seek counseling, how are they going to know that itβs absolutely normal to be experiencing stress from coronavirus?β asks Ali, who received ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½βs 30 Under 30 award last year. She actively blogs for Psychology Today, and recent topics have centered around coronavirus, but she wanted to do something more.
She reached out to two fellow ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½ alumni and mental health professionals in the Orlando area, and the group created a free webinar called βCoping with COVID-19 Stress.β The lesson addresses the stress that this pandemic has likely created for individuals.
Candice Conroy β08BA β13MA explains that the goal of the webinar was to βnormalize the emotional responses coming up as a result of the stress related to COVID-19.β The video also provides a few coping techniques, such as a breathing exercise.

βMany people arenβt taught how to label their emotions or techniques for how they can respond to these feelings when they come up. Many donβt realize that emotions, such as uncertainty, are a normal emotional response in a situation thatβs full of unanswered questions,β says Conroy, a licensed mental health counselor who practices in Baldwin Park.
Sanya Matani β10BA β13MA, the third alumni in the group of counselors, has been creating a weekly vlog since COVID-19 started to explore destigmatizing mental health conversations. She joined the group because she had been searching for a way to talk about the topics of collective grief and trauma as well as normalizing and validating emotions in a way that was safe and appropriate.

βAs therapists, weβre often expected to have the answers and create the environment for our clientsβ healing, and very early on, some of us understood that COVID-19 was going to be something that would have a very significant impact,β says Matani, a licensed mental health counselor who has a private practice in Winter Park.
The group says itβs important to remember that the mental health profession exists for a reason. For individuals who already had mental health problems and have experienced an exacerbation of those issues due to the pandemic, Ali encourages them to seek professional help.
βWe created this lesson to try to give back to the community,β Ali says. βIt is a unique way that we were able to use our education, training and experience to help other people find their power.β