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Membongkar Mitos Dan Stigma Kesihatan Mental Merentasi Budaya

Kesihatan mental ialah isu kritikal seluruh dunia, tetapi budaya mempengaruhi tafsiran dan rawatannya. Mitos seperti masalah mental tidak wujud dalam kelompok tertentu menimbulkan stigma. Ini menghalang individu daripada mendapatkan sokongan. Memahami perspektif pelbagai sangat penting untuk penyelesaian inklusif yang berkesan.

From Waste to Watts

Transform Sarawak’s rural waste into reliable power, thriving economies, and healthier communities. Our decentralized systems deliver sustainable independence, slash costs, and fulfil the Premier’s vision of resilient villages. Embrace circular prosperity today, power your tomorrow, and lead the renewable revolution.

Mewujudkan Ketenangan Tanpa Kos Tinggi

Ketenangan bukan sesuatu yang boleh dibeli, tetapi dicipta sedikit demi sedikit melalui kesedaran, kasih sayang terhadap diri sendiri dan susun atur ruang yang bijak, yang menjadi inti kepada konsep Seni Bina Ketenangan

Build a Calmer Brain in 5 Steps

Skill chosen: Anxiety regulation using the 5-4-3-2-1 grounding technique

Anxiety is strongly associated with the brain’s interpretation of perceived threats.

When the amygdala is overactive, it can trigger a stress response even in the absence of a real threat.

In those moments, the prefrontal cortex, which is responsible for calm reasoning and emotional regulation, takes a back seat, and the body shifts into survival mode.

Grounding techniques like the 5-4-3-2-1 method, used in Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and trauma-informed care, help restore present-moment awareness and emotional balance.

Neuroscience research suggests that repeated grounding techniques may encourage neuroplastic changes in the brain.

This may strengthen the prefrontal cortex’s ability to regulate emotional responses while calming overactive threat-detection circuits.

The 5-Step Brain Rewiring Practice (5-4-3-2-1 Method)

Step 1: Identify 5 things you can see

Take a moment to look around and name five things you can see, such as a chair, a window, light, your hands, or the floor.

This practice helps disrupt internal rumination by redirecting attention toward external sensory information.

As visual grounding engages attentional networks in the parietal and prefrontal regions, the brain gradually shifts out of threat-focused processing.

Step 2: Identify 4 things you can feel

Focus on physical sensations such as clothing texture, temperature, or body contact with surfaces. 

This helps activate somatosensory pathways and anchors awareness in the body.

In trauma therapy, this body-based focus is often used to reduce dissociation and restore a sense of being present.

Step 3: Identify 3 things you can hear

Pay attention to the sounds around you, like voices, wind, or noises in the distance.

This form of auditory grounding helps anchor attention in the present moment and can ease the cognitive narrowing often experienced during anxiety.

Step 4: Identify 2 things you can smell

Take a moment to notice any scents around you, or gently recall a familiar smell if none are present.

Smell is deeply connected to the brain’s emotional and memory centres, which means it can quickly shift how you feel and help anchor you in the present.

Step 5: Identify 1 thing you can taste

Gently notice any taste in your mouth, or bring to mind a simple taste such as water, gum, or the natural taste present in the body. 

This final step completes the sensory grounding sequence, reinforcing embodied awareness and strengthening present-moment anchoring.

Why This Rewires the Brain

Repeated grounding practices may help train the brain to interrupt automatic stress responses.

Over time, this may strengthen neural pathways involved in emotional regulation and reduce the habitual activation of threat circuits.

Research in stress neurobiology suggests that chronic stress can reshape how brain networks connect, but practices like mindfulness and grounding can encourage more adaptive patterns of change and emotional balance.

In simple terms, repetition is the key.

Each time grounding is practiced during anxiety, the brain rehearses a new response pathway, gradually shifting from a panic-driven reaction to present-moment awareness.

Reference:

Cleveland Clinic. (2024, January 10). Grounding techniques to reduce anxiety with Melissa Young, MD [Audio podcast]. https://my.clevelandclinic.org/podcasts/health-essentials/grounding-techniques-to-reduce-anxiety-with-melissa-young

Hölzel, B. K., et al. (2011). Mindfulness practice and brain structure changes. Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging.

McEwen, B. S. (2017). Neurobiological effects of stress and adaptation. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

van der Kolk, B. A. (2014). The body keeps the score. Viking.

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Membongkar Mitos Dan Stigma Kesihatan Mental Merentasi Budaya

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Membongkar Mitos Dan Stigma Kesihatan Mental Merentasi Budaya

Kesihatan mental ialah isu kritikal seluruh dunia, tetapi budaya mempengaruhi tafsiran dan rawatannya. Mitos seperti masalah mental tidak wujud dalam kelompok tertentu menimbulkan stigma. Ini menghalang individu daripada mendapatkan sokongan. Memahami perspektif pelbagai sangat penting untuk penyelesaian inklusif yang berkesan.

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Trauma can alter brain function through stress responses, but neuroplasticity enables recovery, challenging the belief of permanent damage and highlighting the brain’s resilience, adaptability, and potential for healing after adversity.

Community Mentorship Builds Youth Financial Resilience and Stability

Local mentorship networks in Sarawak and Malaysia equip young people with practical budgeting skills and accountability, reducing bankruptcy rates among vulnerable youth. Evidence shows community-driven guidance transforms financial knowledge into lasting behavioural change and long-term economic stability across all generations.

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