UCD Student Help and Support
Your college years are can be some of the best years of your life. You finally have enough freedom as an adult without having too much responsibility (yet). But while college is often depicted as being “the best years of your life” in the media, this is not always the case. What we are not told by our secondary school guidance counsellor is that college is not always the ideal picture we see on the prospectus we get at the start of the year. You are entering an unfamiliar environment and while it can be exciting for some, it can be nerve-wracking for others. In particular, with UCD, you are entering an environment that is made up of over 30,000 people, which is enough to make even the most confident of people to feel a little bit apprehensive! As well as this, alcohol and recreational drug use are often associated with the “student experience”, which can often wreak havoc on your mental health. Whether you are a new or a returning student you can still feel overwhelmed, particularly at the start of a new semester, so looking after your mental health is crucial at this time.
This is where UCD Student Help and Support can help. This website offers help for everything, from managing your money or having issues with your accommodation to more serious issues, such as anxiety or depression. The site is easy to navigate and supplies students with valuable information and helplines that can help them in times of need, such as www.samaritans.org or www.reach.com . As well as providing students with plenty of resources, the network also gives the option of setting up an appointment with a student advisor, in case the student would rather speak face to face to a person about an issue rather than to someone on the phone. Another unique aspect of the help and support network UCD offers is that it also offers assistance to those who are worried about their friends, and gives them pointers on how they can let them know that they’re worried about them in an appropriate way. This feature of the site is extremely useful, as in some cases an individual can become so wrapped up in a problem they become totally blinkered, and need a helping hand even if they do not realise it yet.
So, while practices such as meditation or sport are good methods of looking after our mental health, they can sometimes not be enough, and we need access to more professional help. UCD Student Help and Support is an invaluable resource to every student that attends the university, and it can be reached here through the link: http://www.ucd.ie/students/support/
Ysabelle Branagan


















