While you have been at Dartmouth, have you ever felt hopeless, despondent, uninterested in activities you typically enjoy or lethargic for an extended period of time?
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As of Thursday, the Homecoming bonfire was still in the process of being built.
Students held signs with messages for speaker Emily Yoffe as part of a silent protest of her beliefs on rape and culture.
10.9.15.news.protest_Tiffany.Zhai
How often in the past month have you felt hopeless, despondent, uninterested in activities you typically enjoy or lethargic?
Caitlin Barthelmes works with students to deal with mental health issues.
Behind the façade: Helping, hurting and healing
A cursory glance around any area on campus — Baker Lobby, Collis’s pasta line, the Green — will reveal an idyllic, picturesque scene. Smiling, chatty students eagerly discuss weekend plans and love life drama or offhandedly joke about how unprepared they are for an upcoming midterm, but deeper anxieties or troubles are rarely revealed. You may never know that the put-together, confident girl describing her busy social calendar over King Arthur Flourhad trouble getting out of bed this morning.
How often in the past month have you felt hopeless, despondent, uninterested in activities you typically enjoy or lethargic?
Athletes, who train at Floren Gymnasium, are often under additional stress.
Under greater stress, some athletes fight to stabilize mental health
After enough swings, a baseball bat becomes an extension of the clean-up hitter’s arm. Skates define the way a defenseman relates to winter. Jerseys become identities franchise players wear day and night. The game the athlete plays becomes a fundamental part of who he is, and in many cases, that’s a good thing.
Dick's house
Dick's house
Low-income students face unique stress, anxieties in college
Cesar Rufino ’18 said that he often tells people he feels like he is living two different lives — one at home in Chicago and one here at Dartmouth.
Eating disorders increase in severity, impact a wide variety of students
In the last few years, the eating disorder cases treated by Dartmouth’s health services have increased in severity, College nutritionist and sports dietitian Claudette Peck said.
Athletes on teams requiring weigh-ins, like crew, are susceptible to eating disorders.
Cultural clashes hinder minority students’ search for support
What happens when a diagnosis does not provide clarity moving forward? For Junaid Yakubu ’16, learning that he had obsessive-compulsive disorder coupled with depression during his freshman winter only led to more questions. Though a clinician explained the details of treatment, stress and anxiety management, Yukubu was left with the dilemma of explaining what he was going through to family back home.
For survivors of sexual assault, mental health resources abound
There were 48 reports of rape at locations related to Dartmouth in 2015. With the amount of reports increasing according to the Clery Act data, the College has been improving resources to help survivors of such assaults.
Barthelmes a key resource for creative mental health care
Caitlin Barthelmes’ office space — tucked away on the third floor of Robinson Hall in the Student Wellness Center — can appear a little mysterious to the casual observer. Equipped with a massage chair, free health-related goodies and bowls of candy, Barthelmes and the staff at the Student Wellness Center are working to empower students through holistic and preventative wellness processes.
Caitlin Barthelmes works with students to deal with mental health issues.