Mount Pleasant Magazine March April 2026

100 www.ReadMPM.com | www.MountPleasantMagazine.com | www.MountPleasantPodcast.com it is: overload. “Our nervous systems weren’t built for this level of constant connection,” she said. We’re reachable all the time now. There’s no real pause. Even scrolling, which feels harmless or “free,” costs something. Time. Attention. Energy. “It pulls people away from real life,” said Polk, “and that adds up.” We talked a bit about coaching versus therapy, which can get confusing. Polk was resolute. Therapy comes with education, licensing and ethical oversight. Coaching doesn’t always. Coaching can be helpful in certain seasons – career changes, dating, parenting skills – but problems happen when people work outside their lane. “Knowing who you’re working with matters,” she said. “And knowing what they’re trained to do matters too.” When I asked what mental health would look like if we treated it like physical fitness, her answer was simple. Breathing. Not in a fancy way. Just real, deep breaths. She often tells clients to attach it to something they already do, like brushing their teeth. Thirty seconds. In through the nose. Out through the mouth. “Small things make a bigger difference than people think,” Polk said. One of the most helpful mindset shifts she teaches is remembering that not every thought is true. That alone feels like a relief. A thought may feel convincing, but it isn’t a fact. For people who feel overwhelmed and don’t know where to start, Polk encouraged keeping it practical. Schedule it and find someone close. Virtual therapy is also a solid option, especially for privacy. For people in military or government roles who don’t want insurance involved, private pay therapists can offer more discretion. When stress spikes, calming down isn’t just about thinking differently. Tap into the physical aspect of your health. Yoga stretches on YouTube. Guided meditation. EFT tapping. Even local experiences that intentionally focus on slowing the nervous system. “There’s no one right tool,” she said. “You just have to find what works for you.” One myth she sees a lot is the idea that anxiety is always negative. It’s not. Anxiety is normal and coping well doesn’t mean getting rid of it. It means learning how to live with it without letting it run everything. So when does stress turn into something that deserves support? Polk said to watch patterns. If good days disappear, if you pull away from people or if emotions feel louder than normal, it may be time to reach out. Polk shared something she wishes more people understood. It’s that therapy isn’t advice-giving. It’s a relationship. A safe place. If a therapist isn’t the right fit, it’s OK to keep looking. How true is this? Adulting is hard. Doing it while the world feels heavy is even harder. You’re not alone. The sky is still blue, the birds are still chirping and sometimes the most helpful thing you can do is take one slow breath and start there. health & beauty Crystal Polk, a licensed therapist of Better Tomorrow Therapy.

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