Dad presented with Points of Light Award for lockdown mental health support thisiswiltshire.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thisiswiltshire.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The third lockdown seems to have affected mental health more than the others and it will take some time for the community to recover, says support group founder Samuel Robbins. During the pandemic, we ve seen a rise in mental health issues with more people concerned about their wellbeing. The Swindon and Wiltshire Mental Health Support Group membership has now reached 556 members with more joining daily to seek support and advice from other members. In a recent survey of the group, most members’ mental health was affected negatively by the pandemic. One member said: Pretty much all my usual coping mechanisms were taken away or made illegal. Isolating myself is the worse thing I can do, and I was forced into it.
A DAD is encouraging people to do some volunteering to improve their mental health. Samuel Robbins and his family went out to litter pick taking inspiration from one of the five steps to mental wellbeing. The founder of Swindon and Wiltshire Mental Health Support Group on Facebook is highlighting the issue ahead of Mental Health Awareness Week which starts on Monday. He and his partner Catrina Fletcher took their four children Aimee, 11, Olly-Jai, six, George, five, and Nala, two around the County Ground and the nearby park armed with litter pickers. “It’s something we planned to do because we walk through there all the time, he said. The council do go up there and clear it but they don’t always have the time. A lot of school kids go through there and leave a lot of rubbish.”
With National Superheroes Day this week, we asked you to nominate your real-life superheroes. Every year on April 28, we don’t just celebrate fictional heroes, but those heroes who don t wear capes. We’re celebrating the people who keep Swindon going. Charlene Walker nominated Jennie and Jason Moss. “They give selflessly and have done so anonymously for a number of years and so have had little to no recognition for the random acts of kindness they have strived to give others, she said. “They have been through so many challenges in life and yet nothing stops them doing what they do. They are just the most genuine kindest souls I’ve ever met.”