
Mental Health Awareness Month in Madison, Wisconsin | May 2026
Why Mental Health Awareness Matters More Now Than Ever This Year
May is Mental Health Awareness Month, and it brings the uncomfortable, sometimes taboo, topics that we avoid, to the surface. It brings attention to the vulnerable feelings of stress, burnout, anxiety, depression, grief, trauma, loneliness, and emotional exhaustion that social stigma tells use to hide and avoid.
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For our clinicians and staff here at HEART Counseling, Mental Health Awareness Month is more than just a scribble on our May calendar page. Mental Health Awareness Month builds on the very reason our practice exists. Each day, millions of individuals carry on working and parenting despite mental health challenges. While there is resilience and strength in being able to push through challenging times, no one should be forced to. All individuals in our community deserve support, respect, and dignity.
Mental health awareness has come leaps and bounds over the past several years, and that matters. Individuals feel less stigma, and are able to be more open with others about metal health challenges and disorders, if they attend therapy, and even if they take medications for their mental health. Across the country here in Wisconsin, we’ve had the honor of watching the discourse around mental health become more normalized.
While these steps towards openness and honesty are significant and should be celebrated, we also know that we are far from crossing the finish line. Awareness transforms into meaningful change when it creates structural and societal change that allows people to ask for support without shame.
For many people, the hardest part of therapy is not the therapy itself. It’s deciding they’re “allowed” to need, and ask for, help

Salvia blooming near the capitol in downtown Madison. A reminder that growth and healing happen gradually.
Why Mental Health Awareness Month Matters in Wisconsin
All Wisconsin communities are maneuvering different big-picture challenges that impact emotional wellbeing of residents. No matter your age or location, there are several structural and societal factors that impact your mental health. They could look like chronic stress and burnout, social isolation, caregiving strain, financial pressure, political tension, or parenting stress.
Especially here in Dane County, many residents feel an intense pressure to keep functioning at a high level despite serious overwhelm. Many Madison residents are motivated and high-achieving, and while these qualities can be strengths, they can also make it harder for people to admit when they’re struggling.
We often hear things like:
- “Other people have it worse.”
- “I should be able to handle this.”
- “I’m still functioning, so maybe I’m okay.”
- “I don’t want to burden anyone.”
Mental Health Awareness Month helps challenge those beliefs.
Mental health care is not only for moments of crisis. Therapy can support individuals during periods of transition, uncertainty, relationship stress, identity exploration, burnout, grief, trauma recovery, parenting challenges, anxiety, depression, and any other periods where life just feels more difficult.

Your mental health deserves attention and care.
Why This Month Matters to Our Practice
At HEART Counseling, we believe your emotional and mental health is just as important as your physical health.
Mental Health Awareness Month matters to our clinicians because we know how common emotional pain actually is, even when it’s hidden from others so often.
Many of our clients spent years minimizing and invalidating what they were experiencing. Many of us learned to survive by pushing through discomfort, which was easier than acknowledging it at the time.
As therapists, we care deeply about helping people:
- feel less alone in what they’re experiencing
- build healthier relationships with themselves and others
- understand patterns rooted in stress or trauma
- develop emotional resilience and realistic coping skills
- create lives that feel more sustainable, genuine, and authentic
Mental Health Awareness Month gives us an opportunity to normalize these conversations.

Support begins with small moments of care, connection, and feeling seen by someone else.
For Past Clients: Your Progress Still Matters
Mental health awareness can sometimes create the impression that healing is linear or permanent. In reality, emotional wellness shifts throughout different seasons of life.
For our past clients, May can be a reminder that:
- needing support again is okay
- setbacks don’t erase your growth and progress
- coping skills sometimes need reinforcement during stressful times
Many people return to therapy at different life stages because new experiences often uncover old patterns, grief, fears, or emotional needs, and that is completely normal.

Growth is not about never struggling again. It’s about recognizing your needs earlier and responding to yourself more compassionately.
For Current Clients: Therapy Work is Just as Important Outside the Office
Mental Health Awareness Month also reminds us that therapy is just as much about what you decide to do and change outside of sessions.
The implementing the work you do in the therapy office often requires pushing yourself to hold yourself accountable to actually have difficult conversations, set boundaries in place, hold those boundaries, take intentional time to moments of self-reflect, practice emotional regulation, practice resting and recharging while gently correcting thoughts of guilt or shame, and choosing to be happy with your “personal best” instead of perfection.
For Prospective Clients: You Don’t Need to “Wait Until It Gets Worse”
One of the most dangerous false beliefs about therapy is that you have to be in crisis or be unable to function to ask for help and support. You do not have to hit a breaking point before reaching out.
There are several reasons that might lead someone to seek out individual therapy:
- they feel emotionally stuck
- relationships feel harder than they used to
- anxiety has become exhausting
- they are overwhelmed by life transitions
- they are grieving a loss (of a loved one, a relationship, or even a pet).
- parenting feels heavier than expected
- work stress is affecting daily life
- they want healthier coping strategies
- they are tired of surviving on autopilot
Mental Health Awareness Month can serve a reminder for us to check in with ourselves. Not because something is “wrong” with us, but because emotional wellbeing matters.

Even in darker seasons, moments of care, reflection, connection, and healing can be our light.
Mental Health Resources for Wisconsin Residents
If you’re looking for additional mental health education or support during Mental Health Awareness Month, these organizations are community resources:
- National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI): https://www.nami.org
- NAMI Wisconsin: https://namiwisconsin.org
- Mental Health America: https://mhanational.org
- 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: https://988lifeline.org
- Mental Health Awareness Month information from SAMHSA: https://www.samhsa.gov/mental-health-awareness-month
These resources can provide education, crisis support, advocacy information, and ways to stay connected to mental health conversations both locally and nationally.

Sometimes support can be a simple message of encouragement and support to keep going during difficult times.
Awareness Is Important, but Individual and Community Supports Matter Just as Much
Awareness alone cannot eliminate stigma, burnout, trauma, or isolation, but creates the necessary opportunities for honesty and real change.
Sometimes Mental Health Awareness Month begins with small moments like admitting you’re overwhelmed, checking in on a friend, scheduling a therapy consultation, setting a boundary, resting without apologizing, or recognizing that your emotional pain deserves care and empathy.
At HEART Counseling, we believe mental health conversations should be grounded in authenticity, empathy, and trustworthiness, never performative or scripted.
Everyone deserves support, no exceptions.
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Heart Counseling is a team of therapists specializing in helping kids, teens, and adults with anxiety and anyone who has experienced an upsetting event. Our mental health therapists are also passionate about perinatal mental health and helping parents at all stages. From kids to adults, we are dedicated to helping you and your family thrive.








