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February 25, 2026Something shifted heading into 2026. For the first time, more than one in three Americans said they planned to make a mental health-related New Year’s resolution and they meant it. Not a vague promise to “stress less” or “take more walks.” A real, intentional commitment to their inner wellbeing.
If you’re reading this, you might be one of them. Or maybe you made that resolution in January… and it’s already gotten buried under work emails, family demands, and the general chaos of life. Sound familiar?
Here’s the thing: the intention is still there. And it’s not too late.
By the Numbers
Heading into 2026, more than 1 in 3 Americans (38%) say they plan to make a mental health-related New Year’s resolution — up 5% from last year.
Adults aged 18–34 are leading the charge at 58%, compared to 32% of 45–64 year-olds, and just 11% of those 65 and over.
— American Psychiatric Association’s Healthy Minds Poll
The Generational Turning Point
Those numbers tell a profound story. Young adults aren’t just more open to therapy. They’re actively seeking it out. The stigma that once kept people silent, suffering, and isolated is cracking. The conversation has moved from “do you go to therapy?” to “who’s your therapist?”
But awareness alone doesn’t heal. Intention alone doesn’t heal. Action does. And that’s where most people get stuck.
Why We Procrastinate on Our Own Mental Health
It’s not laziness. It’s not a weakness. Procrastinating on mental health care is often its own symptom. Anxiety is telling you “it’s not that bad,” depression is saying “what’s the point,” or old conditioning whispering “other people have real problems.”
We also live in a culture that rewards busyness. Sitting with your feelings, talking to a professional, carving out time for your inner life… these things can feel indulgent when your calendar is screaming at you.
But consider this: you wouldn’t put off a check-up for a persistent physical symptom for months, then a year, then longer. Your mind deserves the same urgency.
What the Data on AI & Mental Health Tells Us
AI chatbots and mental health apps are booming and the numbers are striking. Nearly half of people with an ongoing mental health condition who use large language model tools like ChatGPT are using them specifically for mental health support. Anxiety management, depression support, loneliness… People are turning to technology because it’s available at 2 a.m., it doesn’t judge, and it’s free.
And for some things, these tools genuinely help. But here’s what they can’t do:
→ They can’t build a therapeutic relationship with you.
→ They can’t pick up on what you’re not saying.
→ They can’t provide the evidence-based, personalized treatment that actually creates lasting change.
Apps are a starting point, not a destination. When you’re ready to go deeper, a real therapist is irreplaceable.
What Working With a Therapist Actually Looks Like
If you’ve never been to therapy or tried it once years ago and it didn’t click… you might be working off an outdated picture. Therapy today is collaborative, goal-oriented, and tailored to you. It’s not lying on a couch talking about your childhood (unless that’s exactly what you need). At Supreme Health & Wellness, 1:1 therapy sessions are designed around your life, your schedule, and your goals. Whether you’re navigating anxiety, relationship challenges, burnout, grief, or simply feeling like something is off…we meet you where you are. Book your one-on-one therapy session by filling out the contact form HERE.


