🛡️ Student Mental Health Series *coming soon
Course overview
Lesson Overview

2.03 – Safety Planning 101: Who Can I Call or Text?: A safety plan is like an emergency map for your emotions. It lists who to contact, where to go, and what to do when thoughts or urges become dangerous. Writing it down matters because thinking clearly during a crisis is hard. Include numbers of crisis lines, trusted friends, or school staff who can respond fast. Also note calming spaces, like a library corner, counselor’s office, or quiet park bench. The plan should include distraction tools—music, grounding apps, fidget items, or breathing steps. It is not about weakness; it is about preparation. Sharing your plan with someone safe keeps it real. If one person cannot answer, another might. Sometimes just reading your own plan reminds you that you do have options. Update it as life changes so it stays useful. The more practiced you are with it, the easier it becomes to reach for help before harm. Safety planning turns fear into structure and structure into control. Every plan is proof that your life matters enough to protect.

About this course

Trauma-informed mental wellness lessons that help students manage emotions, build resilience, and stay safe in real-world situations—like bullying, grief, violence, and poverty. Built for schools, youth programs, and Medicaid-compliant services.

This course includes:
  • Step-by-step guidance for handling social pressure, conflict, and unsafe situations
  • Stories and messages that encourage students to speak up, stay safe, and take control of their future
  • Flexible learning options for classrooms, after-school programs, and independent use

Our platform is HIPAA, Medicaid, Medicare, and GDPR-compliant. We protect your data with secure systems, never sell your information, and only collect what is necessary to support your care and wellness. learn more

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