🌱 Getting Clear on Your Values, Priorities, and Decisions
By: Dr. Jenn Merthe-Grayson, Licensed Clinical Psychologist
Clarity is power 💡. When you know what you value, what deserves your time, and how you make choices, you stop drifting and start living on purpose. Without this foundation, it’s easy to feel pulled in a dozen directions, leaving you stressed and unsatisfied.
1️⃣ Clarify Your Core Values
Values = your inner compass 🧭. They point you toward the kind of life you want to build and protect you from chasing someone else’s version of success.
✨ Ask yourself:
What principles do I want guiding my choices?
How do I want people to describe me?
What am I not willing to compromise on?
Write them down 🖊️. Even a short list (like integrity, growth, family, courage) can become a filter for daily decisions.
2️⃣ Align Priorities With Your Values
It’s one thing to say “family matters” or “health is important” … but do your calendar 🗓️ and energy 🔋 reflect that?
Practical step:
✔️ List your top 3–5 values
✔️ Look at how you actually spend your week
✔️ Adjust so your time + energy line up with your true priorities
3️⃣ Use Values as a Decision-Making Tool
Decision fatigue is real 😵💫. But when you filter choices through your values, things get clearer.
Instead of asking: “What should I do?”
Try asking: “Which choice best honors my values?”
💡 Example:
Value = Growth 🌱 → take the stretching, uncomfortable opportunity
Value = Family ❤️ → turn down the promotion that steals your evenings
4️⃣ Clear Decisions Change the Game
When you lead with values + priorities, you stop reacting and start creating 🚀. You’re no longer living on autopilot — you’re defining life on your own terms.
✨ Final Reflection
Clarity doesn’t erase challenges, but it does reduce regret 🙌. When your choices line up with your deepest values, life feels more authentic, purposeful, and sustainable.
👉 Try this week: ask yourself, Am I living in alignment with my values, or just reacting to what comes my way? The answer may be your very own game-changing moment.
The Secret to Happiness? It’s in the Quality of Your Relationships
By: Dr. Jenn Merthe-Grayson, Licensed Clinical Psychologist
When people think about happiness, they often focus on external achievements—career success, financial stability, personal goals. And while those things certainly matter, research consistently tells us that one factor rises above the rest when it comes to lasting happiness: the quality of our relationships.
It’s not about how many friends you have, how often you socialize, or even whether you’re in a romantic relationship. What truly matters is the depth, safety, and emotional connection within your relationships—those moments where you feel truly seen, supported, and valued.
Why Relationships Matter for Mental Health
Human beings are wired for connection. From infancy, our nervous systems are shaped through attachment and emotional attunement. As adults, the quality of our relationships continues to affect our psychological and physiological well-being. Strong, emotionally safe relationships:
Lower stress and cortisol levels
Boost resilience and emotional regulation
Reduce symptoms of depression and anxiety
Increase life expectancy and physical health
Simply put, we thrive when we feel securely connected to others.
It’s Not About Perfection—It’s About Presence
One of the biggest misconceptions is that happiness in relationships comes from never arguing or always being in sync. In reality, the happiest people often have conflict, disagreements, and ruptures—but they also have the tools and willingness to repair, reconnect, and remain emotionally available.
Quality relationships are built through vulnerability, consistency, and a shared commitment to growth. Whether it’s a partner, close friend, or family member, showing up in ways that say “I see you, I hear you, and I care” can transform both people.
How to Cultivate More Meaningful Connections
If you’re looking to increase happiness through stronger relationships, start here:
Be Present – Put the phone down. Make eye contact. Practice deep listening without jumping in to fix.
Express Gratitude – A simple “thank you” or “I appreciate you” goes a long way in reinforcing bonds.
Repair Quickly – When conflict happens (and it will), lean into honest repair rather than letting resentment grow.
Invest Time – Meaningful relationships don’t happen by accident. Prioritize time with the people who matter.
Create Safety – Emotional safety is the foundation. Aim to be a soft place to land, not a source of judgment or threat.
A Reflection Worth Considering
Harvard’s 80+ year longitudinal study on adult development—often cited as one of the most comprehensive studies on happiness—concluded this:
“The clearest message from our study is this: Good relationships keep us happier and healthier. Period.”
No amount of success can substitute for the warmth of a strong, supportive connection. As a psychologist, I often see clients light up not when they reach a milestone, but when they feel truly connected—when they laugh with a friend, cry with a partner, or heal a painful wound with a loved one.
So if you’re searching for happiness, start with your relationships. Nurture them. Deepen them. Protect them. Because in the end, love and connection aren’t just part of a good life—they are the good life.
The Company We Keep: How Our Relationships Shape Our Mental Health
By: Dr. Jenn Merthe-Grayson, Licensed Clinical Psychologist
“Show me your friends, and I’ll show you your future.”
It’s a saying we often hear in adolescence—but the truth of it echoes across every life stage. As a psychologist, I see time and again how the people we surround ourselves with can profoundly impact our mood, our habits, our self-worth, and even our sense of possibility.
We Are Wired for Connection
Human beings are inherently social creatures. From infancy, our nervous systems learn to regulate through connection. In adulthood, our relationships continue to shape our brains through co-regulation, emotional feedback, and shared meaning. The people in our lives either help us feel safe and supported—or trigger chronic stress, self-doubt, or emotional exhaustion.
The Mirror Effect
Psychologists call it social contagion—the tendency to absorb the behaviors, emotions, and even thought patterns of those around us. When we spend time with optimistic, growth-oriented individuals, we’re more likely to feel hopeful and resilient. When we’re surrounded by criticism, cynicism, or drama, our emotional bandwidth narrows.
This doesn’t mean we should expect our loved ones to be perfect or positive all the time. But it does mean that paying attention to how we feel around others—drained or energized, small or seen—can offer valuable clues about the psychological impact of our social circles.
Boundaries Are an Act of Self-Compassion
Sometimes, the most powerful act of self-care isn’t a solo activity—it’s a boundary. It's learning to say no to relationships that consistently undermine our mental health, and yes to those that uplift and challenge us in healthy ways. This might mean spending less time with a friend who constantly gossips or limits your dreams—or more time nurturing connections that feel reciprocal and kind.
Curating Connection with Intention
Ask yourself:
Who makes me feel calm, capable, or inspired?
Who drains me, triggers my anxiety, or diminishes my confidence?
What kind of relationships do I want more of—and how can I cultivate them?
Being intentional about the company we keep is not about elitism or avoidance. It's about alignment. It's about making room for people who support our growth, hold space for our vulnerability, and celebrate our becoming.
Final Thoughts
Mental health isn't just something we manage within ourselves—it's also something we co-create with others. As you invest in your well-being, don’t overlook the quiet power of your relationships. The right people won’t just walk beside you; they’ll help you walk taller.