Course Content
Dealing with Mood Swings
Mood swings are one of the most common — and most confusing — experiences young people have. They can feel random, embarrassing, or even frightening. But they're rarely meaningless. Understanding what drives them is the first step to getting on top of them.
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Dealing with Mood Swings

Life Skills · Emotional Wellbeing

What triggers your mood?

A trigger is anything, a situation, a person, a thought or a physical state, that consistently tips your mood in one direction. Some triggers are obvious and others are sneaky, so getting to know yours is one of the most powerful things you can do for your emotional wellbeing.

How to find your personal triggers

1

Keep a mood journal

Note your mood out of 10, what you ate, how you slept, who you spoke to and what happened that day. Even five minutes at bedtime is enough, and patterns tend to emerge within two weeks.

2

Look for patterns, not one-offs

One bad Monday after too much coffee is just noise, whereas bad Mondays after any social event is a signal. Triggers reveal themselves in repetition rather than in single incidents.

3

Map your stressors

Work deadlines, money worries, relationship tension, family dynamics, write them down. Stress is one of the most consistent mood-swing triggers there is, yet we often don’t name it until it is already affecting us.

4

Notice negative thought loops

Thoughts like ‘I always mess things up’, or making a catastrophe out of a small setback, amplify your emotional response a great deal. Spotting the thought is the first step to interrupting the loop.

5

Check your body first

Hunger, dehydration, poor sleep and lack of exercise are all biological mood triggers. Before you ask why you feel so terrible, check the basics, when did you last eat, sleep properly and move?

6

Consider your environment

Certain people, places or online spaces may reliably lower your mood. Social media comparison spirals, draining relationships and overcrowded spaces are all legitimate triggers worth knowing about.

Real-life scenario

Ryan, 20, started keeping a simple mood note for three weeks. He noticed his lowest moods always came on days after he’d scrolled Instagram late at night, and his best days followed mornings where he’d exercised before opening his phone. He’d never connected the two before, and knowing this, he now has a rule, no social media before 9am.

Try this today

Write down three things that reliably make your mood drop, and three that reliably lift it, then keep the list somewhere you can actually see it. Most people have never done this, and those who have tend to find it genuinely useful.