![]() May 2026 – Mental Health Awareness Month What Happens When People Are Heard Before CrisisAs calls surge, one crisis hotline organization sees how specific listening skills can change what happens next. And they will teach these skills to your workplace.
By: Caring Contact What's notable: many of these calls weren't emergencies. They were people reaching out earlier—before things escalated. "As a crisis 988 hotline and listening community, we hear every day from people who are carrying more than they can easily put into words," said Mary Claire Givelber, Executive Director of Caring Contact. "Many callers aren't in immediate danger. Something just feels heavy, tangled, or unsettled." For many people, expressing emotions was never modeled as normal—at home, in school, or at work. So they push feelings down, stay productive, stay polite, and try to handle it alone. Long before something becomes a crisis, people have been holding unspoken feelings—and that isolation takes a toll. Feelings don't stay quiet because they're ignored. They tend to show up as chronic stress, burnout, physical symptoms, short tempers, or a persistent sense that something is "off," even if it's hard to explain why. That's where Caring Contact comes in. Trained Listeners answer calls through the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline and through Caring Contact's own crisis line—now in its fifth decade—so people can talk things through before they hit a breaking point. Callers may be lonely, grieving, overwhelmed, burned out, or simply wondering why everything feels harder than it used to. Listening That Changes the Brain Good listening isn't passive. One of the simplest tools Caring Contact Listeners use is helping people name what they're feeling—and reflecting it back clearly and kindly. Research on affect labeling, led by neuroscientist Matthew Lieberman, shows that putting emotions into words—such as "anxious," "overwhelmed," "You can hear the difference," Reflective Listening in Practice Caring Contact Listeners use reflective listening by feeding back what they hear, like "I'm hearing a mix of sadness and resentment." "It's not advice or diagnosis," said Michelle Habayeb, Director of Training at Caring Contact. "It's a mirror. When someone hears their feelings named accurately, their voice changes. They slow down. They breathe. They're not carrying it alone anymore." This approach is a core skill across the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline system because feeling understood supports regulation, trust, and follow‑through— "People say, 'I didn't realize that's what I was feeling until you said it back.' That clarity can be grounding. It helps people regain a sense of agency," explains Caring Contact Listener and board member Mayukh Mukherjee. Listening as Prevention Mental Health Awareness Month is an opportunity to talk not only about crisis response, but about what helps before crisis arrives. Bring Reflective Listening Skills to Your Organization Caring Contact now offers flexible, real‑world training for workplaces and community groups—ranging from the new half‑day volunteer experiences to short sessions at team meetings. Participants learn practical tools for their own emotional wellbeing and how to confidently support coworkers, friends, neighbors, and family members. Learn more at https://www.caringcontact.org. Media Contact Mary Claire Givelber, Caring Contact maryclaire.givelber@ (908) 301-1899 Photo: https://www.prlog.org/ End
Page Updated Last on: May 01, 2026
|