AS WE OBSERVE another Child’s Month, it is imperative to prioritize our children’s mental health.
We spend a tremendous amount of energy ensuring our children are physically safe.We teach them to look left and right before crossing the street. We ensure they wear their seatbelts. We invest in security at our schools.Yet, when it comes to the safety of their minds, we often leave the doors wide open.
The theme for this year’s child month, “Prioritise Our Children’s Mental Health: Strong Minds, Safer Future,” is not just a catchy phrase. It is a national emergency strategy.We cannot speak about a ‘Safer Future’ for our region without addressing the psychological state of the generation currently growing up in our homes and classrooms.The safety of our society in 2030, 2040, and 2050 depends entirely on the mental resilience we build in our children today.
When we think of ‘safety’ we often think of crime rates and physical security. We worry about the external dangers that lurk in the streets. But psychologists understand that the greatest threats to a society often stem from what festers internally.
When a child’s mental health is neglected, they do not simply ‘grow out of it’. They grow into adults carrying unresolved trauma, anxiety, and behavioural dysregulation. We see the results of this every day in our hospitals, our court systems, and our workplaces.
We cannot be surprised by the rise in youth violence or the increasing rates of substance abuse if we refuse to water the roots of emotional well-being. A society that ignores the mental health of its children is effectively manufacturing its own insecurity. A child who cannot regulate their anger becomes an adult who acts on impulse. A child who feels unheard becomes a citizen who feels disenfranchised.
Therefore, prioritizing mental health is the ultimate crime prevention. It is the most effective economic policy. It is the strongest infrastructure project a nation can undertake.
For too long, the definition of a ‘strong mind’ has been warped by misconceptions. We have confused resilience with silence. We have equated strength with the suppression of emotion. We tell boys, ‘Man don’t cry’, demanding they sever their connection to their emotions to appear tough. We tell girls to ‘stop being so sensitive’, teaching them that their feelings are a burden to others.
This creates a brittle kind of strength. It is like building a house with concrete but no steel reinforcement-it looks solid on the outside, but when the hurricane comes, it crumbles.
A true ‘Strong Mind’ is not one that never feels pain; it is one that has the tools to process pain.
A strong mind is emotionally intelligent. It can identify feelings, name them, and navigate them without destroying relationships or self-harming.
To build this, we must prioritize emotional education in our schools just as rigorously as we prioritize Math and English.We must teach our children that it is okay not to be okay.We must teach them how to fail forward, how to handle













