Name the Feeling
Putting words to a mood can make it feel less confusing or overwhelming.
Mental Wellness & Daily Check-In
Take a gentle moment to reflect on mood, stress, sleep, energy, loneliness, and support needs — then get simple next-step ideas for today.
This tool is not a diagnosis. It is a gentle way to pause, name what you are feeling, and choose one supportive next step.
Interactive Tool
Choose the answer that feels closest today. This tool gives gentle support ideas, not a diagnosis or medical advice.
Pick the answer that feels closest right now.
Sleep and mood can affect each other.
Connection can be a big part of emotional wellness.
Small routines can help bring steadiness to the day.
This helps shape your result.
Choose what feels realistic today.
It is okay to need support.
Your safety matters most.
Why It Helps
Many seniors carry stress, grief, loneliness, sleep changes, caregiving worries, health concerns, or quiet emotional weight. A short check-in can help turn “I do not feel right” into one small next step.
Putting words to a mood can make it feel less confusing or overwhelming.
A few slow breaths, music, or quiet time may help the nervous system settle.
Calling, texting, or seeing someone can help reduce the weight of isolation.
A small routine can help the day feel more steady and less scattered.
Support Ideas
These ideas are simple starting points. They are not a replacement for professional help when feelings are severe, ongoing, or unsafe.
Use this when stress, worry, or racing thoughts feel high.
Use this when loneliness or disconnection feels heavy.
Use this when sleep, worry, or nighttime thoughts affect mood.
Use this when motivation is low or the day feels hard to start.
Use this when thoughts keep circling.
Use this when feelings are ongoing, worsening, or affecting daily life.
Related Guides
These related tools can support calmer routines, better sleep habits, hydration, and gentle daily comfort.
Find a gentle relaxation method based on mood, energy, movement, and daily routine.
Use Tool →Create gentle water reminder times, sip routines, and daily hydration habits.
Use Tool →Take a quick quiz to better understand sleep patterns, nighttime waking, and rest concerns.
Take Quiz →Browse helpful home safety, comfort, aging-in-place, and daily living topics.
Visit Hub →Common Questions
No. This tool is for general reflection and wellness support only. It does not diagnose anxiety, depression, grief, dementia, or any mental health condition.
Consider reaching out if sadness, worry, loneliness, sleep problems, confusion, grief, or distress are ongoing, worsening, or affecting daily life. A healthcare provider or mental health professional can offer personalized support.
If you feel in immediate danger or may hurt yourself or someone else, call 911 now. In the United States, you can call or text 988 for urgent emotional support through the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.
Yes, feeling isolated or disconnected can affect mood, sleep, motivation, and daily routine. Even one small connection step, such as a phone call, text, visit, group activity, or caregiver check-in, may help.
One simple habit is a daily check-in: name how you feel, take a few slow breaths, choose one small task, and connect with one person if you need support.
A gentle check-in can be the first step toward calm, connection, routine, and support when the day feels heavy.
Looking for companionship later in life? eharmony offers a dating platform many seniors use to meet people who want something more meaningful.
Visit eharmony for Seniors →