Supporting others
Show up and Support in Specific, Concrete Ways
When someone is going through a hard time, even the smallest acts of support can be significant. Learn about specific, concrete ways you can support others.
In a crisis, sometimes everything you can think of doing to help seems insignificant. That feeling often leads people to pull back and do nothing at all. But you don’t need to solve all of a person’s problems to make a difference. Doing something tangible and concrete, even if it feels small, matters.
When people describe what got them through hard times, they talk about friends and family showing up for them in simple ways. People texting “I’m thinking of you,” tidying their kitchen, meeting for pickup basketball, or coming by with brownies to binge-watch terrible sitcoms.
Research shows that even the smallest acts of support, like putting your hand on someone’s back during a stressful moment, can significantly reduce anxiety.1 In the face of hardship, just turning up is enough to make a difference.
Helping your friends and family navigate hardship doesn’t require a huge investment of time or money. You don’t need magic words that make everything better. You just need to do something to show you care. If you don’t get it quite right the first time, that’s okay. Shift your approach and keep turning up so your loved one knows they’re not alone.
Other Lessons
Endnotes
Jessica P. Lougheed, Peter Koval, and Tom Hollenstein, “Sharing the Burden: The Interpersonal Regulation of Emotional Arousal in Mother-Daughter Dyads,” Emotion 16, no. 1 (January 2016): 83–93.