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Are you a Duck struggling to stay afloat? Here are some tips to handle the pressure…

Ahhh, the smell of a fresh new chapter hangs crisply in the air as we turn toward a new year of goal-setting, ambition-seeking, personal development, growth mindset, learning new skills, picking up a new language, chasing that promotion, studying for exams, investing in relationships, and taking care of ourselves with plenty of exercise, healthy eating, meditation, sleep, yoga, and….

PHEW!

It’s exhausting just thinking about all that. But still, many of us face expectations of living up to all of this stuff and it seems the more we (appear) to be coping, the more we’re expected to keep pushing forward and take on more. We’re also encouraged – implicitly or otherswise – to pretend everything’s forever fine in our lives, on social media, at uni, or in the workplace, even when it’s not.

“Everybody say CHEEEESE!” *smiles in pain*

If you already feel this article resonating with you (fewer than 150 words in!) there’s a good chance that you, or someone that you know, might be experiencing what’s known as Stanford Duck Syndrome (SDS).

Now, it’s really important to know that SDS is not a mental health condition – but it does describe a bunch of conditions (which we’ll look at in a second) that can affect our mental health.

Coined at Stanford University, SDS refers to the concept of struggling to meet overwhelming or competitive demands while presenting a cool and collected image on the surface. (Now it makes sense! Ducks gliding across a serene pond, looking all Zen-like, while – unbeknown to us – their poor feet paddle like mad to keep them going.)

Although SDS was coined to describe students’ experience, the concept applies to anyone who feels a consistent sense of pressure while trying to remain cool and composed on the surface. Here are some signs that SDS might be present…

If this sounds like it describes your experience, you’re definitely not alone. Here are some things you can try to take the edge off the pressure of feeling that you have to keep pushing yourself:


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