viZen
Your Personalized Path to Mental Peace
viZen is your compassionate companion for mental well-being, offering personalized advice and empathetic support through your messages.Designed to reduce the stigma around seeking help, viZen provides a confidential and non-judgmental platform for sharing thoughts and emotions. With viZen, immediate support is just a message away, bridging the gap in mental health services and fostering a sense of community and well-being.
viZen provides personalized advice tailored to each user's specific needs and concerns. By analyzing user inputs, viZen offers customized recommendations to help users improve their mental well-being.
viZen offers empathetic support to help users cope with their emotions and navigate difficult situations. Through encouraging messages and practical strategies, viZen aims to uplift spirits and provide a sense of comfort.
viZen provides counseling services for users seeking more in-depth support and guidance. The chatbot serves as a compassionate listener, offering a safe space for users to express themselves and receive guidance.
viZen ensures user privacy and confidentiality, creating a safe and secure environment for sharing thoughts and emotions. The chatbot employs data protection measures to safeguard user information.
viZen offers immediate support that is accessible anytime, anywhere. The chatbot is available 24/7, allowing users to seek assistance whenever they need it, from any device.
The impact of racial discrimination as an Adverse Childhood Experience, and its relationship to other ACEs, is only recently beginning to receive attention and research.
Whether you have struggled with depression for four months or forty years, I can guarantee you already know one thing: depression is fickle, depression is complicated, and it is the nearly impossible to describe.
When we talk about self-care, we think about it as this luxury piece of time that we have to carve out every single day. It’s drummed into us that we should be taking long soaks in a lavender bath and having time to rest and while yes, that would be nice, it’s not the only form of self care and frankly it doesn’t work for everyone..
So you’ve been diagnosed with a Social Anxiety Disorder and you quickly realise how many people just think you’re “a bit shy” or using it as an excuse or even using it to get sympathy or attention. Does that sound about right? That’s if you’ve even told anyone you have it of course because let’s face it, that’s not an easy thing to do when you have social anxiety.