Seasonal Depression in Ohio: How Creative Arts Can Help Kids and Teens Feel Better This Winter
Winter in Ohio is long. Really long. By mid-March, the sun is setting right after dinner, and it feels like you haven't seen actual daylight in weeks. If you've noticed your kid seems more tired, more irritable, or just... off lately, you're probably not imagining it.
Seasonal depression hits a lot of Ohio families this time of year. And while adults at least know what's happening ("Ugh, it's just the winter blues"), kids and teens often don't have the words for it. They just know they feel bad and can't really explain why.
The good news? You don't need to wait for a diagnosis or get on a months-long waiting list to start helping. With an intake process designed to get you clear answers quickly, you don’t have to wonder whether it’s “just the blues” or something more. There are real things you can do now, practical stuff that doesn't cost much and actually works.
What Seasonal Depression Looks Like in Kids
Here's the thing about seasonal depression: it doesn't always look like sadness. Sometimes it's a teenager who suddenly can't get out of bed in the morning. Or a middle schooler who's snapping at everyone. Or a kid who's just lost interest in stuff they used to love.
You might see:
- Way more sleeping than usual (or trouble sleeping)
- Irritability that seems to come out of nowhere
- Not wanting to hang out with friends anymore
- Eating a lot more or a lot less
- Grades slipping because they can't focus
- Spending all their time in their room
The shorter days mess with brain chemistry, specifically serotonin and melatonin, which control mood and sleep. Adults struggle with this too, but kids and teens have the added challenge of not really understanding what's happening to them.
Why Creative Stuff Actually Helps
This isn't about forcing your kid to become an artist. It's about giving their brain something different to do besides spiral.
When someone's stuck in their head (replaying the same negative thoughts, feeling overwhelmed, not able to name what they're feeling) creative activities interrupt that loop. Drawing, music, writing... these things let you process emotions without having to find the perfect words for them.
The American Art Therapy Association has found that creative expression helps. At Anazao, we’ve seen this work firsthand. It’s why we’ve prioritized creative spaces in our offices—giving kids a physical place to 'get it out' when words aren't enough. And you don't need to be "good at art" for any of this to work. You really don't.
Creative Activities That Don't Require Talent
Draw How You Feel (Literally)
Sometimes "How are you feeling?" gets a shrug or an "I don't know." But putting colors on paper? That's easier. Your kid doesn't have to draw anything recognizable. They can just:
- Pick colors that match their mood and fill a page
- Make a "before and after" scribble showing how the day felt
- Draw whatever random stuff comes to mind
There's no right answer. The point is getting it out of their head and onto paper.
Build a Mood Playlist
Music changes how we feel faster than almost anything else. Have your teen make two playlists:
- One called "How I Feel Right Now"—songs that match their current mood, even if it's angry or sad.
- Another called "How I Want to Feel"—songs that feel like where they want to go.
Then put on the second playlist and take a walk together. Even ten minutes outside during daylight (yes, even on Ohio's cloudy winter days) makes a
difference.
Write For Ten Minutes
Not an essay. Not anything formal. Just... thoughts on paper. Try prompts like:
- "Today sucked when..."
- "One thing I didn't completely mess up was..."
- "If my mood was a weather report, today would be..."
Set a timer for ten minutes and see what happens. No pressure to share it with anyone.
Do Creative Stuff Near Light
Whenever possible, combine creativity with whatever natural light you can get:
- Color or draw at a table by the window
- Take photos on a walk (cloudy days count)
- Make their room's one bright corner actually theirs, let them decorate it however they want
You're hitting two things at once: creative expression and light exposure. Both help.
Making It Stick (Without Turning It Into Another Chore)
Look, you're not adding "creative time" to an already packed schedule. You're sneaking it into life that's already happening.
- Attach it to something they already do. After dinner, before homework, Saturday morning, link it to a routine that exists.
- Leave stuff out where they'll see it. Journal on the nightstand. Colored pencils on the kitchen counter. That playlist is saved and ready to go. If they have to hunt for supplies, it won't happen.
- Drop your expectations way down. Five minutes is fine. Messy is fine. "This looks terrible" is fine. It’s not about perfection, it’s about the process.
- Do it with them, not at them. Draw while they draw. Make your own playlist. Write your own journal entry. It's less weird if you're both doing it, and honestly, you probably need it too.
The goal isn't perfection. It's just... doing something. One time this week beats zero times.
For more ideas on what helps during Ohio winters, check out our Winter Wellness Strategies: Managing Stress and Seasonal Depression post.
When DIY Isn't Always Enough
Creative activities can be a helpful start, but sometimes kids need additional support to manage what they’re feeling. Anazao offers two types of services that work together:
Behavioral Therapy
Licensed therapists help children and teens understand what may be contributing to their feelings and behaviors. Through behavioral therapy, they work on emotional awareness, coping skills, and strategies to manage stress, anxiety, and seasonal depression.
Community Care (CPST / Case Management)
Community Care Workers focus on helping children and families apply those coping skills in daily life. They meet with kids at home, at school, or in the community and support them in practicing strategies (like journaling, music, or other creative tools) during real situations when stress comes up.
Together, these services help families build practical skills and routines that support mental health throughout the winter and beyond.
This Works for Medicaid Families Too
If you're on Medicaid, you should know: Anazao's services are covered. You're not looking at huge bills or fighting with insurance.
At Anazao, we provide:
- Behavioral therapy covered by Medicaid
- Support for kids, teens, and parents
- Help with skills that'll last past winter
- Local care that works with your schedule
You don't have to figure this out alone.
If your child's struggling and you want more support, we're here.
Anazao Community Partners provides Medicaid-covered behavioral therapy for children, teens, and families across Ohio. You don't need to wait for things to get worse. Call Anazao today. Let's talk about what might help.
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