I want to go back to what a few people have discussed. Let's bring it back to the family, and let's bring it back to the schools and into the community.
One of the things that really is curious to me is why, after two and a half years of such significant increase in mental health concern—and we all spoke about it—school counsellors and psychologists have either been let go or are not deemed necessary. I heard several examples of this just in Calgary. We need that force in the resources in the schools.
I also think we need to take it back. I love the prenatal or the early childhood where we teach parents how to regulate their own emotions. They can have the highest IQ, but if you haven't learned emotional regulation, when the avalanche is coming you may start doing things that you wouldn't typically do. I think we need training at different areas—community, places of worship, within schools—where we help parents learn techniques such as mindfulness, emotional regulation. This will help them with many of those things to help adolescents. If you're not in a grounded environment, you cannot ground yourself.
My approach a lot of the time is to work with the parents to help the youth, to coach them to be in a better place and then to deal with the crises.