Dana Hashmonay (@d_hashmo) was a freshman at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y., in 2014 when she began having anxiety attacks before every class and crew practice, focusing on uncertainties about the future and comparing herself to seemingly well-adjusted classmates. "At that point, I didn’t even know I had anxiety. I didn’t have a name for it. It was just me freaking out about everything, big or small," she says. When she tried to make an appointment with the counseling center, she was put on a two-week waitlist. When she finally met with a therapist, she wasn’t able to set up a consistent weekly appointment because the center was overbooked. "I felt like they were more concerned with, 'Let’s get you better and out of here,'" she says, "instead of listening to me." The now 21-year-old, photographed here by @evaoleary, is one of a rapidly growing number of college students seeking mental health treatment on campuses facing an unprecedented demand for counseling services. Between 2009 and 2015, the number of students visiting counseling centers increased by about 30% on average, while enrollment grew by less than 6%, the Center for Collegiate Mental Health found in a 2015 report. Hashmonay started meeting weekly with an off-campus therapist, and later took a leave of absence midway through her sophomore year. She thinks the university could have done more, but notes that the school seemed to be facing a lack of resources as more students sought help. "I think I needed something that the university just wasn’t offering." Read the full story on TIME.com. Photograph by @evaoleary for TIME

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Dana Hashmonay (@d_hashmo) was a freshman at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y., in 2014 when she began having anxiety attacks before every class and crew practice, focusing on uncertainties about the future and comparing herself to seemingly well-adjusted classmates. "At that point, I didn’t even know I had anxiety. I didn’t have a name for it. It was just me freaking out about everything, big or small," she says. When she tried to make an appointment with the counseling center, she was put on a two-week waitlist. When she finally met with a therapist, she wasn’t able to set up a consistent weekly appointment because the center was overbooked. "I felt like they were more concerned with, 'Let’s get you better and out of here,'" she says, "instead of listening to me." The now 21-year-old, photographed here by @evaoleary, is one of a rapidly growing number of college students seeking mental health treatment on campuses facing an unprecedented demand for counseling services. Between 2009 and 2015, the number of students visiting counseling centers increased by about 30% on average, while enrollment grew by less than 6%, the Center for Collegiate Mental Health found in a 2015 report. Hashmonay started meeting weekly with an off-campus therapist, and later took a leave of absence midway through her sophomore year. She thinks the university could have done more, but notes that the school seemed to be facing a lack of resources as more students sought help. "I think I needed something that the university just wasn’t offering." Read the full story on TIME.com. Photograph by @evaoleary for TIME


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