Hassan, 20, from Birmingham, finished his A levels in 2022 and has been out of work ever since.
“This year has been kind of a constant struggle. I want to get a job but how do I get a job? And how do I write the right CV? And how do I apply for things?”
He is receiving help with these struggles from the King's Trust.
Hassan missed out on sitting his GCSE exams because of the Covid pandemic and said sitting formal exams for the first time at 18 was "overwhelming".
“I realised what I had been calling 'stress' for many years was actually anxiety. I had been carrying it with me for so long," he said.
“There’s a lot of talk these days about mental health. But a lot of people think it’s overrepresented… that makes you feel uncertain about trying to identify these problems you deal with in your daily life.”
The government's Get Britain Working plan states that places with the highest levels of unemployment will receive extra NHS support, including additional mental health specialists.
Hassan’s poor mental health in his final year at school meant he put off applying to university, but due to the rising cost of tuition fees, he’s now unsure if it's right for him.
“There’s this thing that is still sold to us, it’s the idea that you should get good grades, and go to university, and get a job, and get a house, and start a family, but that’s not how it is. It’s not happening for our generation.”