Students having mental health concerns are a significant reality for the university campus. Advisers are likely to see a growing trend of increasingly severe mental health problems while advising students. Warning signs of abnormal behaviors are usually evident. The mental health disorders of depression and anxiety are highly recognized as occurring on college campuses, but advisers see many other disorders regularly in our student advisees. Learning what constitutes abnormal behavior will assist student advisees. This article is a means to educate advisers about the identification of abnormal behaviors and assist in their planning for advising students with mental health problems. Let me begin by stating that I am currently a faculty adviser at a small university in the south. However, my professional education is in Counseling Psychology and mental health. My training and experience in counseling psychology have provided me with the ability to recognize mental health illnesses and abnormality of behaviors. This article will provide some basic signs to watch for and identify as symptomology of potential mental health problems. These may be evident as overt behavioral displays or reports from your advisees. As an adviser, you will have student advisees who are experiencing or displaying mental health issues. There are oftentimes situations in which an advisee will describe symptoms that they are experiencing which sound unusual, detrimental, atypical, or even frightening. Symptomology can range from relatively mild feelings of stress, exhaustion, or fatigue all the way to severe and extreme indications of suicidality or psychoticism. A student advisee may arrive in your office for advising confused and unsure of how to gain assistance for their mental health concerns. Your role as an adviser for students is not only to help the advisee with choosing a major to study or selecting a class section. Instead, your role as an adviser may also include aiding student advisees who are in need of support, and that assistance may sometimes include mental health concerns.