Bust Holiday Stress!
By webmaster on Jul 7, 2007 in Holidays
Author by : Norma Schmidt
The holidays will be here before you know it. Clear the way for greater
joy, love and meaning this year by “busting” these sources of holiday
stress:
1. TOO MUCH TO DO IN TOO LITTLE TIME
This week, set holiday priorities with your family. Discuss what traditions
to keep, which to discard, and which new traditions to try.
Make a holiday to-do list NOW and create a realistic schedule for when
to accomplish each item.
Avoid overscheduling.
Ask family members for help with holiday tasks.
2. LONG LINES IN STORES
Shop via catalog or Internet, and avoid stores on weekends.
If you’re shopping with small children, take along snacks, books, toys or
other items to make waiting in line more pleasant. Or, if you’re
sufficiently uninhibited, sing a holiday song with your child.
If you’re shopping alone, use waiting time to relax and and center
yourself with meditation or prayer. Try directing your attention to your
breathing at your belly. Or practice observing the people around you
through the eyes of compassion, without judging. Give thanks or pray for
healing, peace, or other concerns close to your heart.
3. DIFFICULT RELATIVES
Take some quiet time to develop a plan for taking care of yourself
around relatives who “get your goat.”
Invest in yourself by using a therapist to help create a plan to protect
your boundaries.
4. CRANKY KIDS
Think “low key” for a happy celebration with little ones. Remember that
your small child thrives on your undivided attention and has a limited
capacity to adjust to adults’ “needs” to hurry.
Protect your child’s naptime and playtime.
Spend “floor-time” with your child every day.
5. COMMERCIALISM
Create family traditions that involve giving to those in need.
Focus on low-cost or no-cost holiday traditions.
Help keep children’s expectations realistic. For example, you might say
“You’ll get about the same amount of presents as you did on your
birthday.”
6. BILLS
Decide on a holiday budget for entertaining and gifts.
If credit cards make overspending too easy, stick to cash for holiday
purchases.
7. LOSS
If you have lost a loved one, the holidays may intensify your grief.
Explore ways to cope at www.griefnet.org/library/articles/hfa-tips.html
If “holiday blues” persist or seem particularly intense, don’t hesitate to
reach out for professional help. Your physician or clergyperson can give
you a referral.
8. POST-HOLIDAY LET-DOWN
Spread out the fun at least through the end of school vacation by
planning an outing or a fun time at home for each day.
A little forethought and planning can go a long way towards making you
glad the holidays are coming – instead of just being glad when they’re
over. Your wisdom holds the key to holiday joy.
Norma Schmidt, M.A., M.Div., helps busy parents create warm, peaceful,
inviting homes. To download free report, “55 Free and Low-Cost Ways
to Have the Best Holiday Season Ever,”
click here.
[tags]stress,holiday stress,stress management,family,holidays,Christmas[/tags]




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