The holiday season often brings immense expectations around joy and togetherness. Yet for many dealing with grief, loneliness or other difficulties, this contrast sparks sadness instead. Having walked through holidays seasons mourning my mother’s passing, I cultivated gentle coping strategies smoothing out intense emotions when they swell.
In this article, I’ll share insightful philosophies and practical approaches found helpful for navigating holiday hardship based on my journey. My hope is these tips for finding peace amid the bustling holiday intensity offer you comfort too during this reflective season.
Why The Holidays Can Heighten Sadness
Before outlining specific coping methods, it helps naming why this celebratory time of year amplifies sorrow for so many whether due to:
- Grieving those no longer physically here to make fond memories
- Strained relationships with distant or estranged family
- Few close social connections nearby to gather with
- Financial struggles making gifts or travel difficult
- Unmet expectations around successes to have achieved
Personally losing my mother just before the holidays, her absence at traditions we delighted in loomed large ripping open that wound anew. I felt lost wandering holiday aisles hearing her favorite carols.
By acknowledging the many potential reasons the holidays evoke sadness – despite incessant commercialized cheer – we release shame over struggling. We all navigate periods of hardship and loneliness. You don’t need to erase or hide natural grief responses.
The healthiest approach I’ve found entails forgiving myself when sadness surfaces then redirecting gently towards what comforts. Here are methods that anchored me through turbulent holiday seas…
1. Seek Out Company to Avoid Isolation
The deepest despair set in whenever I withdrew further into solitude which offered no distraction from painful ruminations.
I felt lift just stepping outside my home so made efforts reaching out:
- At community holiday events like caroling groups or tree lighting ceremonies I exchanged smiles with strangers also bundling against the festive chill finding connection in shared humanity.
- Coordinating relaxed gatherings with other local friends lacking family nearby brought warmth into a long, quiet December. Simple potlucks eased loneliness if I suppressed instinct to isolate.
- Volunteering at homeless shelters or food banks focused my attention on serving others also battling hardship greater than mine. We swapped stories stoking compassion muting personal sorrows.
Steady companionship during the often elongated, sentimental holiday season kept darker thoughts from consuming me entirely.
2. Embrace Festivities at Your Own Pace
Well-meaning people would insist I needed to “get into the holiday spirit!” which inadvertently made me feel flawed for not mirroring their enthusiasm. With time I learned comparison breeds only frustration.
We each celebrate uniquely so define reasonable traditions respecting your emotional boundaries:
- When previously elaborate décor triggered sadness noticing my mom’s absence, I scaled back – just displaying a small wreath she handwove acknowledging bittersweet nostalgia without overwhelming myself.
- My friend who recently lost her husband sends holiday cards to others spreading cheer despite not feeling cheery herself. Checking one task off her list lightens her mood slightly.
- Another avoids commercial chaos completely – hiking through snow dusted forests rejuvenating her spirit, reminding herself seasons circle back again.
Tune into what soothes versus depletes you right now guiding choices – not external expectations.
3. Find Closure Around Past Losses
Unresolved grief often lingers strongest whenever milestones arrive that missing loved ones used to share with you. Birthdays, graduations, holidays – their absence occupies the vacant space painfully.
Rather than denying this truth, I found relief through intentional remembrance rituals like:
- Baking my great grandmother’s legendary fruitcake, imagining how her wrinkled hands kneaded the same dough annually. Discussing fond stories over sliced cake with relatives bonded us missing her recipes now that she passed at 94.
- Decorating my mantle with ornate bells my mom displayed during my childhood that tinkled joyously whenever anyone entered a room. Hearing their nostalgic chime lets me envision her smiling face again if just for a fleeting second.
- Donating blankets to the homeless shelter my caring aunt volunteered monthly for I discovered after her funeral. Knowing donations link me to her legacy of empathy and service sparks comfort.
Use sentimental heirlooms and charitable acts in missing loved ones’ honor to process grief, celebrating their lasting impact on the fabric of your identity and community.
4. Be Gentle With Expectations of Yourself
When mired in sadness everything feels exponentially harder as emotional fatigue overwhelms. Extend gracious understanding towards yourself.
Rather than measuring this season’s magic by idealized hallmarks, define personal success on your own compassionate terms:
- I no longer pressure myself striving to bake elaborate holiday treats to compensate for emotional numbness. Instead, I spend restorative time slowly hand mixing my mom’s modest snickerdoodle recipe we used make together, forgiving my limited capacity to show up vibrantly right now. It’s enough.
- Similarly, I step back assessing my mental bandwidth realistically then scale activity levels accordingly. When especially depleted by recurring grief pangs, I conserve energy sending just a few cherished friends thoughtful handwritten holiday cards briefly sharing my heart rather than stressing about having the perfect impressive family newsletter to have “made it” career/kid/life wise at my age according to societal timelines.
This season highlights how we all wander different stages in unique seasons of struggle or joy on ever winding paths never quite matching popularized portraits of holiday hustle. Grant yourself sufficient breathing room along your particular journey to cope.
5. Practice Daily Self-Care
Balancing holiday busyness amid grieving often feels impossible without ruthless prioritization of self-care to prevent emotional crashes leaving you bed ridden for days.
Build in these soothing activities between obligatory commitments:
- Luxuriate in lengthy bubble baths with epsom salts to unwind tight shoulders from maintained composure during prolonged socializing when you desperately want to retreat into a quiet room alone instead.
- Step outside solo even just for 5 minutes during hectic days to clear your head with deep breaths of crisp winter air. Stay present rather than spinning anxious thoughts about everything left undone on your holiday to-do list.
- Savor a slow breakfast purposefully not rushing onto the next thing. Linger over comforting cups of chamomile tea, soft blankets and nostalgic songs that let some tears flow in safe solitude since everyone feels compelled towards performative cheer around the holidays. Be authentic.
Consistent mini self-care receptacles help sustain you through demanding holiday terrain.
6. Gift Yourself the Grace of Reflection
Busyness breeds avoidance of complex feelings needing processing. Carve out thoughtful space for journaling about evolving perspectives on this season of contrasts suspended between nostalgia and hope.
Explore insightful reflection question prompts:
- “What comforting childhood holiday memories could I incorporate into new traditions expressing my family’s unique fingerprint?”
- “What false constraints or expectations do I impose on myself competing with what maters most?”
- “How do I wish to walk through this holiday season aligned with my core values?”
By clearly defining your authentic desires separate from inherited assumptions, you can take ownership redirecting things towards fitting your emotional needs this year. Start envisioning actionable possibilities that spark warmth rather than dread if this season dredges up grief over people or times passed.
The holidays often magnify pre-existing sadness against the backdrop of prescribed cheer. But by granting yourself permission to hurt, working through emotions intentionally, embracing manageable traditions on your own loving terms and infusing self-care, flickers of light can gradually infuse the darkness once more.
I’m still navigating learning how to actively mourn while celebrating during the holidays in a fluid way honoring my evolving needs – but it gets gentler each year trusting this process. May you feel permission to entirely be yourself in all your complex contradictions and discover what comforts through loving wisdom this reflective season offers by listening inward first. You deserve that tenderness and warmth.