How to Choose Gratitude Over Stress This Holiday Season
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If you experience excessive anxiety and foreboding at the first sight of holiday paraphernalia in the department store, consider relaxing your expectations and shifting your mindset. These changes help make it possible to survive—and even thrive—during the stress-filled weeks from late November until early January.
Letting Go of Expectations
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Your holiday may not be everything you want it to be. By choosing not to set your expectations unrealistically low or high, but instead allowing events to unfold however they do, you can help to eliminate the pain of disappointment from your holiday season. Bonus points if you can cultivate a sense of humor and learn to laugh off all the missteps.
Shifting Your Mindset
Now that you’ve let go of expectations, it’s time to look at this holiday season through a different lens: pure, unadulterated gratitude. While it might take some effort to cultivate gratitude when stressors abound, it’s well worth it: Studies have shown that gratitude can reduce stress and anxiety, improve intimate relationships, and even promote physical health. A gratitude-filled approach to life has the potential to enhance your general well-being both this holiday season and all year long.
So what are some things to be grateful for? Well, for starters, how about any, or all, of the following:
- For family, even if certain relatives drive you absolutely wild with the desire to escape to another planet.
- For the awareness that you are not responsible for the bad behavior of others, even if they are related to you by blood.
- For those friends who love and support you no matter what—“through thick and thin,” as the old adage says.
- For the abundance of food set before you—knowing that people are starving in every corner of the world, while your plate is often overflowing.
- For the generosity of others who lead by example, whether by giving their time, money, or talent to lend a helping hand.
- For good health—possibly the most cherished gift of all; the one that can’t be bought, wrapped, or returned.
- For the wisdom of parents and grandparents, both present and deceased. Be grateful that even if you believe their mistakes wounded you in ways great or small, their intentions were, in most instances, well meaning, and who you are today is a result of their guidance and those struggles.
- For the knowledge that complete turkey dinners are available for purchase at the supermarket should yours suddenly go up in smoke.
- For the realization that something will inevitably go wrong, even under the best of circumstances, and that it is OK if it does. Look at the big picture and try to laugh it off.
- And lastly, be grateful that this day, dinner, or disaster will soon pass, and you can get back to your real life in January, the most boring, uneventful month of the year.
Suzanne Handler, M.Ed, is an author and the former director of mental health education services for Arapahoe/Douglas Mental Health Network in Centennial, CO, where she was responsible for creating mental health curricula for classroom teachers, school counselors, parents, and the general public. She is the author of The Secrets They Kept: The True Story of a Mercy Killing That Shocked a Town and Shamed a Family. The views expressed herein are hers. To learn more about Handler, visit her website or follow her on Twitter.
Originally published November 2013. Updated November 2015.
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