Friday, November 23, 2007

be careful of holiday blues

came across the following article.. it may be written in US context and for people who already have their own families but we can still take home some of the ideas in there..

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The holiday season officially begins this week, although you may feel like it has been here for a month already. For people with depression, six weeks of enforced good cheer can feel like six years of torture, complete with its own soundtrack. What do you do if you just don't feel it inside?

Holidays Got You Singing the Blues?
By: David Sternberg



It's the most wonderful time of the year, right? Jack Frost is nipping at your nose, the turkey is roasting in the oven and your neighborhood is aglow in festive lights and holiday cheer.

So how come you're so miserable?

You may be experiencing the "holiday blues," a combination of sadness and stress that affects many people this time of year, beginning with Thanksgiving and ending around New Year's.

A major contributor to the "holiday blues" is the unrealistic expectations many of us have of the holidays, due in no small part to movies, television and advertisements.

Hollywood has long portrayed the winter holidays — particularly Christmas — as a time of magic and wonder ('It's a Wonderful Life' and 'Miracle on 34th Street' are two examples). This creates a fantasy to have a sort of Norman Rockwell experience.

But when our lives, sometimes messy and complicated, don't match these media messages, it's easy to feel that we have failed in some deep and meaningful way.

"We have such high anticipation for the holidays and very unrealistic expectations," says Atlanta psychologist Marjorie Blum. "It leaves us with this feeling of dread when our idealized views are not met."

Instead, Blum notes, "we need to expect imperfections in events and in ourselves, and expand and develop new traditions."

Tradition and expectation are often intertwined at the holidays, and when the two are at odds, it's easy to become frustrated or disappointed.

"We have traditions we like to follow at certain holidays and when someone wants to deviate, it gets those who want to retain them bent out of shape and uncomfortable," says Jannette Robert Murray, a psychotherapist in Spokane, Washington.


Another factor for the "holiday blues" is family. For most of us, the holidays mean getting together with our families. For some, unfortunately, our family is not the Hallmark version but a source of tension and conflict in which longstanding grudges often get played out.

So, while we may work hard all year at avoiding our family, at the holidays we come face-to-face with their foibles, whether it's our uncle's drinking problem or our mother's not-so-subtle jabs at our parenting skills or relationship choices.

Family tension can often sap us of energy, which can already be in short supply at the holidays.

That's because we are busier than ever this time of year — cooking holiday meals, shopping for presents, attending parties, and traveling or hosting family and friends.

The increased social demands of the holidays typically affect women more than men.

"Women are so used to doing so much for everyone around them, and the stress becomes even greater around the holidays," says Linda Stolarz, a psychotherapist in New York.

"At the holidays there are so many more people to take care of, and add to that all of the shopping and cooking to do. And if you've also got work stuff to take care of, it can become a very stressful time," she added.

Making matters worse is that the good self-care we practice all year flies right out the window at the holidays. We stay up later than we normally do and don't exercise as often as usual. On top of that, we tend to overindulge on sugary and fatty foods and alcohol, adding to our lethargy.

Compounding matters is the stress of increased traffic on the roads, large crowds at the malls (particularly if we waited to the last minute to do our shopping) and long lines at the airports and train stations.

Finally, self-reflection plays a role, as many of us look back on the previous year to gauge our progress in different areas of our lives.

Sadly, we often give our losses — anything from the death of a loved one to our youngest child leaving the nest — considerably more weight than our gains. These losses are often exacerbated at holiday get-togethers for a variety of reasons.

It may be the first Christmas or Hanukkah without a loved one or we may feel as if we "should" be happy because it is supposed to be such a joyous time


Yes, the holidays can be a difficult time, but there are several things you can do to keep yourself happy and healthy. (If, however, feelings of sadness and stress continue into the new year, you should consult a mental health professional.)

1. Eat and drink in moderation
The holidays mean lots of parties where rich food and alcohol often take center stage.

"It's a time of celebration and letting go," says Blum. "The problem is our bodies are not geared for that all or nothing kind of behavior."

While it's tempting to have that third martini or second helping of pumpkin pie, the downsides are numerous and significant: hangovers and weight gain, to name just a few.

2. Set limits and boundaries with others

If family members are a source of stress, decide to spend only part of your time with them.

Just because Aunt Sarah and Uncle Robert are in town for the Thanksgiving weekend, it doesn't mean you have to spend every waking minute with them. Give yourself a break; set aside some time for yourself or with friends.

3. Ask others for help
As natural caretakers, women tend to take on most, if not all, of the social responsibilities this time of year.

You will burn yourself out trying to do it all. Aim to be more of a manger than a one-woman show. Enlist your spouse, siblings or children to help cook, shop, pick up relatives at the airport, etc.

4. Maintain a regular exercise or self-care regimen
Even at a reduced amount (say, 20 minutes of brisk walking a day versus your usual 45 minutes on the Stairmaster), exercise will help keep you feeling good physically and emotionally.

1 comment:

Bing said...

nice article you hsared =) indeed, problems tend to arise when expectations are not aligned, in almost every area and aspects of our lives, inherently, human behaviour.

looking at one of the paragraphs stating the differnces in tradition and expectations, reminds me of folk traditions. this is a little out of topic, but i was thinking in villages or in the past, when expectations (in terms of health, weather, harvests, work performance) are not met, people tend to turn to tradition or rituals, i.e. using faith as a dependable means to align or justify such departures in expectations. they will pray, dance, perform rituals to make things 'right', trusting that whatever that they do in the ritual shows their efforts and will to change the course of things, and attributing it to unrelated subject matters (angry gods, spirits at play).

on hindsight, perhaps such a mentality is not so bad; sometimes it may help to take the stress or self-blame out of people. and also a much more simplistic way to handle disparity.

a bit out of topic here haha...but it's a nice read =)