Life Coaching Tips : About.com Holiday Season Stress Relief

Managing Inevitable Holiday Season Stress

By , About.com Guide, Updated December 12, 2011

Welcome to the holiday season, that whirlwind of gift-giving holidays, marketing blitzes, holiday parties and activities galore that begins right after Halloween, builds to Thanksgiving, and continues gaining momentum through the end of the year.

While this season is meant to bring feelings of love and cheer, it’s also the harbinger of holiday stress for many. In fact, according to a poll conducted on this site, more than 80% of us find the holiday season to be ‘somewhat’ or ‘very’ stressful — that ranks navigating the holidays right up there with asking for a raise! What is it that has us all so hot and bothered?

What Causes Holiday Stress?

  • Doing Too Much
    All things in moderation, as the saying goes. The problem with the holiday season is that we often experience too much of a good thing. While stress itself is necessary for our survival and zest for life (researchers call this positive type of stress “eustress“), too much stress has a negative impact on our health, both mental and physical. Too many activities, even if they are fun activities, can culminate in too much holiday stress and leave us feeling frazzled, rather than fulfilled.
  • Eating, Drinking and Spending Too Much
    An overabundance of parties and gift-giving occasions lead many people to eat, drink, and be merry – often to excess. The temptation to overindulge in spending, rich desserts or alcohol can cause many people the lasting stress of dealing with consequences (debtweight gain, memories of embarrassing behavior) that can linger long after the season is over. Also, in these more difficult financial times, finding affordable gifts can be stress in itself, and carrying holiday debt is a tradition that too many people unwittingly bring on themselves, and the stress that comes with it can last for months.
  • Too Much Togetherness
    The holidays are a time when extended families tend to gather. While this can be a wonderful thing, even the most close-knit families can overdose on togetherness, making it hard for family members to maintain a healthy balance between bonding and alone time. Many families also have ‘roles’ that each member falls into that have more to do with who individuals used to be rather than who they are today, which can sometimes bring more dread than love to these gatherings.
  • Not Enough Togetherness
    For those who don’t have these family issues, loneliness can be just as much of a problem. As the world seems to be gathering with family, those who rely more on friends for support can feel deserted and alone.
  • Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)
    An often unrecognized problem that comes with the holiday season is actually a by-product of the seasons changing from fall to winter. As daylight diminishes and the weather causes many of us to spend more time indoors, many people are affected to some degree by a type of depression known as seasonal affective disorder. It’s a subtle, but very real condition that can cast a pall over the whole season and be a source of stress and unhappiness during a time that people expect to feel just the opposite.

Minimizing The Holiday Stress

The great thing about holiday stress is that it’s predictable. Unlike many other types of negative stress we encounter in life, we know when holiday stress will begin and end, and we can make plans to reduce the amount of stress we experience and the negative impact it has on us. Here are some tips you can try to help reduce holiday stress before it begins so that it remains at a positive level, rather than an overwhelming one:

Set Your Priorities

Before you get overwhelmed by too many activities, it’s important to decide what traditions offer the most positive impact and eliminate superfluous activities. For example, if you usually become overwhelmed by a flurry of baking, caroling, shopping, sending cards, visiting relatives and other activities that leave you exhausted by January, you may want to examine your priorities, pick a few favorite activities and really enjoy them, while skipping the rest.

Read on for more strategies to manage these holiday stressors and others.

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About kfo

For more info, please go to www.kevinforesman.com Kevin Foresman is a Multimedia Artist and Entrepreneur currently living in Dallas, Texas. Kevin is a veteran of the North Texas Radio and Television industries having worked in them for over 30 years. Currently, he is the Owner and GM of Enlumnia Radio Network: Causecasts Creating Conscious Change at www.enlumnia.com. As part of the dynamic Enlumnia program lineup, Kevin hosts and produces the causecast Raw Soul Radio: Real, Aware and Worldwide, an inspiring mashup of interviews with leaders in cutting edge personal transformation, such as Gregg Braden, Dr. Judith Orloff, Dr. John F. Demartini, Paul Wedding, Ernest Chu, and many other spiritual sages, with highlights of spiritually uplifting music and meditation segments. Kevin is an accomplished Fine Art Abstract Photographer and Video Artist. His fine art photography was first featured at the Alex Gray Microcosm Gallery in the Chelsea area of New York City. Kevin’s video artistry is featured on his YouTube page at www.youtube.com/kfo99 where is work has been viewed by over 600,000 viewers, including nearly 900 suscribers to his site. Kevin is very active with audio and video production through kfomedia. He currently promotes and produces a series of concert celebrations known as Creekside of Forest, musical and performance experiences featuring a wide range of genres including rock, pop, jazz, folk, reggae, tribal, and New Thought, sponsored by Unity of Dallas. He is currently writting a book and documentary script with Paul Wedding about their autobiographical accounts of transforming from being destitute to becoming destined to greatness, and plan to tour in the Fall of 2011 to support their efforts to cause conscious change towards negative attitudes and dated perceptions of the physical and spiritual homeless in America via their dynamic speaking engagements.
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