The Holiday Survival Guide. You’re gonna need it.

It’s holiday time and research tells us the invisible “mental load” we carry, contributes to symptoms of anxiety, depression, social isolation, chronic fatigue, burnout, and fear. Our question is, what can you give up this year to prioritize you.

Welcome to the Sandwich Generation. You’re caring for young children AND aging parents. You’re always hosting everything, and these holidays are no exception. That pressure to always “be on” and create holiday magic for your kids can leave you feeling like you’re responsible for EVERYTHING and get to actually enjoy NOTHING.

Here are our top tips to survive the holiday chaos this year:

Set boundaries. Many of us are MUCH better at setting boundaries with our children than with our own parents, friends, and extended families. Why? Because our old patterns from childhood are closer than we may think. We want to please everyone, we fear retribution or negative feedback, we have a family “reputation” to uphold (good or bad), we are constantly trying to change the narrative, etc., etc., the list goes on and on. Try owning your feelings, saying “NO” to what doesn’t work for you, and communicating with those around you about what you need.

Get rid of rituals that don’t work for you. Instead of doing things the “way they’ve always been done,” try doing things the way it works for you and do more of what you love. Find activities that bring you joy, new or old traditions you love, opportunities to laugh, and do more of them.

Assign tasks when you can. Giving jobs to kids and elders alike can make people feel useful and involved. Give away tasks that you don’t need to control yourself, and think of it as a way to promote participation and a sense of joy for all of your participants.

Set age-appropriate expectations. Can your child sit through a 3-hour dinner? Will they be able to sleep alone upstairs in a new place? Do they like playing with their cousins? Do they enjoy museums? Take a moment to be realistic about your holiday plans, not idealistic. Acknowledging the challenges doesn’t mean you avoid plans, just that you prepare for them.

Focus on enjoying current moments, not making beautiful IG posts. Enjoy life while it is happening instead of trying to capture it as you wish it was. We can all get so focused on the ideas in our minds that we forget to read the cues and signals all around us.

Practice forgiveness. For yourself, for others, for just about everything holiday-related.

Finally, Remember what really counts. Holidays should be about moments of connection between you and your child (and family). Relationships, and true attachment, are built by struggling through hard moments and mistakes with your kids, not avoiding them and making it all look pretty. It isn’t the pictures, the Pinterest boards, the hors d’oeuvres, or the gifts. When you can keep priorities straight, it’s easier to let go of the things that don’t ultimately matter.