The Hidden Emotional Burden of the Holidays

Author : Anthony Silard Ph.D

Hidden Emotional Burden of the Holidays: 2 Holiday Emotions

Do you feel overwhelmed, unseen, and pressured to feel joyful, carrying the emotional burden of the holidays behind forced smiles? Learn insights from expert Anthony Silard!

This is Part Two of a three-part series. You can read Part One here.

How to go about giving to others, then? Research by psychologist Lara Aknin at Simon Fraser University in Canada has found that gifts that are personalized and attune to the unique needs of the other person lead to the most happiness and relationship growth. 

The Hidden Emotional Burden of the Holidays
Reduce The Loneliness: Emotional Burden Of The Holidays

The Power of Giving to Reduce Loneliness

โ€œYes, but what do I do when I donโ€™t know what they want?โ€ you may be thinking. For starters, ask them. If that still doesnโ€™t help, give them a gift that lets them know more about who you are. 

Both strategies, Aknin has found, will likely increase your connection with the other person. Most importantly, when you give from the heart you will likely reduce the loneliness of others which, again, will have the boomerang effect of reducing yours.

When you are considering how to give to someone you care about, never underestimate the power of writing them a card. Sharing your feelings for them will likely increase both their and your estimation of the relationship and decrease loneliness all around. 

Very few people take the time to write cards anymore, preferring to write textual messages that are read and moved on from within a minute on a good day. People often put the few cards they receive on their desk or a shelf and are likely to see them again. The effect? Outsizedโ€”they are more likely to remember and appreciate their relationship with you.

The Hidden Emotional Burden of the Holidays

Holiday Emotion #3: Nostalgia

You may be feeling nostalgic from thinking about memories of family holidays and other moments from your past when you felt more connected with other people or a stronger sense of belonging than you do now. These memories may glisten yet also haunt you as you consider how you will spend the holidays this year. Further, you might (but not necessarily) inflate these memories to levels at which they never really existed, a kind of defense mechanism many of us use when we experience social discomfort or disillusionment in the present.

Nostalgia can also become conflated with grief. When someone you loved deeply is no longer around to celebrate the holidays with you, you are likely to feel both emotions. โ€œTime off during the holidays means time to address the melancholy feelings within me that Iโ€™ve been burying with my work ever since my brother passed away a few years ago,โ€ Edward told me at a recent conference.

โ€œMy father suddenly died three weeks ago and, as he was quite well, itโ€™s been a real shock for me,โ€ Jamie, another one of my conference participants, shared with me recently. โ€œI lost my mother over three decades ago when I was thirteen so Iโ€™m facing both the trauma of the loss of my dad and the awareness of being orphaned, which is challenging even if you are an adult. This year, the upcoming Christmas period is going to be really difficult.โ€

Nostalgia can be positive when you use it to reaffirm your identity and reconnect to the values you developed growing up. Over-focusing on those memories, however, may prevent you from truly engaging with the people now close to you. 

โ€œIโ€™m just not feeling the magic this year compared to before,โ€ shared Jessica. You can make the decision to instead learn from the past and use this learning to show the people you now have in your life how much you value and care about them.

Holiday Emotion #4: Anxiety

Initially Sigmund Freud, and later the existential psychologist Rollo May, referred to anxiety as an emotion without an object. More recently, it has been described by the Berkeley psychologist Richard Lazarus and his wife Bernice as an โ€œexistential emotion.โ€ 

Why? Anxiety is produced by threats to your existence you have trouble identifying. It is due to the vague yet disturbing nature of these perceived threats that anxiety elicits so much emotion activation and hyper-vigilance. โ€œI am a new father,โ€ Robert told me recently. โ€œI feel anxious when I observe my parents for the first time as grandparents. It reminds me of how time is passing so quickly and what we are all becoming.โ€

You may be feeling anxious about spending an extended period of time with your family over the holidays and you might not have voiced to yourself how disconcerted you feel about how you will manage this time. 

โ€œI know Iโ€™m going to have to spend time with a few difficult relatives who I see once per year at the holidays,โ€ shared one of my conference participants. โ€œI will see distant family members who seem to have nothing more to ask me than โ€˜When are you going to get married?โ€™โ€ lamented another. 

Read More Here: The Toxic Emotional Cocktail That Is The Holiday Season

I would like to offer your readers these two free books: The Myth of Happiness: How Your Definition of Happiness Creates Your Unhappiness and The Myth of Friendship: How Your Misunderstandings about Friendship Keep You Lonely. They can enter their email to download them here: www.theartoflivingfree.org/freehappinessandfriendshipbooks


Written by Anthony Silard Ph.D.
reduce loneliness

Published On:

Last updated on:

Anthony Silard Ph.D

Anthony Silard, Ph.D., is a Professor of Leadership and the Director of the Center for Sustainable Leadership at Luiss Business School in Rome. Anthony is the author of numerous scholarly articles on emotion and leadership with an emphasis on how leaders develop high-quality relationships and manage challenging emotions such as loneliness and secondary trauma.

Disclaimer: The informational content on The Minds Journal have been created and reviewed by qualified mental health professionals. They are intended solely for educational and self-awareness purposes and should not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing emotional distress or have concerns about your mental health, please seek help from a licensed mental health professional or healthcare provider.

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Hidden Emotional Burden of the Holidays: 2 Holiday Emotions

Do you feel overwhelmed, unseen, and pressured to feel joyful, carrying the emotional burden of the holidays behind forced smiles? Learn insights from expert Anthony Silard!

This is Part Two of a three-part series. You can read Part One here.

How to go about giving to others, then? Research by psychologist Lara Aknin at Simon Fraser University in Canada has found that gifts that are personalized and attune to the unique needs of the other person lead to the most happiness and relationship growth. 

The Hidden Emotional Burden of the Holidays
Reduce The Loneliness: Emotional Burden Of The Holidays

The Power of Giving to Reduce Loneliness

โ€œYes, but what do I do when I donโ€™t know what they want?โ€ you may be thinking. For starters, ask them. If that still doesnโ€™t help, give them a gift that lets them know more about who you are. 

Both strategies, Aknin has found, will likely increase your connection with the other person. Most importantly, when you give from the heart you will likely reduce the loneliness of others which, again, will have the boomerang effect of reducing yours.

When you are considering how to give to someone you care about, never underestimate the power of writing them a card. Sharing your feelings for them will likely increase both their and your estimation of the relationship and decrease loneliness all around. 

Very few people take the time to write cards anymore, preferring to write textual messages that are read and moved on from within a minute on a good day. People often put the few cards they receive on their desk or a shelf and are likely to see them again. The effect? Outsizedโ€”they are more likely to remember and appreciate their relationship with you.

The Hidden Emotional Burden of the Holidays

Holiday Emotion #3: Nostalgia

You may be feeling nostalgic from thinking about memories of family holidays and other moments from your past when you felt more connected with other people or a stronger sense of belonging than you do now. These memories may glisten yet also haunt you as you consider how you will spend the holidays this year. Further, you might (but not necessarily) inflate these memories to levels at which they never really existed, a kind of defense mechanism many of us use when we experience social discomfort or disillusionment in the present.

Nostalgia can also become conflated with grief. When someone you loved deeply is no longer around to celebrate the holidays with you, you are likely to feel both emotions. โ€œTime off during the holidays means time to address the melancholy feelings within me that Iโ€™ve been burying with my work ever since my brother passed away a few years ago,โ€ Edward told me at a recent conference.

โ€œMy father suddenly died three weeks ago and, as he was quite well, itโ€™s been a real shock for me,โ€ Jamie, another one of my conference participants, shared with me recently. โ€œI lost my mother over three decades ago when I was thirteen so Iโ€™m facing both the trauma of the loss of my dad and the awareness of being orphaned, which is challenging even if you are an adult. This year, the upcoming Christmas period is going to be really difficult.โ€

Nostalgia can be positive when you use it to reaffirm your identity and reconnect to the values you developed growing up. Over-focusing on those memories, however, may prevent you from truly engaging with the people now close to you. 

โ€œIโ€™m just not feeling the magic this year compared to before,โ€ shared Jessica. You can make the decision to instead learn from the past and use this learning to show the people you now have in your life how much you value and care about them.

Holiday Emotion #4: Anxiety

Initially Sigmund Freud, and later the existential psychologist Rollo May, referred to anxiety as an emotion without an object. More recently, it has been described by the Berkeley psychologist Richard Lazarus and his wife Bernice as an โ€œexistential emotion.โ€ 

Why? Anxiety is produced by threats to your existence you have trouble identifying. It is due to the vague yet disturbing nature of these perceived threats that anxiety elicits so much emotion activation and hyper-vigilance. โ€œI am a new father,โ€ Robert told me recently. โ€œI feel anxious when I observe my parents for the first time as grandparents. It reminds me of how time is passing so quickly and what we are all becoming.โ€

You may be feeling anxious about spending an extended period of time with your family over the holidays and you might not have voiced to yourself how disconcerted you feel about how you will manage this time. 

โ€œI know Iโ€™m going to have to spend time with a few difficult relatives who I see once per year at the holidays,โ€ shared one of my conference participants. โ€œI will see distant family members who seem to have nothing more to ask me than โ€˜When are you going to get married?โ€™โ€ lamented another. 

Read More Here: The Toxic Emotional Cocktail That Is The Holiday Season

I would like to offer your readers these two free books: The Myth of Happiness: How Your Definition of Happiness Creates Your Unhappiness and The Myth of Friendship: How Your Misunderstandings about Friendship Keep You Lonely. They can enter their email to download them here: www.theartoflivingfree.org/freehappinessandfriendshipbooks


Written by Anthony Silard Ph.D.
reduce loneliness

Published On:

Last updated on:

Anthony Silard Ph.D

Anthony Silard, Ph.D., is a Professor of Leadership and the Director of the Center for Sustainable Leadership at Luiss Business School in Rome. Anthony is the author of numerous scholarly articles on emotion and leadership with an emphasis on how leaders develop high-quality relationships and manage challenging emotions such as loneliness and secondary trauma.

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