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How Can I Foster A Christmas Spirit With The Relatives?

You want Christmas to be a happy time but you feel uneasy. At this season of the year, you will be with the relatives and in-laws, who perhaps you don't often see, and you want it to go well without too much family drama. But you know you will be spending a lot of time with perhaps a person or two you can find irritating or with whom you don't particularly get on. If seems that there is always someone who never likes the present you buy, the food you cook or the family game you suggest.
There may be disagreement over what to watch on television. Embarrassing questions may be asked and unresolved issues touched on. If some one has a dig, it is so easy to take the bait and get upset with people on top of each other. You may even sometimes wonder whether you can survive Christmas with the relatives.
Yet the spirit of Christmas is supposed to be about generosity and warmth, for family togetherness, children and fun. How can we foster that spirit in the face of our unease? Here are some suggestions.
  • If the strain is beginning to tell, why not take some time out for yourself. Think of some reason to leave the company for a while if someone is really getting under your skin -- going for a short walk "to clear the head after too much to drink", going into the kitchen "to do the washing up", going upstairs "to check on the children."

  • You might be able to suggest a change of scene for at least some of the family group e.g. going out to a football match or the pub for those who might enjoy this. It could distract people from what had been going on.

  • You might try taking a step back from the emotional atmosphere around you. Adopt passive observation rather than active participation. Observe what is going on as if you are watching a television drama. In this way you can achieve a degree of emotional distance from the person who is irritating you and feel less involved in any arguments.

  • In these days of ready expression of personal feeling we tend to say 'Let it all hang out.' The idea of suppressing our feelings is not what we are supposed to do. The old Victorian saying 'Least said, soonest mended,' has gone out of common use. But perhaps its time has come again. When feeling provoked, why not try counting to ten before rising to the bait? Instead of immediately saying what is on your mind, you could ask yourself whether a social occasion such as a special family occasion is really the time and place to have a row about something that is under the surface and not going to be resolved easily. Ask yourself whether speaking your mind would really help clear the air rather than make something bigger than it need be and add ammunition for future tension. Then you can choose between saying nothing or asserting your viewpoint (quietly and with respect for the other person's perspective).

  • Don't allow someone sulking or getting overexcited to spoil your own good time. Even when they are boring or annoying you, try to appreciate the presence of people with whom you have ties of family identity and common interest. It is easier to overlook someone's negative side when you can see their good points; easier to have fun when you are in good humour. In other words why not enjoy what you can in making the most of the situation you find yourself in?
I believe if you think ahead about possible choices and then at the time choose the wisest one for any given situation, it should be possible to rise above family difficulties and foster a spirit of Christmas.
From a deeper perspective, this means letting the ordinary attachments of what has been called the 'little self' to die. The 'little self's' ordinary attachment is to receiving attention, praise, or pleasure at the expense of the needs of the social context. I would suggest that only when the 'little self' dies can the 'higher self' become fully alive. Only when you let your selfish cravings die will the Christmas (or Christ) spirit become incarnate within you.
Copyright 2011 Stephen Russell-Lacy
As a clinical psychologist, Stephen Russell-Lacy has specialised in cognitive-behavioural psychotherapy, working for many years with adults suffering distress and disturbance.
He edits Spiritual Questions a free eZine that explores links between spiritual philosophy and the comments and questions of spiritual seekers. You can share your views and find out more about feeling good, personal well-being & spiritual healing
His book Heart, Head and Hands draws links between the psycho-spiritual teachings of the eighteenth century spiritual philosopher Emanuel Swedenborg and current ideas in therapy and psychology.
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