By: D. A. Wolf for Divorced Moms.
Newly separated or divorced? Currently anticipating the holiday blues? There are no easy answers, but I may have a few suggestions now that the season is upon us, even if your familial landscape (and marital status) is undergoing a difficult time of change.
Just remember – Christmas isn’t about the turkey on your table or the one you’ve been fighting with in court! Marital discord, separation, and divorce bring out the worst in all of us – yes, women, too.
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Do remember what you have to be grateful for. And, in every life – there’s plenty.
- If you have kids – the holidays are about them. Whatever the age, make your day about closeness – food, talk, games, a football tossed around the building hallway, or out in the backyard that needs raking. Ask about school, their dreams, what they’d like to read next. Whatever is age appropriate – and will make them feel like the centre of your heart. Because, after all, don’t they need that right now more than anything?
- What else to be grateful for? Your health, your friends, your family. And it isn’t about quantity. It’s about quality.
- Want more? How about this wonderful resource of women just like you and nothing like you – but all of us anxious to engage in conversation, to listen, to lend our experience, to extend a hand and get to know you.
- Do you have a job? In this economy, that’s worth a big thank you.
- Is your ex doing his best to co-parent according to schedule? Another thank you is due. It isn’t always the case.
- What about a hot pair of shoes? No? Shame! I’ve got plenty of suggestions on that score, and you just may need them in December. (We’ll talk…)
Christmas for someone living below the poverty line. Post continues below.
Christmas, Chanukah, Kwanza, Winter Solstice, and so on
Whatever you celebrate, remember that giving can be the greatest “getting” that there is. Isn’t that what this time of year is about? Wouldn’t it feel incredible to get outside your own head for a bit? And do some good for someone else?
- Can you close your eyes and recall the feeling when you gave of yourself without expecting anything in return? To a child, to a friend, to a stranger? That’s pretty sweet stuff in my book. Somewhere in your area, a shelter needs canned goods, toys, gift-wrap, a volunteer. You.
- Sharing the holidays with your ex for the very first time? A split in days, a need to shuffle the “traditional” schedule?
- I’ve been there. Half of Christmas spent at the airport, or holding the holiday dinner for hours, waiting. It’s hard. And for some of us it stays hard. But when there are children involved, it isn’t about us. It is about them.
- Do right by your kids, and that means no nasty words about the ex in front of them, and as much cooperation as you can muster. If you need to rant, cry, scream and curse – put it on paper, put it in a blog, scream it out in the shower, or call a friend and vent. But not to your kids. Never to your kids.
- Bake. Wrap. Walk. Brush the dog. Rescue a dog. Make a snowman. Light a candle for someone you love, and miss. Light a candle for you – the person you are becoming. New. Different. Lighter. Because it will happen – not without a bumpy road for some of us – but your best gift at holiday time is you.
So celebrate your courage, your integrity, and the dreams you will be able to nurture. And if you need us – we’ll be here for you.