My daughter Katie recently accepted a teaching job and moved out of state. As I helped decorate her apartment and she settled in, our “To Do” list for Tuesday included shopping for classroom items, including a picket fence to be placed at the base of the bulletin board. It seemed like a reasonable project given it was August. Reasonable that is, until we began to shop.
“I’m sorry,” a store clerk answered when we asked where the garden supplies and fences were located. “We put them away last week to make room for Christmas.” We tried three other stores only to find the same answer. Katie and I looked at each other and checked our calendars. Yes, it was August, but summer had vanished and Christmas appeared. ‘Back to school’ supplies were intermingled with harvest, Halloween, Thanksgiving and Christmas. What a picture— rushing the season and Christmas intermingled with everything else! It’s also a winning backdrop for stress.
Rushing Christmas
Christmas seems to appear earlier each year. We rush the season, rush to get things done and fall short of expectations to make the season the perfect Hallmark commercial for ourselves and our family. But with planning and determination, we can reduce stress, slow down instead of rush, and keep Christmas as a focal point rather than have it get lost with competing demands, unrealistic expectations and an overload of events.
Schedule and learn to say “no”. Avoid planning a week with too many activities, late hours, or projects to complete. Decide what can be postponed or eliminated. Determine what is non-negotiable. Give yourself permission to decline activities and invitations.
In our family, we bake several different kinds of Christmas cookies. We deliver them to friends and neighbors and of course, we also eat them! But last year, with our children grown, I cut back on the variety and made double recipes of some. I still made my deliveries and kept my tradition, but I didn’t spend the same amount of time baking.
A gift wrapping station is another area where we can simplify. By creating a station, you can inventory your gift wrap essentials early and know what you need to purchase. Keep the materials out on a card table in your basement and wrap when you find a spare moment. You won’t have to take out all of the materials each time and you won’t run out of supplies because you’ve already assessed your needs.
Perhaps purchasing on-line instead of heading to a crowded mall is another way to alleviate stress and simplify shopping. E-mail Christmas letters may be a solution to addressing and mailing letters to some on your list. Think of what contributed to your stress last year. How can you be proactive and simplify that area so that it is not repeated?
Pause and take stock of what is important to you and your family during the Christmas season. What is it that you value and appreciate? Discuss priorities with your family. Make time for them and plan ahead. You may discover that activities done for years are not as significant now as your family enters a new life season.
Stressed spelled backwards? Why it’s desserts of course! Sweet and satisfying. Sit back and savor the season. You will have captured joy as a focal point instead of a stressful backdrop.