My family is not very traditional in the sense of getting together with extended family over the holidays. My husband and I come from families with lots of discord and unhealthy relationships and we have tried to keep our own family separate, in hope of breaking repeated behaviors and cycles of emotional problems. We want our children to grow up to be happy with themselves, content with life and close to God. Actually, we want them to be close to God– and the rest just comes from there.
Something my husband and I have done since we married is spend Christmas at home. We have spent a few Thanksgivings away at family’s homes, but every year we spend Christmas at home. This tradition has become a week long family event, since my husband always gets the week from Christmas Eve to New Year’s Day off. We cozy down with the kids and watch movies, play in the snow and just love on each other. It is my favorite week of the year.
But how do you get to that week? When the stores start filling your mailbox with fliers, the grocery store lines get longer, and the money seems to disappear before you even see it. To take a line from one of my favorite movies, Christmas with the Kranks, just “skip it.” No, I am not suggesting a complete dumping of the holiday like Tim Allen and Jamie Lee Curtis’s characters attempt to do. Just dump the stressful stuff. Get back to simple and enjoyable.
Christmas is supposed to be a time to observe the birth of God’s greatest gift to us– his son Jesus Christ. Why not make your holiday and your home about love, peace and thankfulness?
-Plan purposeful activities with YOUR family– just the people living in your house– your spouse and children. Take an evening drive to see the lights, take a walk downtown and sip warm cider, rent your favorite holiday movies and have a movie marathon (eat popcorn and string some while you watch), read the Christmas Story (Matthew 1:18-25; Matthew 2:1-12; Luke 1:26-38; Luke 2:1-20), etc.
-Don’t stress yourself out baking. Do as much and what you would enjoy. Just because it is the holidays doesn’t mean you have to bake every cookie, pie and candy imaginable. Keep it simple, bake what you love and buy or let the rest go.
If that means buying a kit this year to make the gingerbread house– buy the kit. Spend the extra time giggling with your children while you make silly marshmallow snowmen for the house’s lawn. A great, inexpensive house can be built with graham crackers and frosting (a box can be used to strengthen the frame) and you get to the fun part right away! When I make sugar cookies, I make a huge batch of dough and divide and freeze it. Then I can come back and bake more later without the mess.
This year, cut back. Buy some beautiful cards and take
sometime to write a personal note to those people who you appreciate. Tell them you are thankful for them. Enclose something small, if you must. ChristianBook.com (CBD) offer beautiful ornaments or bookmarks in different price ranges. Some are flat and could be put into an envelope. Buy the same one for all your extra people and call it good. I bought one of these beautiful baskets (see left) from Family Christian Stores last year and I love it. You could purchase a few (they are under $10) and put in some cookies or a loaf of bread and give it as a gift. We give my grandparents dried fruit and nuts every year and they enjoy them.
Talk to extended family and decide to give only one gift per person, or only get gifts for the children or draw names this year. Go wild and decide to not buy gifts at all. Let everyone keep the money they would have spent to buy the things they need or donate to charity and instead have a meal and sing some carols.
-Plan a date with your spouse. Write it on the calendar. Get a babysitter, send the kids to Grandma’s for a few hours or the night, trade a night with some friends, just find a way to get a few hours alone. Stay home, light some candles, build a fire or download a fireplace screen saver, make some cocoa and enjoy some time together. Often, when things get busy and stressful, we take advantage of our partners. Use this time to refocus on your spouse.Shop the Thanksgiving grocery sales for Christmas too. You can get some great deals on frozen and nonperishable items before Thanksgiving. Buy a case of wine instead of lots of bottles. Once you know what you will be needing all holiday season, you can plan to buy in bulk to get you through the whole season. Save some cash and shopping time!
Melissa can be found writing at HopeSprouts Homeschool.
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{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }
This is a wonderful much needed reminder. I do end to stress out over the holidays and lose the joy of the season. This year I am making a conscious effort not to allow that to happen.
How do you make the snowflake in your article? Is there a website I can go to? Thanks for your great post.
Hi Rose! I also have some worsheets to help make the holidays a little easier on my blog, feel free to use them.
Hi Tony! These are pretty easy to make. (And they are so big and lovely!) Here is a video on it that is pretty good. I will load it on my blog as well. You can add glitter to some of the edges of the 3D Snowflakes to make them sparkle.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ausJdGcgs0k&feature=player_embedded
This is a wonderful list of ideas. My husband and I are also from dysfunctional families with whom we do not spend holidays with (we actually have no contact with–yes it’s THAT bad). It’s nice to know that we aren’t the “lone rangers” on this one. My husband travels for work (10 days gone, 5 days home) so I’m with the kids much of the time by myself. I love, love, love this blog–it is very inspiring and helps me stay connected. You ladies are so encouraging–I’m so thankful I found this site. You’re like great neighbors that I can just grab a cup of coffee (which I have right now) and sit down with and listen to and learn from. Keep up the great work and THANK YOU, I’m sure I’ll have an article posted here one day!