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The
holiday season is a time full of joy, cheer, parties, and family
gatherings. However, for many people, it is a time of self-evaluation,
loneliness, reflection on past failures, and anxiety about an uncertain
future.
What Causes Holiday Blues?
Many factors can cause
the "holiday blues": stress, fatigue, unrealistic
expectations, over-commercialization, financial constraints, and the
inability to be with ones family and friends. The demands of
shopping, parties, family reunions, and house guests also contribute to
feelings of tension. People who do not become depressed may develop
other stress responses, such as: headaches, excessive drinking,
over-eating, and difficulty sleeping. Even more people experience
post-holiday let down after January 1. This can result from
disappointments during the preceding months compounded with the excess
fatigue and stress.
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Coping with stress and depression
during the holidays
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Keep expectations for
the holiday season manageable. Try
to set realistic goals for yourself. Pace yourself. Organize your
time. Make a list and prioritize the important activities. Be
realistic about what you can and cannot do. Do not put entire focus
on just one day (i.e., Thanksgiving Day) remember it is a season of
holiday sentiment and activities can be spread out (time-wise) to
lessen stress and increase enjoyment.
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Remember the holiday
season does not banish reasons for feeling sad or lonely; there is
room for these feelings to be present, even if the person chooses
not to express them.
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Leave
"yesteryear" in the past and look toward the future. Life
brings changes. Each season is different and can be enjoyed in its
own way. Dont set yourself up in comparing today
with the "good ol days."
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Do something for
someone else. Try volunteering some time to help others.
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Enjoy activities that
are free, such as driving around to look at holiday decorations;
going window shopping without buying; making a snowperson with
children.
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Be aware that
excessive drinking will only increase your feelings of
depression.
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Try something
new. Celebrate the holidays in a new way.
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Spend time with
supportive and caring people. Reach out and make new friends
or contact someone you have not heard from for awhile.
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Save time for
yourself! Recharge your batteries! Let others share
responsibility of activities.
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Can Environment be a
Factor?
Recent
studies show that some people suffer from which results from fewer
hours of sunlight as the days grow shorter during the winter months.
Phototherapy, a treatment involving a few hours of exposure to intense
light, is effective in relieving depressive symptoms in patients with
SAD.
Other studies on the
benefits of phototherapy found that exposure to early
morning sunlight
was effective in relieving
seasonal depression. Recent findings, however, suggest that patients
respond equally well to phototherapy whether it is scheduled in the
early afternoon. This has practical applications for antidepressant
treatment since it allows the use of phototherapy in the workplace as
well as the home.
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