“Christmas is not as much about opening our presents as opening our hearts.” —Janice Maeditere
The holidays can be a most wonderful time of year. The season is often marked with family, tradition, and giving. And no matter our age, it stirs up fond memories and creates new ones. The holidays can indeed bring out the best in all of us.
But despite all the hope and preparation, often times, holiday expectations go unmet. Meals don’t turn out right. Kids get crabby. Family members bicker. Gifts are not received as fondly as we expected. And before we know it, shades of disappointment begin to creep in as we realize the season will not measure up to the pictures we had in our mind.
As we enter this final stretch before the holiday, is it possible to avoid this disappointment during the season? Of course it is. But it often takes some intentional steps on our part. Consider these:
12 Steps to Avoid Disappointment this Holiday Season.
1. Identify your main thing.
From food and decoration to presents and parties, the December is full of opportunity. But there is a very fine line between opportunity and distraction. Determine the main thing you want the season to represent. It may be based on religion, family, or rest. Whatever you decide, keep your main thing in sharp focus first.
2. Slow down.
Peace is rarely found in adding commitments and errands. So cut a few—on purpose.
3. Realize perfection is not possible.
Travel gets disrupted. Houses get messy. Kids want more presents. Family members bicker. This is life. And unless you are part of a magazine photo shoot, perfection is simply not possible. Stop expecting it.
4. Don’t push your expectations on to others.
We all have different expectations of how Christmas should be. Often times, these expectations are based on childhood memories. But we all have different childhood memories… so don’t assume everyone expects Christmas to look the same as you do. I’m all for developing traditions. But I’m against thinking everyone expects my traditions to become theirs.
5. Make room for rest.
Take a nap, retire to bed early one evening, or find a morning to sleep in later than normal. Running ragged to make everything perfect rarely results in perfection. Instead, it results in snippy attitudes, short tempers, and runny noses.
6. Offer forgiveness quickly.
People make mistakes. Be quick to offer forgiveness and mend broken relationships—whether the offense occurs today or happened many years ago. Take the step. Because holding on to ill-feelings towards another is one of the greatest sources of disappointment in life (and the holidays).
7. Remember memories are made in the mistakes.
Some of my fondest Christmas memories center on the mishaps that have occurred over the years: getting left at a department store with my cousin, discovering a Christmas gift early, my grandmother wrapping the gifts but forgetting to mark who they were for. These mishaps make me smile even today… we should also learn to smile when they are unfolding right in front of us.
8. Realize the meaning is in the giving, not the gift.
You won’t get everything you want this Christmas and conversely, you will get some things you don’t want. Put less emphasis on the gift in the wrapping. And put more emphasis on the fact that somebody thought you were special this holiday season. The gift is not the gift. The true gift is the giving… and the giver.
9. Admit you can’t change others.
We can set bold examples. We can look for teachable moments. We can offer advice when appropriate. But we can’t make decisions for others. They are going to choose options for their life we wish they wouldn’t. In those moments, remind yourself that you weren’t called to live their life, you were called to live your own.
10. Know when to stop.
From over-eating to over-drinking, knowing when to stop quickly becomes a lost art during the holiday season. But too much of a good thing quickly turns into a bad thing with lasting consequences. In almost every regard, for maximum enjoyment, embrace moderation.
11. Stay within your budget.
Avoid holiday disappointment by celebrating it within your means. This pertains to the number and extravagance of gifts. But should also extend to travel, celebration, and entertainment.
12. Embrace spirituality.
Regardless of your religious (or non-religious) preference, there is much more to this world than the things we see. Embrace spirituality this holiday season by championing love, hope, forgiveness, and grace. Rather than losing yourself in the hustle and bustle, find intentionality in remembering the heart of Christmas and celebrating the soul of everything good.
Fee says
Thanks Josh. Christmas seems to always be very strained in our family and extended family. All I want is peace and love but all they seem to bring is turmoil…….
Laura says
Dear Joshua,
Thank you so much for these inspiring posts all through the year. Well written and thoughtful, these messages are daily mileposts along the journey of a intentional life – offering direction at turns and confirmation on the straightaways.
Wishing you and yours a Joy and Peace filled holiday season.
With much gratitude…
Patricia says
Thanks for posting. Great article!
B Spellazza says
I think so many of us have forgotten the real meaning of Christmas. I know the little ones are expecting Santa Claus and Presents. However this is the time we all should be celebrating the Birth Of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. He has truly given so much for all of us. We just need to accept him into our lives!!! Belive me I’m so Blessed to have Jesus in my Life, AMEN
Bianca Culbert says
I love your website and your approach to most things but I really disagree with your No 8 here. People do not give you a Xmas present because they think you are special, most of them do because it`s what people do. It`s what expected, it`s how it`s always been and it`s what you should be doing if you don`t want aggros.
After gradually cutting down every year, we have said to the last people last year that this was the last Xmas that we`re doing gifts. And it`s so liberating. The pre-Xmas season was totally stress free, and we need not dread the bills in January. There was plenty money for all the nights out which matter to me, and we will not receiving anything we don`t want or give something which will end up being re-wrapped and passed on.
I am showing people that they`re special not by buying them material things but in many other ways, mainly spending time for them and easing their burden at this hectic time of the year.
Most people are totally stressed and complain heavily about the shopping, wrapping and the financial outgoings. They do *not* enjoy the gift giving, and I feel glad that noone has to buy one for me.
Honestly, as long as there are no kids involved, I wholeheartedly recommend stopping the gift giving! It`s so liberating!
Renee says
Holy Toledo! Amen and Amen!
Robin says
Oh wow… you wrote #9 especially for me, didn’t you? Point taken. And thank you. :-)
Rachel says
I personally needed to remember #4 not to push my expectionss on others. If we all were exactly the same the world would be a boring place! Some people are givers and not so much. Forgiving people right away so it doesn’t ruin the holidays:) Thanks for sharing Joshua.
bnckonfeksiyon.com says
Hello, just wanted to mention, I liked this article. It was practical. Keep on posting!
best hodia suplement says
I am continuously invstigating online for articles that can help me. Thank you!