Christmas Strategies: Energize for a Happy Holidy Season: Four Tips for Moms |
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Home >> Christmas Strategies >> Energize for a Happy Holidy Season: Four Tips for Moms Energize for a Happy Holidy Season: Four Tips for MomsDecking the halls and spreading good cheer takes a lot of energy, and no one knows that like a mom. Here are some tips to make sure you enjoy every last fa-la-la. 1. Rise and SHINE. As you lie in bed, summon the physical feeling that accompanies unabashed,
unbridled joy. You know the feeling, though it's one you may have felt
only a few times in your life. It's a feeling that's impossible to put
into words, through I once heard it described as the urge to throw your
shoes way, way up in the air, and I think that's accurate. Seize that
feeling. I follow this with a mantra or saying that I repeat, throughout the day,
as a reminder to return to my center of joyful energy. My favorites: "What
we focus on expands," "Joy to the world," and "This
is the day that the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be glad in it."
Recite a rousing quote, a line from a song, an inspiring verse from your
own religious faith, or make up your 2. Stay Centered. After some thought and reflection, rank your top priorities on a Post-it-Note where you'll see it throughout the day. (Mine's on my computer monitor). Use your list when asked to make commitments and compromises. If the request doesn't jibe with your list, you don't just have permission, you have an obligation to say no. This list of priorities may set the course for new holiday traditions, as well. Perhaps you will donate toys, books, and food to charities. Perhaps you will help serve dinner at a homeless shelter instead of indulging in a huge holiday meal. Bringing joy to the world outside your own is one of the most energizing things you can do. For a moment or two, indulge the ghost of Christmas Past. What memories immediately come forth that evoke a fond nostalgia? For me, it isn't the gifts or the shopping or even the parties. It's rocking my infant, alone, by candlelight, to "Silent Night." It's letting the 2-year-old crack the eggs for the cookies, and seeing the pride on her floury face. Decide what the holidays are to you. Then make a plan to weave more of those activities into your holidays, and reduce the rest. 3. Deck the Halls with Light and Love. For me, the mall is a giant energy drain. The look of worried resignation as a shopper hands over her credit card tells me that she's shopping out of a sense of obligation and not one of joy. And it sours my holiday spirit. Instead, I carve out an afternoon all to myself. I put on an Andrea Bocelli CD, sip Chai tea from a giant mug, and curl up with a fleece blanket to surf the Internet and page through catalogs. That's how I find just the right something for everyone on my very short list. When it ceases to be fun, I stop. I so enjoy shopping this way that, throughout the year, I bookmark sites
that offer just the right items. Sites such as GAIAM,
which couples a commitment to sustainable commerce, the environment, and
personal health with natural products for relaxation and self-care. Sites such as Little
Did I Know.com. Everything on this site is either handmade, distributed,
or invented by a work-at-home mom. Ordering from them means supporting
such families and the value systems Sites such as SERRV International, a nonprofit organization that helps to improve conditions for artisans in developing countries through free trade. Here, you can purchase everything from home furnishings to jewelry made in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America. (SERRV even allows you to purchase coffee directly from the growers. The prices are affordable and you'll be drinking in the good karma every morning.) If you find the materialism of the season draining your energy, commit to making an attitude shift. If you want things to be different this year, only you can make it so. Take the lead for your family, and live in such a way that you prove less stuff really does equal more fun. Maybe you'll take the money you usually spend on one-too-many toys and enjoy, instead, a weekend family getaway. Maybe you'll make homemade goodies, such as picture frames, home movies, or goodie baskets, which the whole family helps to create. Maybe you'll bag the traditional gift-giving and start a new tradition.
In our family, it goes like this: Each guest brings a wrapped gift of
roughly the same dollar value. We sit in a circle and each person, in
turn, has the option of taking a gift that's already been opened or opening
a new one. One of the best ways to avoid commercialism is to simply turn off the
TV and its advertisements for the newest plastic plaything. Return instead Momscape humor columnist Linda Sharp once asked a group of kids to name one thing they'd like from their parents that wouldn't cost a dime. The answers: "Listen to me, please," "Teach me to cook," "Stop being so busy," "Hug me more," "Read to me..." Hard to wrap, but easy to give. 4. Bring Tidings of Comfort and Joy...to Yourself.
As you commit to keeping your spirit centered this holiday season, engage your kids in the process. Recognize your children as the gifts they are. The gift to you as a mother, and your gift to the world. Strive to greet each day as though it were Christmas and await, with reverence, the surprises that your family will help you uncover. Today and every day. By Susie Cortright Susie Michelle Cortright is the author of several books for women and founder of the award-winning Momscape.com, a website designed to help busy women find balance. Visit http://www.momscape.com today and get Susie's *free* course-by-email "6 Days to Less Stress" as well as the *free* pdf ebook, "Spa Recipes for All Seasons." Please feel free to reprint this article in your newsletter and/or on your website as long as the author's resource box, including this paragraph, is included. |
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