Thanksgiving 2020 is going to be—or probably should be if you’re being safe—hard for a lot of people.
Consider yourself lucky if your hard is because you can’t see your family. It means they are still here, and you are maybe saving their lives, and the lives of those you’ve never met.
My heart goes out to those who have lost loved ones this year, whether to covid or to other causes. Welcome to the club, it sucks, and you joined in a particularly sucky year. The good news (in my limited three years of experience) is that the first year is the shittiest, so hopefully you will never be grieving a loved one at a holiday during a pandemic again! (*see grief resources at the bottom)
I am not spending the holidays with my family for the first time in my 37 years on this planet. I managed to get home in September when things weren’t as bad, and I figured it wouldn’t be good at Thanksgiving, so I’ve had some time to adjust to Thanksgiving. Plus, I am able to spend Thanksgiving with my tiny pod—my dear friend/upstairs neighbor and her husband—which makes things a little easier.
But Christmas. Christmas. If you’ve read my blog, you know what a big deal Christmas has been to me, what a big deal it was for my mom. I toyed around in my head with a million scenarios of how I could have made it work. I would have quarantined at my cousin’s, like I did in September, been tested, etc…but in the end, it wasn’t worth the risk for me. At the beginning of the pandemic, my mental health was in a dangerous spot and I had a bit of a crisis, and I was really afraid of being alone for the holidays. But as Kate (friend/neighbor) said, “There would not be enough therapy in the world for you if something happened to your dad.” A wise woman, she is.
But that said, the holidays are hard enough without my mom. There’s a raging pandemic, and I can’t see my family. I’m incredibly stressed out with school right now.
So here’s what I’m doing to care for my mental health during this time:
You’ll get through this. We’ll get through this. When I was in treatment, I asked “wtf does ‘getting through’ mean?”
“Sometimes it just means getting to the next minute/hour/day,” the therapist said. One day at a time, and all of this won’t always feel this hard. I love you, whoever you are, reading this.
Here’s some grief resources I’ve compiled—and follow my friends @modernloss, who host lots of great events.
What are you doing to cope with the holiday season this year?
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I've been struggling with comparing my situation (which, honestly, is pretty darn good) with others' situations, and telling myself that it's not valid for me to be worried / stressed / etc. because I'm much better off than many other people. My therapist reminded me that it's MY situation, and if it makes ME worried / stressed / anxious, that's what matters. A valuable thing to be reminded of just now. Take care of yourself - I am alone too, and it's not going to be easy, but it's the right thing to do.