The holiday season is often a time when families come together, sharing memories, laughter, and traditions. It’s a time where families can reconnect, reflect, and create new memories. For many, these are times for celebration of togetherness, offering families a sense of joy and comfort. While the holidays can bring families a time of reunion, they also bring reminders of those who are no longer with us, giving a sense of absence of those loved ones. It’s important to remember that despite these emotional times, the holidays can help families bond even more with love and support of each other. A Journey of Healing is a process that can be supported by the warmth and compassion families share during these special moments, allowing them to cherish the present and honor the past.
Draw comfort from others
Surrounding yourself with family and friends can help you feel peace. Grieving during the holidays can feel isolation, and having friends and family around can help you to feel that you’re not alone in your grief. Offering a space where you can share memories, express feelings, and simply be present together, can provide you with a sense of connection and understanding. While holidays may not feel the same, the presence of friends and family can create continuity and remind you that you are not alone, and that love and support continues to surround you during the hardest moments.

Allow yourself to feel all emotions
The holidays are associated with joy and celebrations. This can bring pressure to put on a ‘happy face’ and push through these times with a forced smile. Allow yourself to feel whatever emotions arise. Feeling sad, guilt, confusion is natural and an essential part of the healing process. The holidays can overwhelming and acknowledging and honoring these feelings can give you the space to process a loss that is genuine to where you are in the healing process. It’s okay to not be okay, you don’t have to hide your pain and it’s important to know that your feelings are valid. It’s also important to remember that you can experience joy and laughter too. And even with these emotions, laughter and joy during a difficult time does not mean you have forgotten about your loved ones.
.

While holidays are filled with togetherness and memories, they are often filled with traditions. Continuing your traditions, even in the absence of a loved one, can be a powerful way to honor them. It can bring a sense of closeness during a difficult time. Creating new traditions to honor a loved one can also be powerful. Making a memory box, watching a loved one’s favorite movie, playing their favorite song while decorating, or placing a bouquet of their favorite flower as a new decoration can help you feel their presence during your times of celebration.
It’s important to know there is no right or wrong way to grieve during the holidays. Grieving is a deep, personal experience that we all navigate differently. Emotions during these times can feel raw, and the joy that these times bring may carry a sense of emptiness. In pain, remember that holidays can be an opportunity for healing. A Journey of Healing is a personal process that takes time and patience, and it’s okay to take things one day at a time and ask for support when you need it. Grief is a journey, and you don’t have to walk it alone.