Don’t Forget Yourself While Caring for Others
Manage episode 523581416 series 3700353
🎄💔 The holidays can be joyful for many, but for those grieving or caregiving, they can also feel overwhelming and emotionally draining. 😢🕯️ It’s easy to lose yourself while trying to care for others or manage your own grief, but your well-being matters too!
In this video, Healthy by George shares compassionate tips to help you navigate the holiday season with balance, self-care, and emotional resilience. 🌟💛
We’ll explore:
🧠 How grief can affect your energy, mood, and focus during the holidays
🤲 Practical caregiving strategies that protect your mental and physical health
✨ Simple self-care routines to nurture your mind, body, and spirit
💬 Ways to honor your feelings while still participating in holiday traditions
💡 Tips to set boundaries and avoid burnout while caring for others
Whether you’re supporting loved ones, managing your own loss, or simply feeling the weight of the season, this guide provides tools to stay grounded, compassionate, and present. 🌱🕊️
Remember, it’s okay to say no, take breaks, and prioritize your health. Your well-being allows you to show up fully for yourself and those you love. 💪💖
👍 Don’t forget to LIKE, COMMENT, and SUBSCRIBE for more tips on emotional wellness, caregiving, and thriving through life’s challenges.
💬 Share your experiences or strategies for coping during the holidays — let’s support each other.
Healthy by George — helping you care for yourself while caring for others! 🌟✨
MC shares in this episode her experience as a caregiver and the tenth anniversary of her husband's sudden death.
How to Manage Death and Illness During the Holidays
1. Acknowledge the Emotional Reality
• Allow your feelings — sadness, anger, numbness, guilt, relief, confusion. All are valid.
• Give yourself permission to not be "festive." I
• Remind yourself: Grief does not follow the calendar.
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2. Set Realistic Expectations
• You do not have to attend every event or keep every tradition.
• Choose a "minimum viable holiday."
• Communicate with friends/family:
"I may need to leave early," or "I'm keeping things low-key this year."
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3. Create Space for the Person Who's Gone (or for the Illness Journey)
If someone has passed:
• Light a candle.
• Share one story about them at dinner.
• Hang an ornament or photo in their honor.
If someone is seriously ill:
• Include them in a way that feels right — a video call, playing their favorite music, or reading a message they wrote.
• Make room for both gratitude and fear
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4. Protect Your Energy - Explore the following:
• a quiet walk, warm drink, journaling, favorite movie
• small gatherings with close friends
• Reconsider - big holiday parties or hosting significant events
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5. Lean on Support — Lightly, or Fully
• Let at least one Person know what you're going through.
• Join a grief support group (local hospitals, churches/synagogues, hospices often run holiday-specific sessions).
• Accept help with meals, errands, or childcare. People want to help but often don't know how.
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6. Create Emotional "Exits" for Events
Before going to any event, decide:
• How long will you stay
• What you'll do if you feel overwhelmed
• Your exit phrase ("I'm going to step outside for a moment")
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7. Take Care of Your Body While Your Heart Hurts
Grief is physical. Helping your nervous system is key.
• Drink water regularly (crying is dehydrating).
• Keep blood sugar stable with small, balanced meals.
• Move gently: stretching, walking, deep breathing.
• Rest more often than usual.
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8. Reduce the Noise & Create Calm Moments
• Sit with a cup of tea for 5 minutes
• Listen to soft music
• Spend time with nature or a pet
• Limit social media — especially holiday-highlight posts
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9. Honor Traditions — or Redesign Them
• Keep traditions exactly as they were
• Modify them
• Create completely new ones
• Skip traditions this year and return to them later
There is no wrong choice.
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10. If You Are a Caregiver
• Lower your expectations dramatically.
• Ask for rotational help from friends/family.
• Set a "caregiving boundary": one time of day that's just yours (even 10 minutes).
• Don't skip your medical appointments or medications.
Caregivers often forget themselves — especially in December.
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Hashtags :
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