
December 20, 2025

Every year around the holidays, I see the same thing in my therapy office.
Women who look like they have it together.
They are organized. Thoughtful. Responsible. The ones who remembered the gifts, coordinated schedules, smoothed over tension, and made sure everyone else felt comfortable. They show up carrying lists, traditions, and emotional awareness like it is second nature.
From the outside, it looks like strength.
From the inside, it often feels like holding your breath.
For many women, the holidays are not just about celebration. They are about emotional management.
They track who is grieving. Who is distant. Who will feel left or need special handling. They remember what this season used to look like before divorce, before loss, before the kids grew up and left home.
This kind of emotional labor usually started early. Many women learned that keeping the peace meant staying alert, flexible, and emotionally available. Over time, it became automatic. A reflex. Something done quietly and well.
But just because it is familiar does not mean it is free.
During the holidays, unresolved grief has a way of surfacing.
Empty nest sadness. Estranged family relationships. The loss of parents. The ache of traditions that no longer fit. Even joyful gatherings can carry an undercurrent of loneliness or longing.
Women often come into therapy saying things like:
What they are often feeling is the cost of holding everything together for everyone else, while leaving little room for themselves.
Sometimes the tears come over small things. Burnt food. A forgotten detail. A comment that hits deeper than expected. These moments are rarely about what is happening now. They are about everything that has been carried quietly for a long time.
Holding it all together has been framed as strength for generations. But real resilience looks different.
It looks like allowing disappointment without fixing it, naming grief without minimizing it.
It looks like letting something be imperfect and trusting that connection will survive.
For many women, therapy during the holidays is not about crisis. It is about relief.
A place where you do not have to manage anyone else’s emotions, where you can say what you actually feel without being the strong one. A place where your experience matters just as much as everyone else’s.
If the holidays feel heavier than they used to, that does not mean something is wrong with you.
It often means you are navigating a life transition. Roles have shifted. Family dynamics have changed. Loss has entered the picture. Your nervous system is responding to more than you realize.
Therapy can help you understand what you are carrying, what is no longer yours to hold, and how to move through this season with more steadiness and self compassion.
You do not have to stop caring.
You just do not have to carry everything alone.
And sometimes, the most important thing you can do during the holidays is let yourself be held too.

Laurie is a Licensed Professional Counselor with her Masters of Science in Counseling from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, TX. She is also a graduate of McGill University in Montreal. She received advanced practical training in Emotionally Focused Therapy for couples and families at UT Southwestern, where she spent five years in the Department of Psychiatry’s Family Studies Clinic working with diverse clients of all ages. In addition, she has completed training in Collaborative Law for couples seeking divorce to find solutions in a more amicable way.
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