Resources for a Mindful, Happy Holiday

Jay Michaelson
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December 15, 2022

We are approaching the longest nights of the year, and, not coincidentally, the time when many cultures and religions celebrate light, love, and the sacred.

For many people, the good cheer and family time of the holiday season brings light to the darkness outside. Yet for many others, the holiday season can be profoundly challenging. Some of us are alone, while others are with family members with whom we have difficult relationships. Some of us love Christmas music, decorations, and shopping, while others feel alienated or excluded by those things. Despite what commercials suggest, there’s no one right way to feel at this time of year!

Wherever you find yourself this holiday season, I want to encourage you to bring mindfulness and meditation with you – and Ten Percent has resources that can help.

First, we’ve created a new ‘Holiday Survival Kit’ with 26 guided meditations (!) on topics including managing mental chaos, focusing on joy, and navigating difficult relationships. These are being featured regularly in our Daily Dose section of the app, or you can browse through the entire kit on your own. Especially if the holidays make you feel more ‘oy’ than joy, these guided meditations will really help.

Holiday Survival Kit on a phone



Second, mindfulness can help us turn toward the delightful aspects of this season. Personally, I love the steam rising from laundry vents, the indoor smells of firewood, the warmth of thick stew. I even love, sometimes, the alterations in my mood: turning inward, slowing down. And yet, it sometimes takes pro-active effort to notice the good in our lives, because we’re evolutionarily wired to focus on the negative. Mindfulness is an ally in this, because it helps us to slow down, become a little freer from repetitive mental circuits and patterns, and see clearly. And when there’s clear seeing of even the simplest things – a blanket, a chickadee, a memento from a trip – gratitude can arise on its own. Here are some resources that can help in that process.

"Gratitude" Meditation pack on a phone



Finally, there is a subtle joy that emerges from what might be the fundamental mind-heart movement of mindfulness: seeing clearly what’s actually happening, free from the push-pull of our desires. There’s a real delight in this yielding; from letting go of the urge to be happy in a certain way or to celebrate the season in a certain way.

This letting-go is familiar from meditation: as soon as I stop trying to relax, I can relax. As soon as I stop trying to feel joy, I can feel joy. The primary obstacle to happiness is the relentless search for happiness.

You can feel this in your body when you meditate. When you’re trying to feel a certain way, or holding onto some thought, or wishing some difficult sensation or emotion would go away, there’s often a straining or tensing of muscles in the body. The next time this comes up for you in meditation, see if you can notice that holding before reflexively letting it go. You can even do a body scan (again, guidance is in the app) to see if tension might be present without you even being aware of it.

That last bit is gold. Obviously, your body is tensing and relaxing all the time. But by practicing meditation, you can learn to become aware of it and let go of tension that much sooner. You might not even notice any particularly tense feelings or thoughts in the mind. But your body is your barometer.

And then, there’s a deep joy in releasing the resistance to what’s going on. Okay, I sometimes say to myself, this is what’s happening. Even if it doesn’t conform to some Hollywood image of what the holidays should be like, this is what’s true. And letting go of resistance to it is its own delight. It just feels so good to stop fighting with reality. And the best part? No matter what the holidays look like, that happiness is yours.

Dr. Jay Michaelson is a senior editor and podcast host at Ten Percent Happier, as well as a contributing writer to New York Magazine and the Daily Beast.  Jay has been teaching meditation for nineteen years; he is an ordained rabbi and authorized to teach in a Theravadan Buddhist tradition. His ten books include The Gate of Tears: Sadness and the Spiritual Path and Enlightenment by Trial and Error.

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