The Drink at Work.com Guide to Celebrating the Holidays with Your
Family
Ah,
the holidays. A time to rejoice…
A
time to reflect…
A
time to cope…
And
a time to crumble.
Current
wisdom holds the holidays to be a period of great personal distress,
a “perfect storm,” if you will, of high tension, low
energy and middling bouts of migraine-induced strokes…
Such
adverse conditions can often lead to noticeable behavioral changes,
chief among them helplessness, social isolation and inter-familial
aggression, also known as “angry blood” or “this
again.”
Because
of these profoundly negative forces, one is unlikely to recover
without dedicated psychopharmacological treatment, whether it be
over-the-counter or left-of-the-highballs…
While
by no means a cure-all, discerning the right medication is often
that first significant step to a noticeable decrease in anger, anxiety,
concern or even regard.
In
fact, simply initiating a treatment process can give the suffering
party a renewed sense of hope, permitting them the strength to once
more enter the social arena…
Otherwise
known as the holiday dinner table. It is here—where compliments
go hand-in-hand with condemnation and reticence is seen as rebuke—that
one’s resolve and mental progress will no doubt experience
their greatest test.
Unlike
typical peer gatherings, where one can find comfort in similar interests
and experiences, the holiday dinner table is characterized by great
discrepancies in age and perspectives, resulting in seemingly interminable
periods of awkwardness and silence…
Punctuated
only by an elder relative’s lengthy recount of their most
recent and intimate medical exam.
Often
the absence of common ground—coupled with unaddressed guilt
over household disharmony—can cause hostilities to intensify…
Rapidly.
But
rather than permit the situation to exacerbate feelings of despair
and dislocation, one should take the opportunity to actively engage
in society. In the case of a holiday dinner, this can easily be
accomplished with a simple toast…
Of
course, a family toast is nothing if not a minefield of inadvertent
impropriety, since what to the speaker may seem like “playful
ribbing” to others may read as “barely concealed hostility”
or “outright slander.”
And
so one’s genuine attempt at interpersonal connection can swiftly
lead to renewed feelings of loneliness, shame, despondency and “angry
blood”…
That’s
when it’s time to excuse oneself from the social arena. This
will give the individual a chance to collect their thoughts, disperse
any ill notions and muster the will to breathe.
The
injured party can now take a moment to address any conflicting emotions
they may have about the holidays, such as both the desire for the
perfect gathering and the longing for some sort of sudden wormhole
or other means of immediate escape…
While
also reflecting on personal misgivings, like honestly believing
one’s mom when she says, “Your presence during the holidays
is the best gift you can give me.”
Soon
with greater perspective will come greater acceptance of yours and
others’ limitations. You’ll come to see that most family
arguments are the result of misunderstandings and apprehension,
not hatred and spite. You'll also start to feel an overabundance
of good will, an overwhelming sense of good cheer and overall numbness
in your legs, arms and lower jaw…
That’s
when you’ll realize the half-tab of Valium you secretly took
while pretending to be asleep in the backseat of your parents’
car on the drive over is having the most pleasing interaction with
all the liquor you ingested, resulting in a very, very relaxing
holiday indeed.
So
from all of us at Drink at Work.com to all of you, we wish you the
merriest of merry occasions and a Happy New Year!
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