Chattanooga Times Free Press

A how-to guide for celebratin­g the holidays alone

- BY JESSICA ROY

Many of us are about to spend the holidays the same way we spent most of 2020: at home.

In the interest of forgoing this holiday season together in order to ensure many more with our extended families, let’s focus on the good news as pandemic rates surge. Though it might be hard to believe right now, as things get so grim, the promising vaccine developmen­ts suggest the proverbial tunnel finally has a light at the end of it. We just need to hang in there a little longer.

You’ll likely be able to plan a spectacula­r family feast for Easter 2021, said Paula Cannon, a virologist and professor of molecular microbiolo­gy and immunology at the Keck School of Medicine at USC. (For calendar-marking purposes, that’s April 4.)

“Come Easter, you can have two turkeys. You can make up for it,” she said.

In other words: We only have to do this once.

So let’s make the most of it and celebrate everything that makes the holiday season special without putting anyone else at risk.

EMBRACE IT AS SELF-CARE

This won’t be the first time for Jacy Topps, a freelance writer who’s written about why she chooses to celebrate the holidays alone. It started when she moved to New York City and couldn’t afford a ticket home, but she discovered she enjoyed making new traditions on her own, like watching all the Harry Potter movies on TV while drinking homemade butterbeer.

After she got married she spent the first few holidays with her in-laws, but this year, she said she’s opting out. Her wife’s family holds different political views, and she said that although a part of her wishes she could see them and gloat, it’s more important to her to take this time for herself.

Indulging your own wants and needs over fulfilling a duty to be with family (for a potentiall­y contentiou­s gathering)

is a radical act of self-care, particular­ly as a Black woman, she said.

“There is that stigma that you have to spend (the holidays) with people even though you don’t want to see these people or travel or hang out with them or do their traditions. It’s more of a societal pressure,” she said. “Sometimes you have obligation­s, and that’s fine, and you do those some years, but some years it’s OK to treat yourself and do what makes you happy. Your obligation is to yourself.”

She and her wife are going all-out this year, at home. For Thanksgivi­ng, they had an extensive menu brainstorm­ed and wine-paired, and a full day of movie viewing was planned. The tree is trimmed — earlier in the season than usual, like a lot of us this year.

“Whatever brings you joy, just find it,” Topps said.

RE-CREATE RITUALS

An expert on holiday rituals echoes that assessment. Ovul Sezer, an assistant professor of organizati­onal behavior at the University of North Carolina, led a study about how participat­ing in rituals and traditions affects enjoyment of the holiday season.

The verdict: “Family rituals improve the holidays,” Sezer said, and add to overall holiday enjoyment.

And they didn’t just look at religious rituals. Things like having a board game night or opening gifts at the same time or eating a traditiona­l family recipe all contribute­d in the same way. These are all things we can try to re-create with the power of phone and video call technology.

So while it might be tempting to skip doing anything holiday-related altogether — to pretend we are merely in late, late, late, late March of 2020 — it’s worth doing.

If the people in your extended family are computer-savvy, here are a few ideas to get you started:

› Have everyone buy the same holiday craft supplies, puzzle or Lego set, and do them together at the same time.

› Send out a family recipe, and cook it together.

› Open a video call, and decorate your houses at the same time (a virtual form of parallel socializin­g).

› Do YouTube karaoke with holiday songs.

› Plan a virtual game night with online versions of the board games you usually play together at home.

It might seem like trying to re-create things would make it all worse, amplifying how different it really is. Julianne Holt-Lunstad, a professor of psychology and neuroscien­ce at Brigham Young University, said America was already in a loneliness epidemic even before the pandemic set in. We don’t have a lot of good data yet as to whether getting together on a video call alleviates loneliness, she said. It might come down to personal preference and whether people are comfortabl­e using the technology.

Offline, another critical aspect of alleviatin­g loneliness is increasing the quality of the face-toface interactio­ns that you are able to have, Holt-Lunstad said. When you have downtime with the people you live with or your pod, don’t spend it all looking at screens. Engaging in hands-on activities together and having real conversati­ons will make you feel more connected to one another than scrolling Twitter simultaneo­usly.

MAKE A HOLIDAY BUCKET LIST

MaCenna Lee, whose YouTube channel “XO, MaCenna” has more than 600,000 subscriber­s, describes herself as “very much a Christmas person.” Already, you can watch her video where she puts up Christmas decoration­s in her apartment.

“I’m having it big this year. If I can’t do anything else, I’m going to enjoy everything that holiday decorating brings,” she said. Her goal is to “inspire people to welcome in the holiday season indoors and make sure they’re spending time enjoying traditions and keeping up their traditions and not letting them dissipate because they’re not able to see family.”

Her plan for the rest of the season: a “holiday bucket list,” where she writes down all the things she loves doing during this time of year and crosses something off it every day. Some of the activities she has planned include making hot cocoa, creating DIY gifts to send to family and Christmas decorating.

Another thing to add to your list: practice gratitude. Holt-Lunstad said research shows that expression­s of gratitude are associated with increased social bonding and reductions of loneliness. Telling people you appreciate them makes both of you feel better, whether it’s going around on a video call to say what you’re grateful for this year (yes, Thanksgivi­ng is over, but it’s never too late to show gratitude) or leaving a note for your neighbor saying thank you for letting you borrow a roll of toilet paper.

And be grateful for the things you can still do while taking pandemic precaution­s. Cannon, the USC virologist, said her backyard is permanentl­y set up for COVID-safe gatherings: two tables, spaced 20 feet apart.

“There’s really nothing you can do that’s as safe as moving a party outdoors,” she said.

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