Worry Help Line Confidential: Telephone Counseling from the privacy of your office, car or home.

Get effective online phone counseling and therapy today from professional counselors and Life Coach consultants. Call  for anxiety help, phobias, stress management, sex advice, relationship advice, marriage counseling, depression, divorce advice, anxiety attacks, panic attacks, alcoholism help, relationships, and burnout, low self esteem counseling or midlife crisis counseling by phone.

 
 

Sometimes You Just Need Someone To Talk With You

Speak To A Worry Professional Now

1-866-967-7948


Got Worry?
Got Stress?
Got Pressures?
Feel Alone?
Burnout?
Need Relief?

 

Holiday Depression and Stress

 

The holiday season for most people is a fun time of the year filled with parties, celebrations and social gatherings with family and friends. For many people, it is a time filled with sadness, self-reflection, loneliness, and anxiety.

What causes holiday blues?

Sadness is a truly personal feeling. What makes one person feel sad may not affect another person. Typical sources of holiday sadness include:

  • stress,
  • fatigue,
  • unrealistic expectations,
  • over-commercialization,
  • financial stress, and
  • the inability to be with one's family and friends.

Balancing the demands of shopping, parties, family obligations, and house guests may contribute to feelings of being overwhelmed and increased tension. People who do not view themselves as depressed may develop stress responses, such as:

  • headaches,
  • excessive drinking,
  • over-eating, and
  • insomnia.

Others may experience post-holiday sadness after New Year's/January 1st. This can result from built-up expectations, disappointments from the previous year, coupled with stress and fatigue.

Tips for coping with holiday stress and depression:

  • Make realistic expectations for the holiday season.
  • Set realistic goals for yourself.
  • Pace yourself. Do not take on more responsibilities than you can handle.
  • Make a list and prioritize the important activities. This can help make holiday tasks more manageable.
  • Be realistic about what you can and cannot do.
  • Do not put all your energy into just one day (i.e., Thanksgiving Day, New Year's Eve). The holiday cheer can be spread from one holiday event to the next.
  • Live and enjoy the present.
  • Look to the future with optimism.
  • Don't set yourself up for disappointment and sadness by comparing today with the good old days of the past.
  • If you are lonely, try volunteering some time to help others.
  • Find holiday activities that are free, such as looking at holiday decorations; going window shopping without buying and watching the winter weather whether it's a snowflake, or a raindrop.
  • Limit your drinking, since excessive drinking will only increase your feelings of depression.
  • Try something new. Celebrate the holidays in a new way.
  • Spend time with supportive and caring people.
  • Reach out and make new friends.
  • Make time to contact a long lost friend or relative and spread some holiday cheer.
  • Make time for yourself!
  • Let others share the responsibilities of holiday tasks.
  • Keep track of your holiday spending. Over-spending can lead to depression when the bills arrive after the holidays are over. Extra bills with little budget to pay them can lead to further stress and depression.

Is the environment and reduced daylight a factor in winter time sadness?

Animals react to the changing season with changes in mood and behavior. People change behaviors as well, when there is less sunlight. Most people find they eat and sleep slightly more in winter time and dislike the dark mornings and short days. For some, however, symptoms are severe enough to disrupt their lives and to cause considerable distress. These people are suffering from Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD).

Research studies have that found phototherapy is effective in treating people that suffer from SAD. Phototherapy is a treatment involving a few hours of exposure to intense light.

The professional worriers at The Worry Club.com, worry-help-line.com and the WORRY4U hotline are educated and trained in the mental health field. They are excellent listeners, willing to lend an ear to any tales of woe or stress and relieving worries with a sense of humor and pragmatism. In addition, The Worry Club website offers a range of free online stress relief games, ideal for a little pick-me-up during the stressful and even depressing holiday season.

 

 
 

Help With

Accelerate Your Progress with The Most Powerful Self-Improvement Technique on the Planet

 Eliminate Your Stress

Free DVD and CD - find out how you can tap your natural ability to let go of any unwanted feeling on the spot.

 Anthony Robbins: Products For Increasing The Quality Of Your Life! Click Here To See!

 Living Life Blog

Phone Counseling

Alcohol, Nicotine and Other Drugs

Burnout

Crisis

Cultural Competence

Cyber-affairs

Anxiety and Depression

Divorce

Gays, Lesbians, Transgender

Holiday Stress, Anxiety and Worry

Loss, Midlife Crisis, Aging and Bereavement

Men

Parenting

Personal Growth

Psychotherapy

Relationships

Self Confidence Building

Self-Esteem

Sex and Lust

Teens

Traumatic Stress

Women

Work

Worry

All Rights Reserved. Information presented at is for educational purposes only, and is not a substitute for medical or mental health advice or treatment for specific medical or psychological conditions. You should seek prompt medical care for any specific health issues, and consult your physician before starting a new health or fitness regimen. Use of this online service is subject to this disclaimer and the terms and conditions.