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What
to Do When You Are Alone for the Holidays
by Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
Being
alone for the holidays is a major challenge for many people. Holidays
often conjure images of family, of warmth and the sharing of special
time. Loneliness can be overwhelming when you have no one with whom
to share holiday time.
Many
people, however, miss the point of what holidays are really about
and what makes them special. Holidays are not about what you GET
they are about what you GIVE. Many people are under the misconception
that the joy of holidays is about what you receive rather than about
what you share.
Our hearts get filled with love when we give and share love, rather
than from getting love.
This
may seem like a paradox. Many people spend their time with others
attempting to get love, attention and approval, thinking that this
is what makes them feel happy and worthy. But getting attention
from others to fill ourselves is like eating chocolate when you
are lonely it works for the moment but then you need more
and more of it. Eventually it becomes an addiction.
What
really fills the emptiness is the giving of love. If you are alone
over the holidays, the question becomes, "How can I give love
in ways that will bring me joy?"
Below
are some suggestions for sharing your love and caring over the holidays:
* Gather
toys from friends and store donations and bring them to children
who would not otherwise have toys. You can find these children through
schools, churches and various other organizations.
* Find
a battered women's shelter in your area and help to create the holiday
there preparing food, decorating the tree, and just spending
time with them. Last year a friend of mine organized a number of
her local markets to donate food over Christmas to the local shelter
that housed mothers and their children who had left abusive husbands.
She got to know the mothers and children and received great fulfillment
in providing them with an abundant Christmas.
* Spend
time with old people in nursing homes, especially those who have
no family. Spending time caring about another lonely person will
go a long way toward taking away your loneliness!
* Volunteer
to help with serving food to the needy over Thanksgiving and Christmas.
Many churches and other charitable organizations welcome volunteers
to help in food lines over the holidays.
* Locate
a retreat center near you that has a special event over the holidays
and share your time with other people who are also alone for the
holidays. Last year a friend of mine, who had just left her husband
and was alone for the first time with no family around her, went
to a beautiful retreat center on the East Coast. Twenty people gathered
there to share Thanksgiving together. There was a wonderful ceremony
of gratitude that she said filled her heart, and she enjoyed sharing
time with new people.
* Find
a church, temple or 12-step group in your area that has special
events for singles over the holidays. Go to these events with the
intention of sharing your caring with others, which you can do just
by being interested in listening to another person. We all love
being listened to and understood, and all of us have the capacity
to give this to another.
One
of my all-time favorite movies is "A Christmas Carol,"
the one starring Alistair Sim. I just love the scene on Christmas
morning when Scrooge realizes that no time has passed and he has
the opportunity to give. He feels such joy at the prospect of giving,
that he can hardly stand it! He dances around and stands on his
head and laughs and laughs with the joy of giving! In one night
he went from being a
miserable old man concerned only with getting, to a man now focused
only on giving, and he became a joyful person.
While
you might not have money to give, we all have caring to give. You
have no idea how much you might enrich your own life as well as
another person's life just by giving your time, your attention,
your interest, your smile, your understanding. Whatever your life
circumstances, you always have the opportunity to give your caring.
You will discover that giving your caring to others, especially
over the
holidays, is a profound way of caring about yourself.
Margaret Paul, Ph.D. is the best-selling author and co-author
of eight books, including "Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved
By You?" She is the co-creator of the powerful Inner Bonding
healing process. Learn Inner Bonding now! Visit her web site for
a FREE Inner Bonding course: http://www.innerbonding.com
or
mailto:margaret@innerbonding.com.
Phone sessions available.
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