How to Navigate Family Dynamics Over the Holidays
There’s a certain story we can tell ourselves about the holidays. This year will be the one. We’ll have the perfect meal. Everyone will get along. No one will bring up that thing. We’ll laugh like they do in Christmas films, and finally feel close again.
But often, the holidays — for all their warmth and magic — come tangled in old patterns, invisible pressures, and quiet expectations.
You might find yourself trying to manage everyone’s emotions while keeping the potatoes hot. Or quietly hoping that a long-held tension will resolve itself over the turkey. You might feel yourself reverting into an old role: the peacemaker, the quiet one, the organiser, the emotional sponge.
If you’ve ever left a family gathering emotionally wrung out — you’re not the only one.
What If We Let Go of “Getting It Right”?
So much of holiday stress comes from trying to get it right — the food, the gifts, the mood, the timing, the conversations.
But here’s a gentle invitation: What if the goal this year wasn’t to get it right — but to stay connected?
Not just with others. But with yourself too.
Letting go of perfection doesn’t mean giving up. It means tuning in. Noticing where the pressure comes from. Asking yourself which expectations you're carrying that no one else even knows about.
Sometimes, the smallest shift — from performance to presence — can change everything.
Moments of Connection Can Be Tiny
Connection doesn’t need to look like a profound heart-to-heart over pudding (though if it does, enjoy it). It can look like:
Sharing a joke over a ridiculous board game
Helping someone peel carrots in silence
Noticing someone’s effort, and quietly appreciating it
Letting yourself enjoy the moment before everyone wakes up
The memories that stay aren’t always the ones we try to orchestrate. They’re often the ones that slip in sideways, like my own memory of preparing a turkey with my mum in our dressing gowns at 6am, before the rest of the house woke up. It was messy. It was quiet. It was ours.
From Reacting to Responding
Tricky moments happen. Comments that sting. Conversations that tip into familiar territory. We don’t suddenly become different people in December — we just add tinsel.
But when a family dynamic triggers something in you, here’s a gentle way to pause:
Ask: What’s really going on here?
What might this person be feeling or needing?
What’s the value behind their words — and the need behind mine?
Sometimes, even a second of curiosity can interrupt a pattern. You don’t need to fix it. But you can give yourself the gift of not spiralling. You can respond instead of react.
And remember: kindness doesn’t mean tolerating poor behaviour. It means creating enough space to see what’s really happening — and choosing how you show up in it.
Shared Care, Not Just Self-Care
We hear so much about self-care at Christmas. And while that's important, what if this season was also about collective care?
If you tend to carry the emotional weight of gatherings, ask yourself:
Who else could help hold this?
Could someone else bring dessert?
Could you share a game or ritual with a younger family member?
Could you start a new tradition where everyone brings a “Christmas surprise”?
One year, hot sauces at Christmas dinner created a hilarious (and bonding) moment I never saw coming. It wasn’t the tradition I’d planned. But it became a moment of unexpected joy.
Breaking Old Roles
The holidays have a way of putting us back into the roles we grew up with.
The fixer.
The entertainer.
The one who holds it all together.
What if you tried something different this year?
Saying no with kindness
Asking for what you need
Letting go of the need to smooth over every bump
Sometimes just naming the pattern out loud to yourself is enough to start loosening its grip.
What’s one old role or habit you could leave behind this year?
Noticing Joy (Without Forcing It)
Joy doesn’t always announce itself. It doesn’t always look like a glossy advert. It sneaks in — in the shared glance across the table. In the song that makes you tear up. In the silly game you weren’t going to play, but did.
If this year feels like a lot, give yourself permission to notice joy, not create it.
Before the gathering, ask:
What’s one moment I might enjoy?
What do I want to remember from this season?
Where might connection surprise me?
You Don’t Have to Fix Everything
You don’t have to be the glue. You don’t have to keep every plate spinning.
If this is a hard year for you, emotionally or practically — know that’s okay too. The holidays bring up everything. The love and the loss. The joy and the weight.
And maybe this year, all you need to do is soften your grip.
To let things be a little less curated.
To let someone else stir the gravy.
To step outside for a breath before stepping back in.
Whoever you’re with this season — chosen family, biological family, or a patchwork of both — remember this:
You are allowed to be human.
You are allowed to set boundaries, to feel wobbly, to find joy in small places, to not have it all figured out.
And you are allowed to be loved and supported without having to hold it all alone.
Need a Little Extra Support?
If family dynamics are feeling overwhelming this season — or if you’re longing for more groundedness and calm — coaching could be a supportive space to explore it all.
Together, we can:
Make sense of your emotional patterns
Create gentler boundaries that don’t feel harsh
Reclaim what the holidays actually mean to you
Click here to learn more about coaching or book a free clarity call



