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115: Holiday Season Sadness & Depression: Embracing Self-Love & Reconnecting with Your Inner Child
Episode 11518th December 2024 • New View Advice • Amanda Durocher
00:00:00 00:22:17

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Shownotes

Where is the holiday season magic? In this episode, I answer a listener question from someone feeling sad, depressed, and lonely this holiday season. I explore ways to process and accept these emotions, reconnect with your inner child to rediscover holiday magic, and practice self-love. We also discuss the importance of taking care of yourself this holiday season.

Happy Holidays from me, Amanda Durocher! Thank you all for your continued support!

Timestamps

  • Introduction: 00:15
  • Listener Question: 2:12
  • Outro: 21:38

For episode show notes, please visit: https://www.newviewadvice.com/115

For more free resources and to learn more about New View Advice, visit: https://www.newviewadvice.com/

Want to have a question answered? You can submit your question here: https://www.newviewadvice.com/ask-a-question

Transcripts

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Welcome to NewView Advice. I'm your host, Amanda Derosier, and I invite you to

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join me here each week as I offer advice on how to move through whatever

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problem or trauma is holding you back from living life to the fullest. Let's get

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started. Hey,

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beautiful soul. Welcome to new view advice. If you're new here, this is a healing

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centered advice podcast where I offer guidance for the healing journey. I don't believe I

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have all the answers you seek. I believe you have all the answers. You just

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may need a new view and a little help along the way. Thank you so

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much for joining me for today's episode. Today, I am answering a listener question from

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somebody struggling this holiday season with hard feelings such as

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loneliness, sadness, and depression, and they're wondering how they can begin to

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feel better and more festive this holiday season. I love this question.

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I do not think you are alone. I have actually had this conversation with many

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people this holiday season. I don't know if it's just the people I

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have been spending time with or if it's a more collective

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experience, but I have found through many conversations that this

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holiday season has been more challenging for people than other holiday seasons. So

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this episode is really for all of us who are feeling maybe a

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little sad this holiday season as well as wondering where did the holiday

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magic go. That's part of this question, and I think that's a really interesting

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take. And I'm gonna talk a little bit about that idea of holiday

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magic. So for this episode, we're going to talk about how to process some of

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our hard feelings, accepting where we are, and remembering we won't be here

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forever, how to love ourselves more deeply throughout the holidays, and

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hopefully helping you to feel better or at least less alone this holiday season.

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Before I jump into today's episode, I always like to mention that if you haven't

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already, I invite you to check out my website for more free resources. You can

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check that out at new view advice.com. And on my website, I have

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journal prompts, meditations, podcast episodes, or my favorite

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areas are the poems and reflection sections. These are where I

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share writings of mine. I've really been leaning into writing over the past couple

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months, and it's just felt so good to reconnect to that part of myself, the

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writer within me. So that's all on my website at noovioadvice.com,

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and today's episode show notes will be at noovioadvice.com/115.

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So with that, let's jump on into today's listener question.

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Dear Amanda, I'm really struggling this holiday season and was wondering if you had some

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advice. I usually love the holidays, but this year I'm depressed and

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sad. Honestly, as I write this, I realize I've been struggling for months.

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I've been feeling really lonely, and with the holidays, I'm finding I feel worse rather

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than better. I'm lacking any holiday spirit, and it's just adding to the sadness

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I feel. I find myself wondering, where is the holiday magic? Do

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you have any advice on how I can feel better this holiday season, or should

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I just hope January is better? Thank you so much for this question.

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First, I wanna say I'm sorry that you've been feeling sad and depressed. I think

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those are hard feelings to feel all year, and I think around the holidays, they

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become even harder because of the messages we receive about the holidays. So

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if you watch Christmas movies or holiday movies or you turn on the

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TV and you see commercials or with friends and family and

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maybe, like, festive parties, like work events and things like that. We can think

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that we're supposed to be feeling a certain way even if we're not feeling that

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way. So I just wanna honor wherever you're at because

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though it is challenging to not be in the holiday spirit,

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there is nothing wrong with you, and your feelings are valid no matter what time

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of year it is. With that said, I wanna say that I think

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that with those hard feelings you're feeling, it sounds like you've been feeling them for

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months. And my guess is that part of the reason you're really aware of feeling

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them now is, as I mentioned, that there's all these messages that we're supposed to

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be cheery around the holidays. We expect to feel a certain way around the

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holidays. And I find that the holidays can be a great time, but they can

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also be a disappointing time for a lot of people because of those

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unmet expectations, and that can lead to disappointment. And I

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wanted to mention this expectation and disappointment because in your question, you say,

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where is the holiday magic? And that's such an interesting question to

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ask because I think that it's a question many adults feel

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around the holidays. Where is the holiday magic? Because I think that magical

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element of the holiday season connects back to childhood.

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And so I think that when we are looking for the holiday magic, we're looking

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to feel how we felt when we were a child, when there was still that

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magical element of Santa Claus and when there was this

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belief that anything was possible. Right? The movies really show us these

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really magical moments at the holiday season. There seems to be a lot of

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magic involved at this time of year in the movies. And I also think when

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you're a kid, you get the holidays off. So that feels really magical, and it's

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really fun. And as adults, we don't always take 2 weeks off,

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1 week off, whatever it is kids get for vacation. But there's this real

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intention around the holidays when you're a child, and it feels magical. And

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I think that when we're adults and we're looking for that magic it's that we're

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looking to connect to that childlike nature within us, and I

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absolutely love that we're looking to do that. But what happens

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is when we're unable to connect to it, we feel sad, we feel depressed, or

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we feel disconnected. So I wanted to mention that here that when you feel

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like where is the holiday magic? I think that's a beautiful question to be asking

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yourself because I think it connects to, like I said, a childlike part of

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you that's looking to come forward. And I think that's beautiful because I think so

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many people, when they become adults, become disconnected from that childlike

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nature. And our childlike nature is where our creativity lives. It's where our

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innocence lives. It's where such a pure part of us lives, and it

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never goes away. We feel like it goes away, and we can shove it

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down, that childlike nature within us, but it really never goes away. It's part of

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who we are. You know, it's like how people say I'm young at heart. It's

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because people understand that the young, the children of the

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world, have that lightness of heart. And so I just wanna say that

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I think it's a beautiful thing that you're looking to connect to the holiday spirit,

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and I don't think there's anything wrong with that. So with all that, I want

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to now take a step back and answer your question of how do you

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feel better this holiday season. And so my first piece of advice for

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you is that I want you to practice accepting where you

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are without judgment. So as I talked about

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many times when it comes to the holiday season, we are disappointed because our

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expectations are not met. So for you, one of your expectations was that the

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holiday season would feel magical, and you're not feeling that way. And so

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the first step, I believe, in feeling better is accepting where

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you are and accepting that right now, it doesn't feel magical. And

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that may sound counterintuitive. But if you've been listening to this podcast long

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enough, I don't think it sounds counterintuitive, but I will explain it. I think that

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many times when we are running from how we are feeling

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and we want to feel something else, we are not accepting where we're at, and

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then we're not able to process that feeling. And so for you, I think it's

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important for you to take some time to be like, I am sad sad

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this holiday season. This is a hard season for me. And

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allow that feeling up. And I invite you to really sit with

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that feeling. What does that look like sitting with your feeling? You could meditate with

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it. You could journal. You could work with a professional. If you're in therapy, you

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could ask your therapist about this sadness. But I want you to connect with

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it. And one, the great thing about feelings is they never last forever.

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So I invite you to remind yourself that you will not feel this way forever.

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But when we run from our feelings, they tend to linger and last longer. So

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I invite you to embrace it. I'm feeling sad this holiday season. What is

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this sadness trying to communicate to me? And really get to

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know what you feel sad about. Because you said you've been

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feeling sad and depressed and lonely this holiday season, but also for a couple

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months. And my question to you is, why?

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Did something happen in the past couple months to trigger that

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sadness? And I think that's something that happens at the holiday season

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is that things can speed up in a way, like, where we feel really busy,

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but also things start to slow down. So we can't ignore

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ourselves and our hard feelings as much as we are used to.

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And I also think with seeing friends and family, especially friends and family

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we're not used to seeing, those type of family members maybe we only see around

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the holidays, it can bring up old wounding. It can bring up old

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feelings. It can bring up a past experience that wants to be looked at and

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healed, or it can bring up some of our core beliefs

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about ourselves. So maybe our family triggers within us that were not enough,

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or maybe there's something that happened over the past year

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that is now coming up for you to look at at this time. So

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with all that said, I want you to begin looking at these feelings that

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are arising with curiosity rather than judgment.

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Because at the core of this question, I believe that you're judging

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yourself for the experience you're having. And the truth is

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your experience is real. There's no reason to deny it. You are

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having hard feelings, and that is real. You know, I think another part of

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growing up and being an adult is understanding that you can be having hard

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feelings right now. You can feel sad and depressed, and you can also have

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those moments of magic mixed into this holiday season. I was

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joking with my partner that I sometimes think nostalgia is like a

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disease. Like, I think people get so attached to the past.

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They, in their head, tell themselves it was a lot better than it was

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because I do think times were simpler years ago, and I

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think things are just getting more and more chaotic in a lot of ways. But

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the truth is the human experience ebbs and flows. And I

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think that people are always having different emotions.

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And I think that we look at the past and we can put rose

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colored glasses over it, and we can say, oh, that was such a great year

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or that was such a great vacation. Even if the vacation was filled

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with ups and downs because life is filled with ups and downs. And it's not

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that I think we should look at the past in a negative light. I just

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think that sometimes with the nostalgia, we look at it as if it

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was always better than the present moment is, and I don't

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believe that's true. And I also believe all we have is the present

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moment. So with nostalgia, I find so many people look at the past in this

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longing, in this fairytale way, the same way that people can look to the future

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as if it's gonna fix all their problems. And so much of life is learning

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how to be comfortable in the discomfort and hard feelings are

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uncomfortable. So my first piece of advice for you with feeling better this

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holiday season is to accept where you are and to

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really spend some time processing those feelings or bringing awareness to those feelings and

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why you're feeling that way. Because with that, what I also wanna say is in

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your question, you said, should you just wait till January? No. No. Oh

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my goodness. No. This is my hot take of the week. Do not just

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wait till January. You have right now, this present

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moment. If you need to wait till January, okay. I mean, be kind

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to yourself. There's no judgment here. The reason this is a hot take is because

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I can't tell you the amount of years that I waited till January.

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I was like, January 1st, I'm gonna get my life together, or January 1st,

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things are gonna be different. And guess what? January 1st hit, and I was the

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exact same person, and I was so devastated. I'm laughing right now because when

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I got this question, I read it to Evan, and we talked about that, how

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I was one of those people who was always like, January 1st, things are

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gonna change. It's gonna shift for me. The universe is gonna show up different.

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No. Same life. The lesson has always been, Amanda,

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can you tune back to the present moment? Can you drop into

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here and now and appreciate this moment no matter what is arising? And

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as a trauma survivor, as many of us are who listen to this podcast, that

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can be incredibly difficult. I know that. I honor that.

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But I also know that January 1st isn't

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gonna magically make your sadness, your depression, or

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your loneliness disappear. Those feelings are going to linger

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because they have messages for you. Right? Maybe the loneliness is time for you to

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step out of your comfort zone. I know that came up for me. I talked

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about loneliness back in October, and since then, I've really been making a big effort

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to meet new people. And I say that because that

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loneliness was communicating to me that it was time to step out of my

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comfort zone. With sadness for you, I'm wondering if there's an inner

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child who wants to be acknowledged. I think that this

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idea of a magical Christmas, which I still think you can bring magic to the

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holidays because I believe you can bring magic to everyday. But I think there's

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a inner child within you who's looking for that magic, who feels as if

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they're missing something. And I don't know what you feel like you're missing, but I

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invite you to become curious about that expectation that's not being met right

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now. And with depression, depression is a very challenging one

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because it can linger. Right? I find sadness ebbs and flows

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where depression is that lingering feeling of gloom and melancholiness.

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And for depression, it's learning what helps you with that

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depression. And maybe with all these feelings you're feeling since you've been feeling

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them for months, maybe it's time to get some help. If you don't have any

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professionals in your life or you haven't been reaching out for help, that could also

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be something that you're ready for maybe come 2025. Maybe you've something that you're ready

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for maybe come 2025. Maybe you've been going long

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enough on your own and you're looking for some help on your journey. There's

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nothing wrong with that. I've worked with many professionals throughout my journey. I continue to

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work with professionals. So I invite you to be honest with yourself if

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maybe these lingering feelings are trying to communicate to you that it's time

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to try something different. And you can also check out my website for

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journal prompts to assist you in connecting back to your feelings. I do have journal

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prompts specifically for healing from depression on my website, and I'll link

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those in the show notes at newviaadvice.com/115. So

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with all that said about feeling your feelings, I also

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think this is an invitation for you to love yourself more

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deeply this holiday season. I think that when we accept where

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we are, it's an act of self love because you are accepting where you are

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in the present moment without judgment. That's what I'm inviting you to do is to

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not judge yourself for wherever you're at. I know it can be really hard this

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time of year with the outside world mirroring back a cheery facade

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when we don't feel cheery. But I also wanna say here that I think that

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the holidays are filled with a lot of smoke and mirrors is what I'm

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going to say. I don't think that everyone is cheery every

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second. As I said, people are complex. Most people aren't just holiday version

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of cheery for 30 days. Right? They may look that way

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on social media or in the movies or on a

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commercial or maybe even at holiday parties. But I think

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that the deeper we get, the more we see that people

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are still people during the holidays. So they're often stressed.

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They're often overwhelmed, or maybe they're sad and lonely as

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well. I know for a lot of people, the holidays can be really sad because

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there's so many messages of family up around the holidays, and many people

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have lost family members, and many people are estranged from their families.

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So it can be a very lonely time for many people. So you're definitely not

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alone in how you're feeling. I know that this holiday season's been harder for me

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than past holiday seasons. And I'm reminding myself that I won't

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feel this way forever and holidays will be around again next year. And that's not

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me ignoring how I'm feeling. It's me taking care of myself and disengaging from things

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that are triggering for me. So for you, I invite you to also notice what

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triggers are. Are there specific things that are triggering you to feel this sadness,

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depression, and loneliness this holiday season? So I feel like I went on a

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tangent there, but I invite you to love yourself deeper. And what I really mean

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by that is that the holiday season, as I said, with that holiday magic you

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mentioned, I really think it's connected to your inner child. And I think that

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the way to bring that holiday magic back is to connect with that

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inner child. And that is such an act of self love,

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is to connect deeper with your inner child and to

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acknowledge that part of yourself that, as I said, is always there, that innocent

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nature, that creative spirit, that purity within you. And this is a time of year

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where I invite you to let that inner child out. Maybe you want

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to do something this holiday season that allows that inner child to shine. Maybe

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you wanna go ice skating. Maybe you wanna go sing some Christmas songs. For

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me, I've been playing Christmas songs on the piano. I just started learning how to

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play the piano, and I can only play jingle bells. I'm not very talented. I

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just won't throw that out there. But that's how I've been connecting to the holiday

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spirit, Also, my inner child is my inner child has been loving playing

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music. It's been something I've been embracing for the past couple of months. I healed

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from a lot of trauma this summer, and I have been spending the fall and

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now winter really connecting back to that inner child within me who felt

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really punished for her creative gifts. And so

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that's what I've been doing, but I find that that's an act of self love.

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So I invite you to really embrace self love this holiday season because that's the

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other thing. With the holidays, we can expect other people to act certain ways,

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and we can find we're disappointed by other people. Like, we can think our family

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will act a certain way, and then we go see our family and they act

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the way they always act. Or we can expect our partner, our

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husband, our wife to buy us a certain gift or to acknowledge the

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holidays in a certain way or try to be the magic of the season and

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they aren't in the holiday spirit either, and then we get mad at them. And

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with those unmet expectations, it can cause us to feel disappointed again.

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So I invite you to really see what you can do this holiday season

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to bring that magical feeling you're looking for and, again, not judging

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yourself or however you feel. And the last thing I wanna mention is another way

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you can love yourself this holiday season is to prioritize self care.

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I think that the holidays are really a time for slowing down,

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relaxing, and reconnecting with one another. But at least here

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in America, I find we've gotten so disconnected from that. For so many,

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the holidays is a more stressful time. It's a time where people disconnect from

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themselves. They put other people first or I hear the message over and over again.

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I just gotta get through the holiday season. Yes. That's one way to

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get through the holiday season, but I don't think that's what holidays were meant to

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be. I don't think that's how they have to be. And for you, if you're

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feeling disconnected from the holiday magic, I invite you to ask yourself how busy you

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are. Are you too busy? And are you doing things you want to be doing?

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Because I think that the other thing we've lost with the holidays is bringing

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intention to the holiday season. Do you wanna feel holiday magic? I invite you to

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ask yourself how would you bring that into your life. How would you feel that

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holiday magic? Like I said, I play piano. And when I play holiday

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songs, I feel that holiday magic. I feel my inner child like,

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dang. This feels so good to get this. And it's songs

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from my youth. It's songs from my childhood. So I feel that holiday magic. But

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is my whole day filled with holiday magic? No. It's not. But for me, I'm

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okay with that. But maybe for you, there's other ways you can add in that

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holiday magic. And maybe it's communicating with your loved ones what that is

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for you. Maybe you have to set boundaries this holiday season. Maybe you have to

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prioritize yourself this holiday season. I think when we feel triggered by a

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time of year or by an event like the holiday season, it's an invitation

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for us to get intentional and to choose new. So for

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some people, you may find that you always feel this way around the holiday season.

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I know for a long time, I felt disconnected from the holidays, and I

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always wanted them to be, quote, unquote, better than they were. And I eventually

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had to be like, what is that? And I realized it was because I had

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lost all parts of me at the holidays. The holidays had become about other

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people, and I needed to prioritize myself. And I spent time thinking about that,

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and I brought that intention into my life. But it took me becoming conscious

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of that in order to change it. So with you and these hard feelings

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arising, it's not a bad thing. It's an invitation for you to become more

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intentional and more aligned with yourself. So many times throughout my life,

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something I did previously doesn't bring me the same joy in the future, and

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so I end up being disappointed because I had an expectation around that. But, really,

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it's just an invitation more and more for me to become more present with myself

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and to see what each present moment wants rather than putting expectations from the

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past or nostalgia from the past on the future. So with that all

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set, I do wanna wish you a happy holiday season. I

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am sending you all so much love this holiday season. I am so grateful for

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each and every person who listens to new video advice and tunes into the

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podcast. I am forever grateful for this community. I

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can't tell you how much of a difference you have all made in my life.

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So I am so, so grateful for you. So know that though you're going through

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a challenging time, I am right here with you along this human

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journey and this healing journey. And my life is not perfect. My life

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has ebbed and flowed and is so much better than it was a year

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ago. So I'm taking this moment to acknowledge that. But there's still

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things that come up for me, and there's still healing that I'm going

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through, and that's part of the human journey. So wherever you're at

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today, I am sending you so much love, and please do not judge yourself. Please

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be kind to yourself. I truly believe self compassion has the power to change

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the world. And I also think, as I'm wrapping up this question, one way to

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bring holiday season and holiday joy this holiday season is

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to do something for someone else. I really believe small acts of

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kindness have a ripple effect and have the ability to change someone's life. I

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know that in my life, I look back on the moments that mattered most to

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me and so often it was small acts of kindness that shifted my day or

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shifted my point of view on something. So I find the holiday season can

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be a great time to give back and to connect with others even if it's

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just sending a text to somebody you haven't seen in a while. It doesn't have

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to be some grand gesture or some full day of volunteering. I think that we

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can find small ways to impact each other. I always find that when I give

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back to someone else, I do feel better because it reminds me to

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get out of my own way and that the world is so much bigger than

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me. So that just popped in my head here at the end of the episode.

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But I do hope something in this answer was helpful. Again, I know that the

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holidays can be a challenging time. So wherever you're at, be kind to yourself. Take

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care of yourself. Practice self care. Practice self love. Be kind to yourself,

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set boundaries if you need to. If you have plans that are not good for

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you and do not bring you joy, feel free to cancel them this holiday season.

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You can tell people Amanda Durocher said you can cancel them, and they'll be like,

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who is that? But I give you permission. I give you a permission slip to

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cancel them. But you know you don't need me to give you that permission slip.

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You know that you can give yourself that permission slip. That's what we do here.

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We give ourselves permission to do what we need to do to help us to

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heal and feel better. So as always, I hope something in

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this answer was helpful. Thank you so much for this question. I am sending you

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so much love.

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Thank you so much for joining me for another episode of newbie advice. As always,

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I'm so grateful to be able to have these conversations each week and for everyone

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who listens. The NewView Advice community is truly what I am grateful for this holiday

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season, so thank you. Thank you. Thank you again. And if you haven't already, I

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invite you to either leave a comment on this episode or leave the podcast

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5 stars. Comments and ratings really helps to bring more people to the podcast

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and help me to continue making more content, and it is truly the joy of

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my heart. So thank you so much, and thank you again for joining me for

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another episode of newbie advice. As always, I hope I was able to offer you

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a new view on whatever you may be going through. Sending you all my love.

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See you next time.

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