When Holidays Become More Work Than Rest
Holidays are supposed to be joyful, restful, and connection-building. But if you’re parenting teens or pre-teens, you may already be bracing for the shift from cosy family time to mood swings, eye rolls, and parallel screen time.
Many parents quietly admit that holidays often feel like more work than reward — yet those same messy, imperfect moments become cherished family memories later.
Remember What Holidays Felt Like For You
Before expecting harmony, recall your own adolescence. Holidays between ages 9 and 17, did the involve:
- joy
- frustration
- boredom
- conflict
- expansion
- experimentation
Meeting your adolescent where they are begins with remembering who you were.
Seven Strategies to Keep Christmas Calm, Kind, Connected and More Enjoyable
- Set Expectations Together
Before you travel or settle in, ask each person what they want from the holidays. Collaboration increases cooperation.
- Offer Independence (Where You Can)
Holiday environments can feel crowded and over-regulated. Small freedoms — choosing meals, activities, or a budget — reduce power struggles.
- Keep Communication Light
Holidays are not the moment for deep debriefs or “family summits.” Laugh more, lecture less.
- Honour Teen Rhythms
Expecting teenagers to wake at 7am brimming with festive cheer is unrealistic. Balance family plans with downtime.
- Plan Lightly, Leave Space for Magic
Aim for one anchor activity a day. Let the rest be spontaneous — that’s where memory-making happens.
- Choose Connection Over Control
The fantasy of the perfect family holiday creates tension. Look for small wins and let go of what doesn’t matter.
- Protect Your Own Energy
Your nervous system sets the tone. Rest creates patience. Boredom creates creativity.
Before the Holiday Ends…
Take a moment to name highlights together. Teens will volunteer low points without prompting — that’s part of the charm. Shared reflection turns chaos into story.
About Mindful Coherence
If you’re navigating life with adolescents, join us on Instagram @mindfulcoherence or visit www.mindfulcoherence.com to access webinars, eBooks, newsletters and community groups.
With over 30 years supporting young people worldwide, I aim to make guidance accessible, evidence-informed, and genuinely helpful.
Original Publication Note:
This article first appeared on Substack on 11 December 2025. Read the original version on Substack.
