7 Practical Ways To Prioritize Your Emotional Well-Being When Hosting Family

They're in your house and suddenly you forget your own needs. A psychologist's advice.

extended family members hold sparklers simona pilolla 2 / shutterstock.com
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Families can be thorny even in good times. There’s always a great deal to negotiate. 

Perhaps on the most basic level, a family is a group of individuals we love so much that we will do things for them we would not do for anyone else.

This doesn’t mean it’s easy, but we are often willing to because they are, well, family. 

Our basic desire is to be with our family members during the holidays and gatherings throughout the year. But to keep the peace, it helps to be prepared to manage the range of potential conflict when the people you care most about are under the same roof.

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RELATED: How To Respectfully Disagree With Someone

Tips for keeping the peace with family during gatherings

1. Own that you have skills to deal with your family

After all, you have been dealing with your family your whole life. You know what not to say to Aunt Mathilda, how to ask Grandma for something, how to charm your father.

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Over the years, you’ve developed negotiating skills tailored to each potential area of conflict within your family, such as:

  • Food allergies and special diets. Do you bring the pecan pie now that you know your nephew has a nut allergy? What about accommodating your daughter’s vegan diet, or Grandma’s diabetic challenges?
  • Who brings what dish? Each family member has a specialty, but you’ve already experienced how offended they may be if not invited to bring their masterpiece, even if it was left virtually untouched last year. 
  • Drinking and driving. How do you make sure those who drink have a designated driver? Do you plan to just take away someone’s keys and have them sleep it off on your sofa? If there's a family member newly in recovery, do you decide that this will be a celebration with no alcohol?
  • Who sits next to whom? Do you put fully vaccinated people in one room and those who are unvaccinated in another? 
  • And ... you know how to keep the peace and not ask inappropriate questions, such as why your brother is still dating a girl you feel is not worthy of him. Take a deep breath. You’re probably better prepared than you feel in having this discussion.

RELATED: 10 Tragic-But-True Reasons People Cut Family Members Out Of Their Lives

2. Make a plan for self-compassion

Recognize what will make you feel safe to host or to attend a family celebration. Yes, your safety needs to be a top priority. This is one of the takeaways from the pandemic. With all the uncertainty swirling around us, know that you have the right to keep yourself, your unvaccinated young children, and vulnerable adults safe.

These are the issues you will want to consider:

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  • Vaccination status. 
  • COVID-19 testing — positive, negative or unknown?
  • Will face coverings be required? 

RELATED: Why Having 'No Contact' With Family Members Is Perfectly OK

3. Communicate openly and honestly

How you communicate your choices depends on your tolerance for risk. Do you want to send out a clear message that includes one of these statements?

  • “In recognition of the health concerns of many of our family members, please only come if you are vaccinated. Know that if you don’t come, we love you and will miss you.”
  • “We’re requesting that everyone wears a mask regardless of their vaccination status.”
  • “Please be prepared to take a rapid-response test at the door and to wait for the results before entering.”
  • “Please bring your masks to wear when we’re not outdoors.”

This is exhausting to figure out, so take some time with this. If you’re the recipient of this type of request, don’t just react; consider your own comfort level. This is another way you can be compassionate to yourself.

RELATED: 5 Ways To Practice Self-Compassion That Will Help You Start Treating Yourself The Way You Deserve

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4. Be curious about responses to your plan

Be curious rather than judgmental. If family members are unvaccinated, ask why. Go deeper than just “I read it on Facebook.” 

5. Get to know your family members on a more intimate level

If family members say they are concerned about something they heard or read, whether they express concerns about Big Government or changing guidelines, or mistrust of the government about vaccines in general, try to find out why they feel the way they do. If the answer you receive is that they don’t trust conventional medicine, ask why.

Find out if they trust other entities. For example, do they eat fast foods and not worry about what is in the meat at their favorite hamburger chain?

Do they trust the information they receive about snow tires? Why? Be curious about why this specific action is causing so much anxiety.

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RELATED: How To Reach Family And Friends Across The Political Divide

6. Show compassion

Being compassionate about the information you receive about family members’ underlying fears can be important to you and them. It may also bring you closer to understanding and helping those you love.

7. Use this opportunity to grow

A crisis is an opportunity to develop new skills. We never grow when everything is going well. We grow when we must address something uncomfortable. So, see this as a golden opportunity to determine what you need this holiday season.

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Caring about yourself while you consider the decisions your family is making can be a breakthrough gift for everyone including you most of all.

RELATED: Why We Need Love To Resolve Conflicts

Patricia O’Gorman, PhD, Psychologist, Life Coach, is a best-selling author of nine books on trauma, resilience, women and self-parenting.