Five tips for surviving the holidays
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Monday, November 24, 2008 — Dr. Jonathan Abramowitz, an expert in anxiety disorders and professor of psychiatry and psychology in the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s School of Medicine and College of Arts & Sciences, offers five tips for coping with holiday-related stress. Finally! It’s the holiday season! We get a break from work, visit family, watch football games, eat great food. And the other time-honored tradition: we get to stress out. And with unemployment across the country rising, many people might truly have a blue, blue Christmas. “When someone becomes stressed they’re experiencing an age-old, very normal reaction to the perception of some sort of threat,” says Dr. Jonathan Abramowitz, an expert in anxiety disorders and professor of psychiatry and psychology in the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s School of Medicine and College of Arts & Sciences. “Your heart races, your chest gets tight, you start to sweat. There are catastrophic thoughts: ‘Oh, no! What’s going to happen?’ And then we act – it’s the fight-or-flight response,” Abramowitz says. “At its heart these are normal and adaptive behaviors.” Stress, anxiety, depression and anger all are caused by certain patterns of thinking. “When we get angry, we’re telling ourselves that things must or should go a certain way, or other people must or should behave certain ways. With the economy, we might be thinking that we have to buy gifts or go on vacation or travel to see family. But, Abramowitz says, it’s the way we think about things that dictate our emotions. “If we’re thinking, ‘I have to buy gifts for everyone. We signed up to take this big vacation, we have to travel.’ Those set us up to be let down. So, what are we to do?
“We don’t have to like the holidays, and they might not be stress free, but going into them thinking, ‘This is temporary, I can get through this,’ instead of “Oh, God, this is going to be awful,’ prepares you to get through them,” Abramowitz says. UNC contacts: Clinton Colmenares, (919) 966-8757; ccolmena@unch.unc.edu or Stephanie Crayton, (919) 966-2860; scrayton@unch.unc.edu [top] |

