There's no good reason we should spend time with our families if it's just going to mean hostility and bad feeling. We don't hear much about it, but a lot of people no longer feel obliged to visit their family and are much happier spending Christmas on their own or with friends.
Readers responding to a newspaper's agony column were unanimous: If you don't get on with your family, ditch them and make Christmas your own.
Readers shared stories of walking away from tense gatherings, spending the day alone, heading off on trips, or celebrating with friends - and loving it.
The overriding response was simple: protect your peace, reclaim Christmas, and make it a day you actually enjoy rather than an exercise in pleasing others.
I sent Christmas on my own for many years and relished it. That was partly because my father and I didn't get on. Also because my parents had political views very different from my own and it would have been too stressful keeping on the right side of them.
Now my parents are both gone, I don't miss them at Christmas. Jenny and I have a great time on our own and wouldn't have it any other way.


It's like you had me in mind when you wrote this. My brother has not been seen nor heard from in over 30 years. He did the right thing, I did the wrong. My mother had a personality disorder. All family on both sides stopped interacting with us when I was a young child. Because of upbringing as the daughter I was so trained to take it I never left. There are people who think I'm horrible when I say the day she died felt like a rebirth for me and my son. So, long way of saying, you won't hear an argument from me on this topic.
ReplyDeleteSandra: That seems quite understandable that it felt like a rebirth when your mother died, if you had had a difficult relationship with her. Sad that your brother has been missing for over 30 years.
Delete