Couples Who Never Fight: When “Keeping the Peace” Is Actually a Trauma Response

by Melanie Gibbons, LAC Why conflict avoidance can feel like love, but quietly create distance, and how couples can build safety without blowing up. Let’s start with a confession. When couples tell me, “We never fight,” part of me is like… aw, that’s cute. And another part of me, the trauma therapist part, gently leans forward like: “Okay. And . . . what does it cost you to keep it that way?” Because here’s the thing. Not fighting can mean you have great communication, strong repair skills, and mutual respect. But sometimes? “We never fight” is not a sign of peace. It is a sign of protection. It is a sign that somebody’s nervous system has learned, somewhere along the way, that conflict is dangerous. And when your body believes conflict is dangerous, you don’t “talk it out.” You avoid it, smooth it over, shut it down, or swallow it whole. That’s not a character flaw. That’s a trauma response. And yes, it can show up in couples who genuinely love each other. What I notice beneath the surface Most of the time, when I’m sitting with couples, we’re talking about the usual relationship stuff: communication, disconnection, intimacy, the same argument that keeps showing up in a different outfit. But I’m always paying attention to what’s happening underneath those moments. Because a lot of what looks like “personality” in a relationship is actually protection. A nervous system doing what it learned to do. A partner going quiet not because they don’t care, but because conflict feels unsafe. Someone staying agreeable because it keeps the connection intact, at least on the surface. That trauma layer matters. Not in a heavy, dig-up-your-life-story way, but in a very practical way. It helps couples stop moralizing their patterns and start understanding them, so they can respond differently and feel closer, not just calmer. So, let’s talk about it. Let’s talk about it in a way that’s real, not overly clinical, and does not make anyone feel like they need to unpack their entire childhood before finishing their coffee. What is a trauma response, really? When people hear “trauma response,” they often picture something dramatic or obvious. Panic attacks. Flashbacks. Big reactions. But trauma responses can be quiet. They can look like being “easygoing.” They can look like being “the chill one.” They can look like never bringing things up that bother you. A trauma response is simply the body’s learned way of staying safe when something feels threatening. Not “logical threat.” Nervous system threat. So, if you grew up around conflict that was explosive, shaming, unpredictable, or emotionally unsafe, your body may have learned: Conflict equals danger. Danger equals I need to protect myself. In adult relationships, that can turn into patterns like: Again, not because you’re broken. But because your body got really good at surviving. Why “we never fight” can be a red flag This is where couples get confused, because they are like: “Wait. Are you saying we should fight more?” No. I’m saying you should be able to tolerate normal conflict without your nervous system acting like it’s the apocalypse. Healthy couples have disagreements. They have mis attunements. They bump into each other’s stress, triggers, needs, and blind spots. The goal is not to “never fight.” The goal is: When couples never fight, it can sometimes mean: And the relationship starts to run on politeness instead of intimacy. Because intimacy requires truth. And truth sometimes includes tension. What “keeping the peace” looks like in real life Let’s make this painfully relatable. Keeping the peace can sound like: And it can look like: Keeping the peace is often a short-term strategy that helps you avoid discomfort now, but it creates disconnection later. It’s like putting your feelings in a storage unit. Eventually, it’s full. And then you’re paying emotional rent on stuff you never even use. How trauma shows up as conflict avoidance Here are a few common trauma-rooted reasons why couples avoid conflict. You might see yourself in one, your partner, or both. 1) “If I bring it up, I’ll be rejected.” This often shows up as people-pleasing, overexplaining, or staying quiet. The fear is not the argument. The fear is losing the relationship. 2) “If I upset you, something bad will happen.” If someone grew up in a home where anger meant emotional withdrawal, punishment, or chaos, their body may treat conflict like an emergency. 3) “My needs don’t matter.” This is the quieter trauma story. It can come from being dismissed, ignored, or told you were too sensitive. So, you learn to have no needs, or at least none you admit out loud. 4) “Conflict means I’m unsafe.” Some nervous systems equate conflict with danger. Not because the current partner is dangerous, but because the body remembers old experiences. 5) “I don’t know how to do conflict without it becoming ugly.” A lot of people did not grow up seeing healthy repair. They saw yelling, stonewalling, blame, or silence. So, as adults, they avoid conflict because they truly do not know what “healthy conflict” looks like. This is where a trauma lens matters in couples’ work. Because I am not just teaching communication skills. I’m helping couples build enough emotional safety that honesty does not feel like a threat. The sneaky downside of never fighting Here’s what tends to happen when couples avoid conflict long-term. Resentment quietly grows It starts small. Then it becomes a personality trait. One partner starts feeling like: “I do everything.” The other starts feeling like: “Nothing I do is enough.” And nobody says it out loud, because we are keeping the peace, remember? Emotional distance increases You can be kind and still feel alone. A couple can look fine to everyone else and feel completely disconnected behind closed doors. Explosions happen later, over something dumb If you never fight, eventually you will fight about something that makes no sense. The dishwasher. The tone. The look. The way they breathed or chew their food. It’s never about the dishwasher. It’s about the 47 conversations you didn’t feel safe enough to have. One or both partners start to numb out When you constantly suppress your truth, your body adapts. It disconnects. People start feeling flat, tired, checked out, or emotionally unavailable. That is not laziness. That is nervous system fatigue. What healthy conflict actually looks like Healthy conflict is not yelling. It’s not insulting. It’s not the silent treatment. It’s not “winning.” Healthy conflict is: A good goal for couples is not “we never fight.” A good goal is: “We can
Love Beyond Romance: What Motherhood Teaches Us About Love

by Autumn Colon When we talk about love, we almost always mean romance. Partnership. Marriage. Desire. Being chosen. But not all love is romantic. And motherhood will teach you that quickly. Motherhood shifts the way you experience love, not just toward your children, but toward your partner, your community, and yourself. It forces you to confront what love actually looks like when it’s tired, stretched, and responsible for more than just chemistry. Motherhood is not just a new role. It’s an identity shift. Psychologists call this matrescence, the developmental transition into becoming a mother. And like any major transition, it reshapes relationships. Sometimes quietly. Sometimes dramatically. The Relationship with Yourself The first relationship that changes in motherhood is often the least discussed: the one you have with yourself. Many mothers describe feeling like they “lost” who they were. Not because they regret becoming a parent, but because their needs slowly moved to the bottom of every list. Time, body autonomy, career identity, rest — all renegotiated. Recognizing this, holding this truth does not mean you have regrets about your children or the new role; it simply means, you are human. In therapy, I often ask mothers a simple question: Where did you go? Not in a dramatic way. Just gently. Somewhere between managing schedules, anticipating needs, and holding emotional labor, many women stop checking in with themselves. The disconnection between mind, body and living life has become the norm that loving self just feels like another thing to add to the never-ending list. So, you do nothing, say nothing, and sit with it. Burnout thrives in that silence. One exercise I use with clients is mapping energy instead of time. Instead of asking “What do you need to get done?” we ask, “What depletes you? What restores you?” Often the depletion column is long and unquestioned. The restoration column is short, sometimes blank. Rebuilding love of self in motherhood isn’t about luxury. It’s about regulation. It might mean: If you’re wondering where to begin, try the non-negotiable list as your first stop. That list is your anchor, and nothing comes before ensuring your non-negotiable (a.k.a your baseline) has been tended too. Love that excludes you will eventually exhaust you. And we’re not doing that, sis. We’re no longer self-sabotaging in the name of motherhood. The Relationship with Your Partner Romantic love shifts under the weight of responsibility. Parenthood exposes inequities in labor, communication gaps, and unspoken expectations. Intimacy changes. Time changes. Desire changes. And for many couples, the shift feels personal when it’s actually structural. This isn’t sad or discouraging. This is reality. Love changes. And it should; as you move throughout life, there will be many changes in you, your partner and your relationship. The sweet spot is making sure throughout those changes you find your way back to each other. In sessions with couples, I often help them move from accusation to clarification. Instead of “You never help,” we explore, “What does support look like to you?” Instead of assuming alignment, we define it. Motherhood changes both partners. But it’s not always at the same pace. Love after children requires intentional recalibration. One practice I suggest is a weekly “state of us” check-in — not about logistics, but about emotional temperature. How are we feeling? Where are we disconnected? What feels unbalanced this week? The love may take a new shape, they may see you in a new light, you may wake up and say, how did we get here. These questions don’t always mean the love is lost, it’s still love. It’s just maturing. The Relationship with Community Motherhood also reshapes friendships and family relationships in ways that can feel subtle at times — and seismic over time. Some friendships deepen because they can hold your new reality. Others drift because the rhythms no longer align. They say motherhood shows you the truth of who your true friends and village are. Your needs change. You may need more flexibility. More emotional safety. More understanding around time and energy. You may find yourself less interested in surface-level connection and more protective of where your vulnerability goes. Some friendships deepen because they can hold your new reality. They adjust with you. They grow with you. Others feel strained; not from absence of love, but from a shift in season and capacity. And then there’s family. Parenting can resurface old dynamics quickly. Especially if you’re choosing to raise your children differently than how you were raised. Boundaries that once felt unnecessary suddenly become essential. Conversations you once avoided feel unavoidable. Many mothers quietly grieve here — not because they don’t love their people, but because loving well now requires clarity. Love in community doesn’t mean constant access, shaky boundaries or overextending yourself for the sake of “this is my mother/best friend/aunt, I’m expected to show up this way”. It doesn’t mean enduring dynamics that exhaust you. Look for mutual respect and room to grow. In my work, I often encourage mothers to audit their support systems without guilt. Not to cut people off impulsively, but to assess alignment. I ask questions that help you get a clear understanding of the people you love that you want with you during this phase of your life. Who feels safe? Who respects your parenting choices? Who allows you to evolve? Where do you feel like you have to shrink? And here’s the part that matters: motherhood may be a significant part of who you are, but it is not all of who you are. If every relationship only engages you as “mom,” the other parts of you begin to fade. The friend. The thinker. The creative. The woman with evolving interests and boundaries. A healthy community makes room for those parts and if not, in the words of Moses “let those people GO!” This means redefining closeness. Sometimes it means strengthening the relationships that can expand with you. Sometimes it means intentionally building new connections that reflect who you are becoming; not just who you’ve always been. Isolation increases burnout. But so does staying in proximity to people who cannot meet you where you are. The goal isn’t more people. It’s relationships where love continues to thrive — because you are allowed to grow inside of it. When Love Starts to Feel Like Labor There are seasons in motherhood when love feels expansive. And there are seasons when it feels like work. Burnout changes the emotional tone of everything. You can still care deeply and feel exhausted by the caring. You can still be devoted and quietly resent how much is required of you. Many mothers internalize this as guilt: But burnout is not a reflection of your capacity to
Women and Anxiety in Relationships: What You’re Actually Reacting To

by Tiffanie Brown, LCSW-R Hey girl, Hey! February is here and the stores are filled with heart shaped balloons, teddy bears, and chocolates. And while you are thinking about what to get your special person, I want you to reflect on these questions: Have you ever been told you are “doing too much; or that you are too sensitive, too anxious, or too intense?” Are you someone who replays conversations in your head, or someone who constantly scans for shifts in people’s tone; or are you the person who spirals when replies to your texts feel shorter? If this sounds like you, you are not imagining things! That tightness you feel in your body when something “feels off” is a sign that your body is trying to protect you. You see, what often gets labeled as relationship anxiety is actually something much deeper; it is your nervous system trying to protect you. The anxiety you are carrying in your body and into your relationships does not come from nowhere. It is shaped by your history, your experiences, and survival. So, let’s talk about what is really happening and why. Oh! And grab a box of dark chocolate for yourself; you might need them later. I am the kind of therapist that is passionate about getting to root of your emotions and helping you develop a deeper and healthier understanding of yourself. Anxiety in Relationships Isn’t Random, It’s Learned Many of my clients assume when anxiety shows up in relationships, it automatically means they are insecure or needy. But anxiety is rarely about wanting too much. It’s about learning, over time, that connection can be unpredictable. And yes, you most likely learned this in early childhood relationships, and it was later reinforced in your adult experiences. In therapy, we call this conditioning. So, let’s try and pinpoint some of this together. Can you recall a time when you’ve had to: Through these experiences your body may have learned that love requires you to stay on alert or vigilant. Vigilance affects your nervous system, which means in your relationships, your nervous system stays on alert, because you’ve learned that closeness can disappear without warning. Hypervigilance: When Your Body Is Always Paying Attention Hypervigilance is often misunderstood. It’s not about being paranoid; it is your body trying to prepare. It can look like: For many Black women, hyper-vigilance didn’t start in romantic relationships. It started early. This is quite common in families where emotional needs were not prioritized; in environments where expressing feelings felt risky; or in systems where being misunderstood had real consequences. In order to survive those experiences, your body learned to pay attention, or you might get hurt. So, now as an adult, when someone pulls back, even slightly, your nervous system responds before your logic can catch up. Safety Is the Missing Piece in Relationship Anxiety Here’s the part that doesn’t get talked about enough; anxiety often shows up when safety is inconsistent. And I am not talking about physical safety. I am talking about emotional safety. Emotional safety is knowing: When emotional safety isn’t established, anxiety begins to fill the gap. Remember it is trying to communicate to your body that something is “off,” and we need to prepare for or stabilize what is “unstable.” In response, you might find yourself explaining yourself repeatedly, or over-functioning to keep the relationship steady; or suppressing your needs to avoid conflict; or trying to “be better” so things don’t fall apart. Emotional Labor: The Invisible Load Women Carry Honest moment! Women are taught to manage relationships and that “ish” is exhausting. It’s like an unspoken rule. We are constantly expected to: Whew…can someone pass the chocolate. Over time, this creates an uneven dynamic where you are the emotional regulator of the relationship. And when you are doing most of the emotional labor, having anxiety makes sense. It can feel like you are carrying responsibility without support. Our body remembers past experiences too. We are not just reacting to what is happening now; we are reacting to what this moment reminds your body of. Your anxiety may be responding to past emotional neglect, inconsistent caregiving, being chosen last or overlooked, or having to earn love through effort. So, when something familiar shows up, like distance, silence, or unpredictability, your body reacts fast. This Isn’t About “Calming Down,” It is About Clarity Many women are told to manage anxiety by minimizing their reactions. But the goal isn’t to silence yourself. The goal is to understand what your anxiety is pointing to. When anxiety shows up, I want you to start asking yourself: When you listen instead of judging yourself, anxiety becomes information, not a flaw. Shifting From Survival to Self-Trust Here are 5 grounded ways to work with relationship anxiety instead of fighting it. 1. Track Patterns, Not Moments Instead of reacting to one interaction, zoom out. Ask yourself: Is this a pattern or a one off. Consistency matters more than intensity. 2. Notice Where You Over-Function Where are you doing more emotional work than the other person? Where are you initiating, repairing, explaining, or holding things together alone? 3. Check in With Your Body Anxiety often shows up physically first. Tight chest. Shallow breathing. Restlessness. Pause and ask: What doesn’t feel safe right now? 4. Practice Saying Needs Without Over-Explaining You don’t need a dissertation to deserve care. Here’s a script: “I need more consistency to feel secure.” 5. Ask Yourself This Question If I stopped managing this relationship, what would happen? Your answer will tell you a lot. Ok! I hope you walk away from this believing that you are not “too much.” You’re just responding to what you’ve had to survive. Anxiety in relationships doesn’t mean you’re incapable of love; it means you care deeply and have learned to protect yourself. If this blog resonated with you and you need support navigating anxiety in your relationships, schedule a consultation with me at Renewed Focus. And remember the work isn’t to become less sensitive. It is to build relationships where your sensitivity is safe.
Moms, You Don’t Need a Reinvention — You Need Rest

by Autumn Colón, Associate Therapist Somewhere along the way, motherhood got paired with the idea that we’re always supposed to be becoming something new. A new version of ourselves. A better version. A calmer, more patient, more fulfilled, more put-together version. And when we feel exhausted, disconnected, or burnt out, the message we often receive is the same: reinvent yourself. We see it all over our feeds at the beginning of the year. New year. New me. New routines. New habits. New goals. New identity. But what I see, over and over again in my work with mothers, is this truth: Most moms don’t need a reinvention. They need rest. When Burnout Gets Mistaken for a Personal Problem Burnout builds slowly, often so quietly that many mothers don’t recognize it as burnout at all. It shows up in small ways. It could look like feeling tired even after a full night’s sleep. Becoming more irritable over things that never used to bother you. Losing patience with yourself. Feeling emotionally flat, disconnected, or constantly on edge. Your burnout might not look like Angela Bassett’s crash out in “Waiting to Exhale” but more like functioning day to day on autopilot. You’re getting things done, showing up, caring for everyone else, but internally you feel depleted, foggy, or numb. The days blur together. Joy feels harder to access. Rest never feels like enough. Many moms who come sit with me are worried that something is wrong with them. They’ll say things like, “I don’t feel like myself anymore,” or “I think I need to figure out who I am again.” They begin to associate burnout with a lack of identity. I’ll hold your hand when I say this: burnout doesn’t mean you need to become someone new. It means your system is tired. In my work with mothers, this is often where we begin. I’m trained to help women slow the moment down enough to separate exhaustion from identity, and burnout from self-worth. Together, we look at what your nervous system has been holding, how long you’ve been running on empty, and what kind of support would actually help right now. My approach isn’t about pushing change or prescribing a new version of you; it’s about creating space for rest, clarity, and reconnection to emerge naturally, without pressure. The Identity Shift No One Prepares You For Motherhood does change you. That part is real. Matrescence: The transition into motherhood that reshapes your body, brain, identity, and relationships. Your time, your body, your priorities, your relationships, your sense of responsibility, all of it shifts. And yet, we’re rarely given space to grieve what has changed or to name how disorienting that can feel. Society tells mothers to be grateful, to push through, to not dwell, all while quietly carrying an overwhelming amount. You love your child and motherhood deeply. Also . . . . You miss yourself profoundly. Both truths can exist at the same time. This is one of the quiet paradoxes of motherhood. When I sit with moms in therapy, we often spend time in this in-between space: the version of you before motherhood, the version you are now, and the version that hasn’t had room to emerge yet. If you recognize yourself here, I want you to know this space isn’t something to solve or rush through. This is where rest is needed the most. I often invite mothers to notice how the story of burnout has started speaking for them, telling them they’re lost, failing, or behind. Together, we practice loosening that story’s grip, not by arguing with it, but by gently separating it from who you actually are. Burnout is something you’re experiencing, not the sum of your identity. At the same time, we make room for what’s here (the grief, the fatigue, the longing) without treating those feelings as problems that need to disappear before life can move forward. From that place, I encourage moms to reconnect with what matters to them now. Not who they were before, and not who they think they should become, but what feels meaningful in this season. This isn’t about forcing clarity or reinventing yourself. It’s about creating enough safety, compassion, and space for your identity to unfold in its own time, guided by what you value, rather than what burnout has convinced you is wrong. Why Rest Is So Hard for Mothers Rest sounds simple. In practice, it’s one of the hardest things for moms to actually allow themselves. Not because you don’t want rest, but because rest is rarely neutral. It comes loaded: With guilt about not doing enough, with anxiety about leaving your child with someone else, with the fear of letting people down or dropping the ball, with deeply ingrained beliefs about productivity, worth, and what a “good” mother is supposed to look like. There’s also the invisible mental load most moms are carrying, the constant tracking, anticipating, remembering, and managing. Even when your body stops, your mind often doesn’t. So, when I talk about rest, many moms hear, “Do less,” in a world that already makes them feel like they’re falling short. That’s why rest has to be reframed. Rest isn’t quitting. Rest isn’t giving up. Rest isn’t avoidance. Rest is regulation. Rest is protection. And for mothers, rest is both a right and a quiet revolution. What Realistic Self-Care Actually Looks Like Self-care has been sold to mothers as something extra, something indulgent, something you squeeze in if you’re lucky. In reality, realistic self-care is often unglamorous, deeply practical, and about doing what actually supports you, not what looks good online. It can look like: Yes, self-care can be nail appointments, spa days, or solo trips if those are accessible to you and genuinely restorative. But it can also live in those much smaller moments. Realistic self-care isn’t about doing more or becoming better at taking care of yourself. It’s about giving yourself permission to need less from yourself, especially in seasons that already ask so much. How I Support Moms When Burnout Sets In When moms come to me feeling burnt out, disconnected, or unsure of themselves, we don’t start by asking them to reinvent their lives. We start by slowing things down. We look at what’s actually happening day to day. Where energy is leaking. What feels heavy but rarely gets named. How much is being carried quietly, without help or acknowledgment. Often, the work begins with noticing just how much you’ve been holding together on your own. There’s usually a lot of self-blame when moms arrive, a sense that they should be handling things better or feeling differently by now. My role is often to help shift that lens, away from “What’s wrong with me?” and toward “Of course this feels hard, given everything I’m carrying.” I don’t believe you need to
Holiday Grief Hits Different: What Nobody Tells You About the “Firsts” After Losing Someone You Love

by Dr. Melissa Robinson-Brown, PhD (Dr. Mel) I watched him dance around the kitchen island… and I can’t stop replaying it. Four years ago, we were at my sister’s house for the holidays. My dad — in full goofy joy mode — took on a challenge from a game we were playing and DANCED around that island like the happiest man alive. That was him. Silly. Willing. Joyful. A man who embodied a level of contentment most people spend their whole lives chasing. And this year during holiday season? We’re driving “over the meadow and through the woods” to see family… and my chest is tight. Because this is our first holiday season without him. And whew… holiday grief is a different kind of ache — the kind that shows up uninvited, sits next to joy, and says, “Hey girl… scoot over.” The “Firsts” Nobody Prepares You For People warn you that the firsts after a loss are the hardest: But nobody tells you what they actually feel like. Nobody tells you: As a psychologist, I tell my clients all the time: Grief is a nasty, disrespectful b%$ch. Nonlinear. Messy. Loud. And it shows up whenever it feels like it. And holiday grief? It hits everyone — not just those mourning a death. People are grieving: If your heart feels heavy this season, you’re not imagining it. This time of year amplifies everything. What’s Actually Helping Me Navigate Holiday Grief (Right Now) Not the polished, “self-care is a bubble bath” stuff. I’m talking about what’s actually keeping me upright these last two weeks. 1. Let grief show up. You can’t outrun grief. If you try to push it down, it will come back louder and heavier. Let it have its space — not your whole house, but its seat in the corner. 2. Personify it. (Yes, really.) My grief has a name: Iggy. She’s a haggard, “The Ring”-looking woman walking beside me. Sometimes she taps my shoulder… Sometimes the b%$ch jumps on my back… And some days she minds her business and sits in the corner. We nod at each other. I acknowledge her. But I don’t pretend she’s not there. 3. Don’t let her run the whole room. Iggy gets space — but she does NOT get full control. If I collapse into her, I know I’ll struggle to get back up. If I allowed it, I would spend this whirl holiday season sleeping…but I know that’s not how to deal with this ache. So I sit with her… but I don’t surrender. 4. Anchor yourself to something that reminds you you’re alive. For me, it’s the gym. Movement pulls me back into my body when grief tries to drag me out of it. Every rep whispers: “You’re still here. You’re still living. And your dad would want that.” For you, it may be special family recipes, solo holiday shopping trips, a day at the spa, reading your favorite book cuddled up by the fire. Whatever it is, lean into your anchors. 5. Cry + let people hold you. I’ve cried more in the last two weeks than I have in months. And every tear has made room for breath. Let people show up for you. Lean if you need to lean. 6. Read something that speaks your grief language. I’ve been reading Notes on Grief by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. When I tell you this book said things I thought only existed in my own head? And her experience is so similar to mine…I feel seen! It has held me in ways I didn’t expect. Holiday Grief & Depression: What They Don’t Tell You Here’s the clinical truth: Grief isn’t depression — but the two can intertwine. Holiday grief can look like: If you notice these shifts in yourself, especially during the holidays, you’re not alone — and you’re not broken. At Renewed Focus, I work with high-achieving women who carry grief and depression quietly because they’re used to being the strong ones. Holiday grief can stir old sadness, trigger new waves, and make everything feel too loud or too empty. And if that’s you? You deserve support, not silence. You deserve a space where you don’t have to hold it all together. If you’re looking for that space, here’s where we do that work: Depression & Mood Support at Renewed Focus — culturally-attuned, real, and rooted in your lived experience. You Don’t Have to Navigate Holiday Grief Alone No one prepares you for losing a parent. No one prepares you for grieving in rooms full of people who have no idea how deep your ache goes. But you’re not the only one trying to hold grief and gratitude at the same time. You’re not the only one showing up to a holiday gathering with heartbreak tucked into your pocket. And you don’t have to pretend you’re okay. These are the things keeping me steady in the hardest season of the year. If you have things that help you cope, drop them in the comments — your truth might be the thing someone else needs today. Your’s in Badassery, Dr. Mel
How to Protect Your Peace and Recharge During the Busy Holiday

By Jillian Berridge, LMSW Renewed Focus, Staff Psychotherapist The holidays are a time for family, friends, good food, and lots of joy—but truth moment please: They can also be a lot. Uncomfortable conversations with distant relatives, the pressure of hosting, the financial stress of gift-giving… it can all take a toll on your mental and emotional health. And for many of us, the holidays also stir up grief for loved ones we’ve lost, especially when their absence is felt at family gatherings. That’s why it’s super important to be intentional about how you’re taking care of yourself this season. Luckily, there are a few simple ways you can navigate the stress of the holidays and enjoy what matters most without losing your peace. 1. Set Boundaries Like a Boss: How to Say No Without Guilt First things first—boundaries are key to protecting your mental and emotional wellness, not just in everyday life, but especially during the holiday season. What does this look like? Take a moment to think about what’s realistic for you in terms of commitments. Can you skip hosting this year? Is catching up with every friend who’s in town too much? Maybe your gift budget is tighter than it used to be. It’s okay to say no, even if it feels hard. Be honest with yourself about what you need and don’t feel guilty about enforcing your boundaries. You know yourself best—and let’s be real, no one else is going to advocate for you, so take this time to practice speaking up for yourself. Setting boundaries is not selfish; it’s an act of self-love and a necessary part of keeping your mental health intact. 2. Unplug and Unwind: Why Digital Detoxes Are Essential for Your Well-Being The holidays are already full of distractions—from social media to work emails. How about using this time to step away from all the constant noise? We all know the struggle of scrolling through endless stories, checking the news, or refreshing your inbox while you’re technically “off” from work—guilty! Taking a digital detox doesn’t mean you have to disappear completely, but it can be a game-changer for your mental clarity and overall peace. Think of it as a chance to be more present with the people around you and even more importantly, with yourself. You’ll be surprised at how much lighter and more grounded you feel after just a few days without the constant digital distractions. 3. Self-Care, Not Self-Sacrifice: Reclaiming Your Time for You The holidays are busy, and it’s easy to get caught up in the chaos of shopping, cooking, hosting, and trying to keep up with all the traditions. Before you know it, you’ve committed to everyone else and forgotten about you. This year, let’s do things differently. Put yourself on the schedule—make time for the things that fill you up, not drain you. Whether that means squeezing in a therapy session, taking a walk, or just reading your favorite book for 30 minutes, it’s about giving yourself what you need. Prioritize things that nourish your mind, body, and soul. Whether it’s therapy, journaling, or some good ol’ self-care like strength training or dancing to your favorite playlist, these are the things that’ll keep you energized and in balance. You can’t pour from an empty cup, so fill yours first! 4. Find Your People: Surround Yourself with People Who Uplift You The holiday season is the perfect time to check in with your tribe—those friends, family, and colleagues who respect your boundaries and help you feel seen. We’ve talked about how the holidays can drain you, so let’s make sure to spend time with the people who give you energy instead of those who take it. Who’s that friend who lets you vent without judgment? The cousin who makes you laugh until your stomach hurts? The aunt who’s drama-free and always there for you? These are the people who help you feel grounded, loved, and remind you of your worth. Protect your peace by connecting with your inner circle—those who build you up and help you recharge. 5. Celebrate Your Wins: Reflecting on the Year Without the Pressure Instead of rushing into the new year with a long list of resolutions, take a moment to reflect on the things you’ve already accomplished this year. Seriously. This is one of the most powerful ways to shift the focus from “I need to do more” to “I’m doing enough.” Take some time to recognize the small wins that you might’ve overlooked—whether it’s personal growth, work accomplishments, or just the fact that you made it through another challenging year. When we’re always on the go, it’s easy to forget how far we’ve come. So take a second to pause, celebrate yourself, and give yourself the credit you deserve. 6. Honoring Your Needs: How to Listen to Your Body During the Holidays The holidays come with a lot of moving parts, but it’s essential to check in with yourself. Your body will tell you when it’s tired, stressed, or needs rest—but you have to listen. Pay attention to the signals your body is sending you. Maybe it’s telling you to take a nap, drink some water, or just sit still for a minute. The more you practice checking in, the more you’ll be able to recognize when you’re heading toward burnout before it happens. Honor your body by giving it what it needs, whether that’s a break, a bit of movement, or even a good night’s sleep. You deserve it. 7. Letting Go of Perfection: Embracing Imperfection This Holiday Season The pressure to create a “perfect” holiday experience can be overwhelming, whether it’s the food, the decorations, or family gatherings. But this year, I challenge you to let go of the need to be perfect and embrace the beauty of imperfection. Give yourself grace, and remember: the holidays don’t need to be flawless to be meaningful. Sometimes, the most memorable moments are the ones that don’t go according to plan. Show up
The Ultimate Holiday Game Plan: How to Set Boundaries with Family (and Actually Stick to Them)

By: Melanie Gibbons, LAC Renewed Focus, Staff Psychotherapist So, let’s talk about the holidays. The most wonderful time of the year, right? But if we’re being honest? Sometimes, it’s more like a three-ring circus starring your nosy aunt, your passive-aggressive cousin, and that one family member who always has way too much to say about your life choices. Sound familiar? Yeah, me too. As wonderful as family can be, the holidays often come with a side of drama. Add in the pressure to make everything perfect, and you’ve got a recipe for stress with a capital S. But what if I told you this year could be different? What if you could enjoy the season and keep your sanity intact? Spoiler alert: YOU CAN. Welcome to your ultimate holiday game plan—your go-to guide for setting boundaries with family and (the tricky part) making sure they stick. Let’s get into it! Why Boundaries Are the Secret Sauce to Holiday Bliss Let’s start with a truth bomb: boundaries are not mean. They’re not selfish. And they’re definitely not about shutting people out. Boundaries are about creating space for your peace, happiness, and emotional well-being—so you can show up as your best self, even when Aunt Carol is three eggnogs deep and asking why you’re still single. Without boundaries, the holidays can feel like a never-ending episode of “Survivor: Family Edition.” You’re constantly dodging guilt trips, side-eyes, and unsolicited advice about everything from your parenting style to the way you cook the turkey. Boundaries help you take back control. They’re your personal VIP rope, keeping the chaos at bay and protecting your peace. The reason why boundaries are difficult is because they require you to make a change, not other people. Are people going to test them? Heck yes. Does that mean you should not set them? Absolutely not. Boundaries are your way of saying this is how I am going to act, regardless of whether or not you respect my wishes. Now let’s get into how we start setting these boundaries in the first place. Step 1: Get Clear on What You Want Before you can set boundaries, you need to figure out what you actually want from the holidays. This isn’t about what your family expects or what you’ve “always done.” This is about you, boo. Ask yourself: For example, if dragging your kids to three different houses on Christmas Day leaves everyone exhausted and cranky, it’s okay to say, “This year, we’re staying home and keeping it low-key.” Or if you love baking cookies but hate hosting, maybe it’s time to let someone else throw the holiday dinner. Step 2: Communicate Your Boundaries (With Love, But Also Confidence) Okay, so you’ve got your list of non-negotiables. Now comes the hard part: telling your family. Here’s the deal: how you communicate your boundaries matters just as much as the boundaries themselves. Coming in hot with, “I’m not doing *this* or *that* anymore!” will probably lead to defensiveness and drama. Instead, aim for a tone that’s clear, calm, and loving. Here’s an example: What Not to Say: “Stop asking me to bring a dish to dinner. I’m over it!” What to Say Instead: “This year, I’m keeping things simple and focusing on my family’s needs. I won’t be bringing a dish, but I’m happy to contribute in other ways!” It’s all about framing it in a way that feels respectful but firm. And no, you don’t owe anyone a long explanation. “This doesn’t work for me” is a complete sentence. Step 3: Prepare for Pushback (Because It’s Coming) Let’s be real—some people don’t take “no” for an answer, especially if they’re used to you saying “yes” all the time. If your family isn’t familiar with boundaries, they might test yours. Here’s where you’ll need a little practice in standing your ground. The key is to stay calm and consistent. You don’t need to get defensive or argue your case. A simple “I understand, but this is what works for me” can go a long way. Example Scenarios: Pushback: “But we’ve always done Christmas at Grandma’s house!” Your Response: “I know, and I love those memories. This year, we’re starting a new tradition and staying home. We’ll miss you, but we’re excited about this change.” Pushback: “You can’t *not* come to the family gift exchange!” Your Response: “I hear you. I’m just feeling stretched thin this year, and skipping the gift exchange feels like the best choice for my mental health.” Remember: other people’s feelings about your boundaries are *not* your responsibility. Step 4: Enlist Your Ride-or-Dies Every boundary-setting queen needs a hype squad. Whether it’s your partner, your bestie, or that cousin who always gets it, surround yourself with people who’ll back you up when things get tricky. Let them know your plans and ask for their support. If you’re navigating co-parenting during the holidays (shoutout to all my co-parents!), make sure you and your co-parent are on the same page about schedules and expectations. Consistency is key. Step 5: Set Boundaries with Yourself, Too This one’s sneaky but important. Sometimes, we’re our own worst enemies when it comes to boundaries. We say “no” to others but then feel guilty and overextend ourselves anyway. (Hello, signing up for that last-minute bake sale because you didn’t want to disappoint anyone.) Let’s make a pact right now: no more self-sabotage. If you set a boundary, respect it. Practice saying “no” to yourself when you’re tempted to take on more than you can handle. Bonus Tips for Surviving Holiday Boundary-Setting What If They Just Don’t Get It? Let’s face it: some family members will never understand your boundaries, no matter how lovingly you explain them. And that’s okay. Their lack of understanding doesn’t mean you’re doing something wrong. In these cases, you might need to create some extra space. That could mean limiting contact during the holidays or choosing not to engage when the boundary-pushing starts. Protecting your peace isn’t just okay—it’s necessary. How
Navigating Tricky Holiday Conversations with Family and Friends: Protecting Your Peace and Joy

The holidays. A time for laughter, delicious food, and catching up with family and friends. But let’s be real—sometimes those conversations can feel less like catching up and more like being put on trial.
5 Essential Tips for Handling Family Drama During the Holidays (Without Losing Your Sh*t)

Let’s make one thing clear: you deserve to enjoy your holiday without getting sucked into unnecessary drama. You’re there for the food, the laughter, the memories—not the nonsense. So take charge, hold those boundaries, and keep your vibe intact. You’ve got this.
Co-Parenting When Kids Head Back to School: Tips, Tricks, and Keeping Your Sanity

Alright, it’s that time again—the summer’s winding down, Target is packed with families on a mission, and our social media feeds are about to be flooded with first-day-of-school pics. (You know the ones. Backpacks bigger than the kids, grinning faces, and the “Can you believe they’re in 3rd grade already?!” captions.)