Even things that should be enjoyable, like spending time with family are stressful. My husband works a lot during the holiday season, and my in-laws all have crazy schedules, so planning any kind of celebration is always last minute. I'm one of those people who can't function unless I have everything planned out weeks, if not months, in advance, and I typically don't know what we're doing for Thanksgiving until the week of. It drives me insane. Then, if I have to cook at my house, nothing ever seems to go right. The food doesn't come out the way I want it, I spend tons of time on a new dish and no one even tries it, or I go way overboard and end up eating leftovers for the next six months.
My biggest problem is with holiday shopping. I'm a gift whisperer. I apply so much effort to selecting the perfect gift for everyone on my list that it drives my husband crazy, especially after they open it. If they don't look absolutely ecstatic, I feel like I failed and I'm depressed for days. And, although I know it's not fair, I kind of expect the same effort out of others, even though whenever someone asks what I want, I always say, "nothing." Like most men, my husband doesn't think about things like gifts, so every year, we go through the same argument. He asks what I want, and I tell him I want him to apply some effort and think of something, or else I'll just pick it out myself. I'm sure he'd prefer if I did. Picking out our daughter's gifts isn't any easier. I tell him what we're getting her, he says she won't like it and he'll pick something, which he never gets around to, so I just end up getting what I had originally picked. Gift giving is an awful painful process.
As you can see, I get a little crazy at holiday time and that much stress is never good, not for your health and not for your soul. Last year, I eased my holiday stress by making homemade gifts for pretty much everyone on my list. I bought tins and baked and baked and baked, then loaded everyone up with enough baked goods to last them all year. Not only did it save lots of money, but it required much less effort on my part. It's a lot easier to bake than scour stores and the internet for the perfect gifts.
This year, I'm tackling a stress-free Thanksgiving. Since my husband works as a retail manager, he has to be at work at 10:30 Thanksgiving night, so I've already put my foot down and decided that I'm not doing a big family Thanksgiving. He's going to sleep until dinner time, then get up, eat and head to work. There really isn't time to go visit family or even visit with them at our house. Since neither he nor I are huge on the tradition of turkey, stuffing, etc., I saved a lot of money by not buying a turkey (he wanted ham anyway). I went to the store and found an individual packaged huge slice of ham that's just enough for the two of us, with no leftovers. Then I'm making green bean casserole, which is the only holiday food I care about, biscuits and for dessert, since we each like different kinds of pie, I picked up a couple individual serving pies from the freezer section, berry for him and pecan for me. Our daughter's three, so she'll just pick at what's available.We still get our "Thanksgiving Dinner", but it'll take me all of about 45 minutes to throw together. Plus, with all the money I saved, I get to have mulled wine AND champagne with cranberries - to unwind just in case any tension does manage to creep in. :) I'm sure the in-laws will be sad, but this will be one pleasant Thanksgiving for me!