Heart of the Home
On Your Own
Permanent Decision
Your permanent decision is to heal. It may or may not include a permanent decision to be no contact with your family. If you heal to the point that you are free from triggers, you may decide to reengage with your family.
Navigating dysfunctional family relationships is not fixed and predictable. As you heal, your needs change, so remain open to evolving relationships. You must stay in control of the changes because getting sucked back in is easy.
Sometimes survivors reengage with family once the person who harmed them dies. Having children can also spark a desire to re-engage.
As long as you continue to heal after going no contact, you will not return to the family as the same person. You will be more empowered.
The power dynamics in your family must shift. You must ensure they change in your favor and not return as a victim.
You must continue to control the engagement according to where you are on your healing journey. You should not become emotionally dependent on people who trigger emotional distress.
Setbacks may come if you overly engage. Families are complex and expansive, and we don’t know how to live with no contact until we do.
On Your Own
No contact is an experience of grief and loss. There is no roadmap to the no contact life. Each survivor must pave their own way. The journey must be paved with truth, integrity, and the commitment to heal by any means necessary.
Healing requires you to suspend ingrained ideas about family. We set ourselves up for triggers and heartbreak when we hold too much space for family members who will never choose the survivor over the dysfunctional family unit.
Family members who wish to maintain a relationship with you will do so on your terms if they respect your intention to heal. If your interaction with a particular person is limited to family functions, then you must be honest about the relationship you are trying to preserve.
You may be consciously or unconsciously trying to find a way to maintain family ties. Thus, you are not at the center of your healing, and healing is not at the center of your life.
Unhappy No-Contact Holidays
Holidays are the most challenging time to be no contact, no matter how long ago you made the decision. Years into healing, you may still feel lonely and isolated. Family is still absent, no matter how many holiday party invitations you receive.
Loneliness is triggered. But, if you are proactive as the holidays approach, you can breeze through the critical two months free of triggers. Preparation will help you avoid feeling unsafe, unwanted, or unworthy.
Feel Your Feelings
Common coping mechanisms of positive psychology and gratitude often become ineffective during the holiday season. You can’t heal emotions by ignoring them or covering them up.
Instead of forcing your feelings to go away, embrace them. Your intense emotions around the holidays are an opportunity to validate your experience of harm or grief. Whatever happened in your life to bring you to this place of pain was real and can be healed.
All wounds need intentionality and a safe space to heal.
Time does not heal all wounds. All wounds need intentionality and a safe space to heal. Some wounds need professional help to heal. Think about how to address, instead of suppressing, your feelings.
Know You are Not Alone
You are not alone in your feeling, no matter how bad you feel. Many people have similar experiences and are also in need of support during the holidays.
Find and use your tribe during the stressful season. Check social media, local organizations, and your place of employment for opportunities to connect.
The least likely suspect sometimes offers the most, so open your mind. Supporters may not be members of the same age group, race, or religion. They may have different values than you. Still, they may be empathetic, understanding, and kind enough to stand in the gap.
You are not looking for a family replacement. You are establishing support for family absence.
Celebrate You
Beware that if you use your tribe for therapy, you risk building a dysfunctional trauma bond that is likely to be short-term. Use your tribe to create new experiences of gratitude and joy.
Share cultural events, such as theatrical or dance performances, even if they are online. Read and discuss common books. Join an organization together to express similar passions. Plan workouts together.
Most importantly, keep in touch without becoming emotionally dependent on one another. You are an adult seeking support, not a child seeking care.
Don’t demand daily communication with your tribe. However, try to communicate consistently, not just when you feel sad.
Make the Body-brain Connection
Years of denying yourself the right to be heard take a toll on the body and the mind. Your body may become infected with lies when you do not live in your truth. Systems may malfunction.
On the other hand, if you pay special attention to your body to give it proper care, you turn the mind-body connection in your favor. When you increase the competence of your body, the mind can thrive off that competence.
Move your body for the sake of moving your mind. Group exercises may be more motivating than working out alone, particularly during the holidays. Get ahead of the New Year’s crowd and join the gym now. If you haven’t returned to the gym after COVID, this is a critical time to start back.
Years of denying yourself the right to be heard take a toll on the body and the mind.
Yoga is gentle and can restore emotional balance. Aerobics is great for activating endorphins for a sense of happiness. Weight training can make you feel stronger inside and out. Trial and error will develop emotional independence.
Take a secondary approach if you cannot do the physical work to connect with your body. Treat yourself to massages, wear makeup, take baths, and change your hairstyle. Let your body know that you are paying attention. Affirm yourself, not just your pain.
No One’s Home
The holidays come with a cultural script that brings joy to many and sadness to some. But, the holiday blues do not have to be an annual tradition for people without family contact. Strategies can be employed year-round. Put an empowerment plan in place so you don’t feel like a displaced victim.
Choose no contact because you are a whole human being with talents, interests, and relationships, not just a family member. Your worldview does not have to be based on harmful childhood experiences. You deserve to create space to heal.
Healing is ugly, disorderly, awkward, unpredictable, and overwhelming work that sometimes produces anger, regret, fear, and uncertainty for a while. Sometimes going no contact relieves those feelings. Other times, it triggers them, such as the holiday season. Work on the messiness of healing all year long.
When home breaks your heart, only you can heal it.