Hey Reader,
Welcome to your weekly Mezzo moment — where we give you clarity, confidence, and one doable win for caring for your parents and yourself.
This Week's Theme: Managing Your Mental Health Over the Holidays
The holidays are often described as "the most wonderful time of the year." But when you're balancing a career, caregiving for an aging parent, and trying to show up for everyone else in your life, they can feel more like an endurance test. This week, we're talking honestly about protecting your mental health during a season that asks a lot of you.
Here’s what we’re diving into this week:
- Quick Win
- Deep Dive Topic of the Week
- Meal Plan (for you or your loved one)
- Community Support
Let’s get into it. 💛
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🔥 QUICK WIN OF THE WEEK
Action: The "Good Enough" List
Before the holiday chaos kicks into high gear, take 10 minutes to make two lists.
How To Do It:
Grab a piece of paper and draw a line down the middle.
- On the left side, write "Must Happen" — the non-negotiables that truly matter to you and your family this season (maybe it's one meaningful meal together, or making sure your parent feels included).
- On the right side, write "Would Be Nice" — everything else (the perfect gift wrap, the elaborate dessert, attending every event you're invited to).
Now here's the important part: give yourself permission to let the right column go if needed. When time runs short or your energy dips, you already know what can slide without guilt.
Why It Works:
Holiday stress often comes from treating everything like a priority. But when everything is urgent, nothing gets your real attention—and you end up exhausted and resentful. This exercise forces you to get honest about what actually matters versus what you think you should do. Seeing it written down makes it easier to protect your energy for the things that count.
Pro Tip: Share your "Must Happen" list with a partner, sibling, or someone who can help. They can't read your mind, but they can step up if they know what matters most to you.
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Coming soon...
We believe the generation that disrupted everything else is perfectly positioned to reinvent aging—for our parents and ourselves. "In the Mezzo" is a podcast that explores how we do that.
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Deep Dive: Why the Holidays Hit Us Harder
There's a particular kind of grief that shows up during the holidays when you're caring or showing up for an aging parent. It's not always obvious. It might look like irritability, exhaustion, or a vague sense of dread as December approaches. But underneath, something more complex is happening.
The Weight of "Used To"
Holidays are built on tradition and memory. And when your parent's health has declined or is beginning to shift, you're often mourning the person they used to be while still caring for the person they are now. Maybe your mom hosted every Christmas for 30 years, and now she can't remember the recipe she made famous. Maybe your dad fried the turkey, and now he's more interested in supervising your preparation.
These losses aren't dramatic enough to name as grief, but they add up. You might find yourself sad at a holiday gathering without fully understanding why.
The Pressure to Perform Joy
Add to this the cultural expectation that the holidays should feel magical. You're supposed to be grateful, cheerful, and present all the time. 😩 But gratitude and grief aren't opposites—they often exist side by side. You can be thankful your parent is still here and also deeply tired. You can love your family and also need space from them. The pressure to feel only positive emotions makes you internalize the hard ones, and that's where trouble begins to brew.
Practical Ways to Protect Your Mental Health
1. Lower the bar on purpose. This isn't about being lazy. It's about being realistic. If hosting a full dinner feels impossible, do dessert only. If traveling to see everyone is too much, pick 1 or 2 link ups and let the rest go. Done is better than perfect, something is better than nothing and present is definitely better than resentful.
2. Build in exit strategies. Whether it's a family gathering or a work holiday party, know how you'll leave if you hit your limit. Drive separately if you can. Have a code word with your partner in crime. Give yourself permission to go home early without excuses. We're too grown for that.
3. Schedule blank space. Block time in your calendar for nothing. Not errands. Not catching up. Just open time where no one has access to you. Guard it like you would an important appointment, because it is one.
4. Let people help (even imperfectly). If someone offers to pick something up, watch your parent or kids for an hour, or handle a task - SAY YES. It won't be done exactly the way you'd do it, and that's okay. You never signed up to be a martyr and holding everything yourself isn't a badge of honor; it's a fast track to burnout (speaking from experience).
5. Name what you're feeling. You don't have to process every emotion in real time, but acknowledging "this is annoying" or "I'm a little anxious right now" can keep feelings from building up. Say it out loud to yourself, write it in a notes app, or tell someone who gets it.
A Word on Family Dynamics
The holidays have a way of putting you back into old family roles. Suddenly you're navigating sibling tension, old resentments, or relatives who have opinions about how you're handling your kids or parent's care. A few things to remember: you don't have to defend your choices. "This is what works for us" is a complete sentence. And you can love someone without agreeing to spend unlimited time with them.
Get on the Waitlist: Our tech forward platform that empowers you to manage both your parents' needs and your own life, without sacrificing your career, relationships, or sanity.
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🥗 WEEKLY MEAL PLAN (for you or your parents)
Between gatherings, cooking for your parent, and the general chaos of the season, you need meals that require almost no mental energy. This plan assumes some days you'll be eating holiday food elsewhere—and other days you just need something simple at home.
Monday Rotisserie Chicken Dinner — Pick up a grocery store rotisserie chicken. Serve with bagged salad and a microwavable grain pouch (quinoa, rice, or farro). Dinner in 5 minutes.
Tuesday Loaded Baked Potatoes — Microwave or bake potatoes. Top with whatever you have: butter, cheese, canned chili, broccoli, sour cream. Customizable and oddly comforting.
Wednesday Soup & Sandwich Night — Good quality canned or boxed soup (butternut squash, tomato, chicken noodle) paired with a simple grilled cheese or deli sandwich. Classic for a reason.
Thursday Leftovers — Reheat anything from earlier in the week or scramble some eggs.
Friday Sheet Pan Sausage (or Tofu) & Vegetables — Slice pre-cooked sausage (chicken, turkey, or pork) or seasoned tofu. Toss with bell peppers, onions, and olive oil. Roast at 400°F for 25 minutes. Minimal prep, minimal cleanup.
Weekend Give yourself permission to eat simply. Cheese and crackers, a bowl of cereal, or takeout from your favorite spot all count as meals. The goal is nourishment, not performance.
Bonus Tip: If you're cooking for a parent with a smaller appetite or dietary restrictions, many of these meals can be easily adjusted—softer textures, lower sodium options, or smaller portions that don't create waste.
🌐 JOIN THE CAREGIVER COMMUNITY
“If you need people who get it — join our caregiver support circle on Discord.”
👉🏾 It’s free. It’s kind. It’s judgement-free.
💬 A Final Thought
You don't have to attend every argument you're invited to. You also don't have to attend every obligation, expectation, or guilt trip. Protect your peace—it's not selfish, it's necessary.
The holidays will end. You will get through this. And it's okay if "getting through" is the goal this year.
Until next week,
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Amber Chapman
Editorial Director, Mezzo
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