Mental Health Blog : Therapy Tips, Coping Tools & Insights

Using the Winter Solstice as a Trauma-Informed Reset

Using the Winter Solstice as a Trauma-Informed Reset

The winter solstice happens to be an organic start date for renewal, rebirth, and reframe for fresh starts and new intentions coming into the new year. That often can feel a bit pressuring for people who have trauma histories so we’ll talk about ways that you can still get that renewed start, but with a more sustainable, giving yourself permission to exist sort of way. The solstice can be seen as a way to pause, conserve energy, and rest without forcing new changes.

What is the Winter Solstice? 

The winter solstice usually happens around December 21st in the Northern Hemisphere and it marks the shortest day and longest night of the year. Culturally-speaking, many traditions have used the solstice to mark a time for stillness, protection, and gratitude that life continues to grow even when it isn’t visible. Historically, it symbolizes what sustains us, endurance for the winter, and trusting that gradual change will come rather than immediate transformation.

Trauma and the Nervous System in Winter

With winter having shorter days, less daylight, and a slower pace, it can intensify the feelings of fatigue, feeling shut down, anxiety, depression, and isolation. None of these mean that you may be regressing, just that your body is responding to the reduced external stimulation. A trauma-informed approach works with your body with where it's at currently. With the winter solstice celebrating productivity and renewal, give yourself permission and acknowledgement that you do not have to earn renewal by being productive. You don’t have to be ready to make new intentions and new beginnings. Tending to your heart and trusting that light will come back gradually, literally in sunlight and figuratively in mood is a good start. 

Instead of Resolutions and Reinventions, Try This

Consider having a soft reset where you reflect on all that you need, want, and need to remove going forward.

  1. Reflect Without Judgement

    • Ask yourself these questions to start with:

      1. What feels depleted lately?

      2. What have I been forcing that actually needs gentleness?

      3. What do I notice that feels uncomfortable?

  2. Reduce outputs and inputs, don’t add new traits and personality changes

    • Consider removing unnecessary strain

      1. What is one obligation you can pause and step back from?

      2. What is one expectation you can lower?

      3. What is one relational boundary that you can reinforce?

  3. Choose warmth and sustainability over growth

    • While growth often is full of discomfort, there can be a line where you surpass that discomfort and it becomes intolerable. Ask yourself “what helps my body feel safer, warmer, and more grounded?”

      1. It might be earlier bedtimes

      2. It might be rewatching familiar shows

      3. It might be eating heartier foods

      4. It might be limiting social activities that deplete rather than recharge

If you measure progress by how different you feel, you might end up missing the micro moments that signal big shifts. You might miss that you rest a little easier, you recover faster after being stressed, and that you choose yourself more often than before.

A Simple Practice to Try

  • Dim the lights or light a candle

  • Soften your gaze or close your eyes

  • Place a hand on your heart and belly while feeling your belly rise and soften when breathing

  • Name one thing that you’re letting go of or not forcing any longer

  • Name one way that you’ll protect your energy this winter

Remember, rest is not a reward, it is a requirement. You are allowed to slow down. You are allowed to need less. You are allowed to begin again without announcing it. The light will return, you do not have to chase it.

  • Sam Villarreal, MS, LPC, LCDC

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Holiday Boundaries for People Who Were Never Allowed to Have Them

Holiday Boundaries for People Who Were Never Allowed to Have Them

If you grew up in a family where boundaries were foreign, the holidays can feel extra tense. Old wounds can flare up, guilt becomes the main feeling, and suddenly you’re doing things you swore you were done with like overly pleasing people and feeling responsible for other people’s emotions. Here are some simple ways to navigate holiday gatherings when you’re still learning that the word “no” doesn’t make you a bad person. 

  1. Notice the patterns you automatically fall back into when around family and pick one pattern to interrupt. Just one interruption is enough.

    1. Like saying yes before you even check in with yourself

    2. Feeling emotionally responsible for everyone else

    3. Making yourself smaller to avoid conflict

    4. Compensating for childhood power dynamics

  2. Set one single boundary, not 10. Start small and start with what matters most to you.

    1. “I can come, but I’m leaving at 8 pm.”

    2. “I’m not talking about whether or not I’ll have kids.”

    3. “I won’t be drinking this year and I’m not open to discuss it.”

  3. Expect discomfort when feelings of guilt and tension arise. It doesn’t mean you made the wrong decision, it just means that historically you’ve been the “easy one” and you’re disrupting the default dynamics. 

    1. Their discomfort does not mean you need to reverse the boundary you set

    2. Your anxiety does not mean you’re doing something wrong

    3. Default dynamics will try to pull you back in, so anticipate it, but don’t enable it

  4. Have a backup plan for when you need to step away to ground yourself

    1. Let a friend know that if you message them during this date around this time that you are in need of their support to help with grounding

    2. Step outside to re-regulate

    3. Take a longer bathroom break and sit on the ground to breathe

    4. Reassure yourself by acknowledging the guilt and that you’re taking care of yourself in this way

  5. Practice authenticity and honesty, but in a simple and clear way.

    1. “I won’t be able to make it this year, but hopefully next year.”

    2. “I’m not discussing that right now.”

  6. Aftercare, aftercare, aftercare! Boundary-setting is hard so take time to review and reward yourself afterward.

    1. What went better than I expected?

    2. Where did I sell myself short?

    3. What do I want to keep practicing?

    4. What does my body need from me right now?

If you end up trying some of these, just know that building internal safety takes time and practice makes progress.

  • Sam Villarreal, MS, LPC, LCDC

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