Let’s be honest about where you are right now: exhausted, slightly resentful, and wondering how you’re supposed to summon enthusiasm for five more days of this. You’ve already powered through Thanksgiving, navigated Black Friday chaos, attended multiple holiday parties, and checked off most of your gift list. And somehow, impossibly, there’s still more.

Eighty-nine percent of adults report feeling overwhelmed during the holiday season, according to the American Psychological Association. That’s nearly everyone white-knuckling their way through what’s supposed to be the most wonderful time of the year. But here’s the thing: you don’t have to keep pushing until you completely crash. You still have agency over how the next two weeks unfold.

Give Yourself Permission to Scale Back

The mistake you’re probably making right now is thinking you have to finish strong — that backing out of commitments at this point would be rude or disappointing. But showing up exhausted and checked out is worse than not showing up at all. People would rather have your genuine presence for one gathering than your depleted, going-through-the-motions attendance at three.

Look at what’s still on your calendar between now and New Year’s. What can you actually cut without guilt? That casual acquaintance’s party? The second round of family visits? The elaborate New Year’s Eve plans you agreed to in October when you still had energy? You’re allowed to change your mind when circumstances change, and your circumstances have changed.

You’re burnt out.

This applies to hosting too. If you committed to hosting Christmas dinner but you’re already dreading it, it’s not too late to suggest a potluck instead or even ask if someone else can take over. Most people will understand because most people are also exhausted.

Stop the Financial Bleeding Now

For the third consecutive year, financial stress tops the list of holiday stressors, with inflation hitting budgets particularly hard. If you’ve already overspent, the instinct is to just keep going because the damage is done. That’s exactly backward.

Every additional dollar you spend now is a dollar you’ll regret in January when the credit card bills arrive and you’re trying to figure out how to pay rent. Draw the line today. If you haven’t finished your shopping, genuinely consider whether those remaining gifts are necessary or just obligatory. Gift cards exist for a reason. So do heartfelt cards explaining that you’re focusing on presence over presents this year.

You cannot fix the overspending that already happened, but you can prevent it from getting worse. Check your accounts right now. Face the number. Then stop.

Protect the Next Family Gathering Before It Happens

You’ve probably already had at least one tense moment with family this season. Maybe it was a political argument at Thanksgiving or someone making a passive-aggressive comment about your life choices. You know how your family operates by now, and you know which conversations are landmines.

For the gatherings still ahead, decide now which topics you’ll discuss and which you’ll deflect. You can love people and still say, “I’d rather not discuss that topic.” If Uncle Whatever insists anyway, you can repeat your boundary or excuse yourself. Your emotional wellbeing matters more than someone else’s need to debate.

This goes double for any gathering involving alcohol. Seventy-nine percent of people report being so stressed during the holidays that they neglect their own needs, according to the American Heart Association, and alcohol often amplifies tensions that were already simmering. You can choose not to drink even if everyone else is. You can also leave early.

The Final Week Survival Strategy

You’re running on fumes, which means your margin for error is gone. Small inconveniences feel catastrophic. Normal requests feel overwhelming. This is when you need to be most protective of the basics: sleep, food, and moments of actual rest.

You don’t need elaborate self-care. You need 90 seconds of deep breathing in your car before walking into the house. You need to eat real food instead of subsisting on cookies and cheese plates. You need to go to bed instead of staying up wrapping presents at midnight. Resting isn’t lazy when you’re this depleted. It’s the only thing preventing a complete breakdown.

And for the love of everything, delegate. If someone offers to help, say yes immediately. Stop redoing things other people did because they didn’t do them your way. Good enough is good enough when you’re this tired.

January Is Coming

Here’s your permission slip: it’s okay to just get through the next two weeks rather than trying to make them magical. You don’t have to create perfect memories or make everyone happy. You just have to survive until January without completely destroying yourself.

The holidays will end. The obligations will stop. You’ll get your routine back. But that only helps if you make it there without crashing so hard that January becomes about recovery instead of moving forward. Protect what’s left of your energy now, while you still have some.

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