Post-Holiday Letdown: Tips for Moving into the New Year
- Jenny Hawkes
- Dec 30, 2025
- 3 min read

Originally published 12/30/2025
The holidays are often filled with anticipation, but once the decorations come down and routines return to normal, it’s common to feel a post-holiday letdown. For families experiencing divorce, separation, or ongoing co-parenting challenges, those feelings can be amplified. Adjusting to the quiet after a busy holiday with the kids, managing feelings about time you missed, or simply catching your breath after the stress of coordinating schedules, post-holiday letdown can be uniquely challenging.
Here are some insights and strategies to help you move through this period with steadiness and self-compassion.
1. Recognize Post-Holiday Letdown Is Normal
Many parents feel a dip in mood after the holidays—especially when expectations were high or the season felt emotionally heavy. The sudden shift from celebration to routine can create a sense of emptiness or fatigue. This is normal.
Understanding that these feelings are common can help you approach them with patience rather than self-judgment.
2. Give Yourself Credit for Getting Through a Challenging Season
Holiday parenting often requires:
Coordinating schedules
Managing travel or transitions
Navigating communication with a co-parent
Making the holiday “magical”
Supporting children’s emotions
Balancing extended family expectations
These tasks take physical and emotional energy. Acknowledge your effort!
3. Reestablish a Routine
Routines can feel grounding after the unpredictability of the holidays, especially in shared-parenting families. Being intentional about reintroducing daily routines, such as regular meals, bedtime routines, predictable work or school schedules, and exercise or daily self-care practices can help both parents and children recalibrate, physically and emotionally.
In the event you don’t normally exercise regular self-care, now is a great time to start. Studies have shown that the first 15 minutes of the day have a profound impact on a person’s physical, mental, and emotional wellbeing. We highly recommend committing to 15 minutes in the morning whereby there is no phone. The first 5 minutes you are awake, mentally think about your day and identify two things you want to accomplish. The next ten minutes, move! Whether that is a short walk around the yard or something else, get yourself moving for ten minutes; then get the day going.
Here’s to new routines!
4. Allow Space for Emotions
You, and your children, may be experiencing mixed feelings:
Relief that the holiday stress is over
Sadness that the holiday is over, or that it didn’t go as planned
Delight with new traditions created during the season
Loneliness when children transition to the other parent’s home
Frustration about conflicts that surfaced
Gratitude for the moments that were meaningful
All these emotions can coexist. Rather than pushing them away, give yourself permission to notice, feel, and process them. And provide a safe space for your children to do the same.
5. Support Your Children Through Their Own Post-Holiday Dip
Children experience post-holiday letdown, too. It can be hard transitioning between two homes and/or juggling multiple celebrations. Supporting them can involve:
Talking openly about their experiences during the holidays
Discussing how the return to routine feels
Keeping your household calm and predictable
Offering reassurance that it’s okay to feel disappointed, tired, or any other emotion
Focusing on small, comforting family moments
Your steady presence and open communication will help your children adjust back to the normal routine more smoothly.
6. Focus on Small Wins as You Move into the New Year
Instead of overwhelming yourself with resolutions, consider small, achievable steps that promote stability and well-being for the whole family, such as:
Committing to a weekly family dinner
Setting aside time for daily, personal self-care
Improving one aspect of communication with a co-parent
Organizing one area of the home that’s been causing stress
No matter how slow or how small, progress builds confidence, trust, and contentment.
7. Evaluate What Worked (and What Didn’t) this Holiday
If the holiday season brought up co-parenting challenges, now is the time to reflect. Ask yourself:
Did the holiday parenting schedule work smoothly?
Were there communication issues?
Did holiday travel arrangements create stress?
Did your children seem overwhelmed or content?
If changes are needed, discuss modifying your parenting plan with your co-parent or consult a family law attorney before the next holiday season arrives.
8. Reach Out for Support if You Need It
Talking to a trusted friend, counselor, or professional can help you process emotions in a healthy way. If legal questions or unresolved conflicts are contributing to your post-holiday stress, a family law attorney can provide guidance and clarity.
Moving Forward with Hope and Balance
Post-holiday letdown can feel heavy, but it also offers an opportunity to reflect and reset, and to establish a healthier rhythm for the new year. Having compassion for yourself and focusing on stability for your children helps ease the transition from holiday intensity into familiar routines.
If you have questions about co-parenting issues or need help adjusting your parenting plan, our family law team is here to support you.




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