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News Every Day |

I used to obsess over perfect holiday cards. When I finally stopped sending them, I found more joy in the season.

The author stopped sending holiday cards two years ago.
  • Growing up, my family's annual holiday photos were elaborate productions, with matching outfits.
  • When I became a parent, I kept the tradition going, until the stress of perfect photos wore me down.
  • Letting go of holiday cards lifted an unexpected weight, giving me back time joy, and time.

I grew up in a house where coordinated family photos were the norm. My mom would line up the four of us kids in matching outfits — one year, freshly pressed sailor suits; the next, velvet dresses, with my brother in a matching tie. Every stray hair would be tucked in or sprayed down.

We were bribed (or more like lightly threatened) to smile with our eyes open, something that's more difficult than it should be when you're a kid who just wants to be DONE.

Then came the card — glossy, cheerful, and perfectly posed — the proof that our family had it all together, at least for one photo.

I kept the tradition going with my own kids

So when I had my own kids, I continued this tradition without question. Every year, I'd book a family photo session well in advance of Thanksgiving, hoping that temperamental Chicago weather wouldn't put a damper on our outdoor photos.

I'd scour Pinterest for outfit inspiration, aiming for a coordinated but not totally matching vibe. The goal was to capture one frame of perfection — a photo worthy of the hundreds of envelopes I'd soon address by hand.

The author continued the tradition of holiday cards with her family.

But the reality behind those photos was far from picture-perfect. There were bribes of hot chocolate and complaints about itchy sweaters. I'd smile through gritted teeth while the photographer tried to get everyone looking in the same direction. By the end, the kids were shivering, my husband was done, and I was wondering why we put ourselves through this every year.

And that was just phase one.

Once we had a "good enough" photo, I'd spend hours designing the cards online, tweaking fonts, choosing layouts, and agonizing over whether to include a photo of the whole family or the cuter one of just the kids.

Then came the addressing, stamping, and mailing — usually squeezed in between wrapping gifts, decorating the house, and trying to keep the ambiance somewhat festive. What was meant to be a joyful holiday tradition had turned into yet another item on my never-ending to-do list.

Quitting holiday cards lifted a huge weight

Two years ago, I finally asked myself, "Why am I doing this?"

When I couldn't come up with a satisfying answer beyond "because we've always done it," I decided to stop. No family photo shoot. No card design. No envelopes or stamps.

The author feels her family photos feel more authentic now.

That first year without holiday cards felt strange at first, like I'd forgotten to do something important. December rolled around, and my mailbox filled with cheerful greetings from family and friends, each one featuring those perfectly posed families and braggy year-end recaps. For a fleeting moment, I felt a pang of guilt, like I'd dropped out of a club I'd been part of my entire adult life.

But then the feeling passed. What replaced it was a deep sense of relief.

Without the looming card deadline, December suddenly opened up. I had more time to actually enjoy the holidays — to bake sugar cookies in the shape of stars and drive through neighborhoods adorned in holiday lights. The pressure to present our family in a certain way — smiling, coordinated, festive — simply disappeared.

Now our photos (and holidays) feel more authentic

Instead of orchestrating a posed photo, we started taking more spontaneous pictures: messy, candid, real. A selfie at a local holiday market. A blurry shot of everyone laughing in front of our silver faux Christmas tree. A snowy mountain scene after a day of skiing. These pictures weren't perfect, but they were us. And when I looked at them later, they didn't remind me of how stressed I felt trying to get everyone to cooperate — they reminded me of how much fun we actually had.

The author and her family.

Something else unexpected also happened: no one seemed to miss the cards. The people who truly wanted to connect reached out in other ways. It made me realize that keeping in touch didn't have to involve postage and cardstock.

Letting go of the holiday card tradition didn't make the end of the year any less special — it made them more so. It gave me permission to simplify and remember that the memories that matter most aren't ones you send in the mail. They're the ones you make together, no matching outfits required.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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