Tag: rewriting-your-story

  • 5 Things to Remember When the Holidays Bring Up Old Wounds

    5 Things to Remember When the Holidays Bring Up Old Wounds

    The smell of cinnamon candles. The sound of a familiar song echoing through a store. The sight of twinkling lights that make the world shimmer for a moment.

    And suddenly… it hits you.

    That old ache in your chest. The one you thought time had softened.

    The holidays have a way of stirring up memories you didn’t ask to remember — the ones tied to loss, loneliness, or the version of you who never felt safe to relax.

    If this season feels heavy instead of merry, you’re not broken. You’re human.

    The truth no one says out loud? Even joy-filled months carry shadows. The trick is learning to care for your heart while the world celebrates around you.

    Before you build emotional armor or hide under a blanket of “I’m fine,” here are five things to remember when the holidays bring up old wounds — because healing doesn’t pause for tinsel and lights.

    1. When Old Feelings Resurface at Unexpected Moments

    You’re chopping vegetables, scrolling gift ideas, or wrapping a present — and then something small cracks you open. A memory. A scent. A song.

    Suddenly, you’re 12 again at the kitchen table, hearing a raised voice, or noticing that empty chair across from you that used to be filled.

    Pain has a funny calendar; it doesn’t check what month it is before saying, “Hey, remember me?”

    Here’s the key: it’s not a setback. It’s communication. Your nervous system is reminding you that you’ve lived through things that mattered — deeply.

    When old emotions rise during the holidays, see them as signals, not setbacks. They’re showing up now because you finally have the safety, space, or softness to feel what couldn’t be felt before.

    You’re not back at square one. You’re revisiting an old chapter with new wisdom in your hands.

    Mini practice:

    When a wave of sadness or frustration comes up:

    1. Pause.
    2. Place your hand over your heart.
    3. Quietly say, “I see you. You’re allowed to be here.”

    That one sentence can transform the moment from self-judgment to self-connection.

    2. You Don’t Have to Fake the Festive

    Somewhere along the way, the holidays turned into a performance — the smiling family photos, the “grateful” posts, the cheerful small talk.

    But pretending everything’s fine when it isn’t? That only deepens the loneliness.

    It’s okay if you can’t summon joy on command. You’re not required to decorate your pain with glitter.

    You can love the season and still want to skip the party. You can laugh over cocoa one day and cry the next. Healing doesn’t mean feeling good all the time. It means being honest.

    Set boundaries that protect your energy:

    • Politely decline events that drain you.
    • Create your own version of celebrating — a quiet dinner, a nature walk, or a cozy night in.
    • Respond with honesty: “Thank you for inviting me. I might need to see how I’m feeling that day.”

    When you stop pretending, you make room for connection that doesn’t require a mask.

    3. The “Perfect” Holiday Is a Myth (and It Always Was)

    The perfect holiday we see in movies or ads? It never really existed. No one’s family is that serene. No one’s table is free of tension.

    Even the person posting matching pajamas on Instagram probably cried in the bathroom ten minutes earlier.

    We chase an image from our childhood — the holiday we wish we had. But comparison is poison. Unrealistic expectations feed disappointment, which feeds shame.

    Instead, ask: What actually feels nurturing to me right now?

    • Bake cookies for yourself, not for show.
    • Play your favorite music while cleaning.
    • Tell your inner child, “This year, I’ll give you the safety you never had.”

    Try this: Each morning, ask, “What would make today feel 1% more peaceful?” Then do that one small thing. Healing is in the quiet gestures.

    4. Your Triggers Aren’t Enemies — They’re Invitations

    The holidays press buttons we didn’t even know were still there:

    • A critical parent comment.
    • A sibling rivalry that never faded.
    • That dinner conversation that makes you want to crawl out of your skin.

    These triggers aren’t proof you’ve failed to heal. They’re reminders that healing is ongoing — a spiral, not a straight line.

    Instead of seeing discomfort as the enemy, get curious:

    • What is this feeling trying to tell me?
    • Whose voice am I hearing — theirs or my own?
    • What would support feel like in this moment?

    Even a small pause — the breath between past and present — is evidence of growth.

    Triggers are teachers. They show which parts of you still crave safety or validation and invite you to bring light into old corners of the heart.

    5. You’re Allowed to Create New Traditions

    Just because something’s “always been done” doesn’t mean it belongs in your life now.

    Maybe old traditions feel like walking through a haunted house — familiar but unsettling. You can let them go and build something new that fits the life you’re growing into.

    Ideas to try:

    • Write a letter to your younger self and burn it safely as a ritual of release.
    • Spend a day volunteering or helping someone in need.
    • Host a “chosen family” dinner with people who make you feel safe.
    • Go somewhere quiet in nature and reflect on what you’re ready to leave behind.

    Traditions aren’t sacred because they’re old — they’re sacred because they hold love. Make new ones that nurture you, not drain you.

    Healing Doesn’t Skip the Holidays

    Many assume personal growth follows a calendar — progress in August, peace by December. But the truth? Healing is messy, nonlinear, and beautifully human.

    You can be grateful and grieving.

    You can forgive and feel anger.

    You can love your family and still need space.

    Both can be true.

    When Grief Joins the Celebration

    The holidays can feel especially heavy if you’re carrying loss — the absence of a loved one, a relationship that ended, or even the life you thought you’d have. Grief doesn’t take a vacation for December. In fact, it often shows up louder, reminding you of what’s missing amid the lights and laughter.

    It’s important to give grief space without guilt. Feeling sad doesn’t mean you’re failing at the season — it means you’re human, and your heart remembers love.

    Gentle ways to honor grief during the holidays:

    • Light a candle or create a small ritual to remember those you’ve lost.
    • Share a memory with someone you trust, or write it in a journal.
    • Allow yourself tears without judgment — they are part of healing, not weakness.
    • Blend joy and sorrow — it’s okay to laugh at a funny story, then feel a pang of longing afterward. Both emotions can coexist.

    Grief and celebration can exist side by side. When you acknowledge your grief instead of pushing it away, you make room for gentle presence, authentic joy, and meaningful connection — the kind of holiday your heart truly needs.

    The holidays don’t have to test your healing; they can deepen it. One quiet boundary, one grounded breath, one honest no at a time — that’s evolution.

    Every emotion that resurfaces — sadness, longing, or even anger — isn’t here to ruin your holiday; it’s asking to be witnessed, finally, with tenderness instead of judgment.

    Gentle Grounding Ritual for When the Season Feels Heavy

    1. Pause and breathe — Inhale for 4 counts, hold 2, exhale 6. Feel your feet on the floor.
    2. Name what’s real — Whisper, “This is just a moment. It will pass.”
    3. Soften your heart — Hand on chest: “I’m doing the best I can.”
    4. Reconnect — Step outside, look at the sky, light a candle, touch your pet. Remind your body life exists beyond the memory.

    Your nervous system doesn’t need perfection; it needs reassurance. Every small act tells your body, “You’re safe now.”

    Quick Reminders

    • Grief can share space with gratitude. Both belong at the table.
    • You’ve already survived the hardest parts. Memories can’t hurt you like they used to.

      It’s okay to unplug. Social media doesn’t define how your holiday should feel.
    • Rest is productive. You’re allowed to pause.
    • You are allowed to choose peace over tradition.

    Say it again: You are allowed to choose peace.

    The Quiet Power of Self-Compassion

    Self-compassion is courage. It’s what allows you to show up honestly, without the tight smile or “I’m fine” script.

    When you talk gently to yourself, you rewrite the tone of painful memories. You give past versions of yourself the love they deserved.

    Imagine sitting by candlelight, whispering, “I forgive you for how hard you tried.”

    That’s healing: soft, real, and enough.

    A Season to Come Home to Yourself

    The most sacred connection is the one you build within.

    You don’t need perfect family moments or a flawless dinner. You just need presence — the kind that says, “I’m here, I’m breathing, I’m learning to love myself through this.”

    When old wounds whisper, remember:

    They’re not reopening to punish you. They’re unfolding to be healed.

    And healing, even in December, is a sacred kind of magic.

    A Gentle Invitation from HerRadiantMind

    If this season feels heavier than your heart can hold alone, you don’t have to carry it without support.

    At HerRadiantMind, our mission is simple — to help women turn pain into presence, and wounds into wisdom.

    Through one-on-one coaching, you’ll learn to:

    • Release emotional patterns that resurface during the holidays.
    • Practice grounded self-care that feels natural, not forced.
    • Rewrite your inner story with compassion and clarity.

    Healing isn’t meant to be done in isolation — it’s meant to be witnessed, gently, by someone who sees you.

    Take this as your sign: it’s time to give yourself the same grace you’ve offered everyone else.

    Thank you for spending this time with me.

    Remember—healing isn’t linear, and growth doesn’t have to be loud to be powerful.

    Keep choosing yourself, one gentle moment at a time.💖

    Until next time, stay radiant and take tender care of your beautiful mind and body.

    With love,

    — Christabel, HerRadiantMind

  • From Surviving to Thriving: Rewriting Your Story After Trauma

    From Surviving to Thriving: Rewriting Your Story After Trauma

    Trauma doesn’t have to be the end of your story. It can be the very place your healing begins.

    Rewriting your narrative after trauma isn’t about forgetting—it’s about reclaiming your voice and choosing to live empowered, not imprisoned.

    The Science Behind Trauma’s Impact

    Trauma alters the brain, especially in areas like the amygdala, hippocampus, and prefrontal cortex. According to research published in The Journal of Neuroscience, trauma can over-activate the amygdala (the brain’s fear center) and reduce activity in the prefrontal cortex (responsible for decision-making and reasoning).

    This biological shift explains why trauma survivors may feel “stuck” in survival mode—reactive, anxious, and emotionally exhausted—even when the threat has passed.

    But here’s the hopeful part:

    Thanks to neuroplasticity, the brain can rewire itself. With intentional self-care, therapy, and mindfulness, healing isn’t just possible—it’s physiological.

    Affirmation:

    “My brain and body are capable of healing. I am not broken—I am becoming whole.”

    Why Rewriting Your Story Matters

    Your subconscious mind stores trauma as a pattern, which means your brain may still interpret present-day situations through a past lens. But when you intentionally reframe your narrative, you begin to create new neural pathways and emotional responses.

    You are not erasing your pain—you are giving it new meaning.

    Affirmation:

    “I am the author of my life. Every chapter, even the hard ones, have led me to this strength.”

    Steps to Rewrite Your Story and Thrive

    1. Acknowledge, Don’t Avoid

    Denial deepens the wound. Healing begins when we shine light on our pain.

    “What you resist, persists. What you feel, you can heal.” — Carl Jung

    2. Name Your Emotions

    According to Dr. Dan Siegel, “naming it to tame it” helps regulate the nervous system. Journaling or talking to a therapist helps shift emotional overwhelm into clarity.

    Affirmation:

    “I give myself permission to feel and to heal.”

    3. Reconnect with Your Body

    Trauma disconnects us from our bodies. Practices like breathwork, yoga, or grounding techniques help bring us back to the present and restore safety.

    Try This:

    • Inhale for 4 counts

    • Hold for 4 counts

    • Exhale for 6 counts

    • Repeat 3 times

    Affirmation:

    “In this moment, I am safe. My body is my ally.”

    4. Cultivate Self-Compassion

    Dr. Kristin Neff’s research shows that self-compassion is linked to reduced PTSD symptoms and improved emotional resilience. Be kind to yourself in the same way you would be to a friend.

    Affirmation:

    “I am worthy of love, healing, and peace—just as I am.”

    5. Visualize a New Identity

    Visualization activates the same neural networks as real experience. By imagining a thriving version of yourself, you condition your mind to step into that reality.

    Affirmation:

    “I choose to see myself not through the lens of trauma, but through the light of transformation.”

    Raising the Stakes: Why It Matters Now

    Unresolved trauma doesn’t just affect your mental health—it impacts your relationships, work, physical well-being, and overall sense of joy. The longer we carry unprocessed pain, the more it seeps into every decision and connection.

    But thriving is possible. You’ve already survived. Now it’s time to live fully.

    Affirmation:

    “I am more than what happened to me. I am creating a new path forward.”

    Closing Thought: You Are the Rewrite

    Healing doesn’t happen overnight—but with every small act of courage, you’re turning survival into strength. You’re rewriting your story—not to forget, but to reclaim your power.

    Affirmation:

    “My healing is not linear, but it is unfolding. I am becoming my most radiant self—one moment, one breath, one breakthrough at a time.”

    Healing isn’t linear—it’s layered, sacred, and deeply personal. If you’ve spent years simply surviving, know this: thriving isn’t just possible—it’s your birthright. Your trauma doesn’t define you, but your courage to face it and rewrite your story does.

    As you continue walking this path, may you give yourself permission to grow beyond survival. To love yourself through the process. To feel worthy of peace, joy, and wholeness—not after you’ve healed, but as you heal.

    You are not alone in this journey. I’m walking it with you, one breath, one breakthrough at a time.

    With so much light and love,

    Christabel

    Your Radiant Mind-Body Coach