How To Make The Best Of The Holidays In Covid Times

A woman with MS sits on a couch in front of a Christmas tree, determined to safely celebrate the holidays in the time of Covid.
MS and Covid are the ultimate party crashers. Here’s how to outsmart them both.

The holidays, Covid, and MS

Nobody would blame you for wanting to sit out the holidays this year. I thought about it myself; sitting is kinda my thing. But those of us with MS already know we can’t press pause on life while we wait for things to get better. At least for now, Covid is real life.

MS complicates everything, and regular readers will remember this holiday survival guide from the Before Times, with tips on pacing (pre-nap), entertaining (cut corners), and self-care (drink through it). With Covid lurking around every corner, it will require even more creativity to reimagine the holidays in 2020. The good news is, if you’ve had MS for more than a minute, chances are you already know how to pivot. I’m signing up to celebrate a Covid Christmas because having things to look forward to, is one of the pillars of happiness.

Looking forward to this champagne while I wait for Santa to bring me the extra presents I deserve.

Will Covid make the holidays suck?

Even a party-girl like me can recognize there are some perks to a Covid Christmas. I mean, you don’t have to thoroughly clean the bathroom, or put on a bra, or eat your aunt’s weird Jell-O with the carrots in it. You don’t have to suffer through the 12 Days of Christmas at your niece’s school pageant, or make small talk with your drunk uncle or lowkey racist grandmother. You don’t even have to go to church. Buffets are cancelled forever, and we finally have the collective realization that putting your hand in a shared bowl of chips is like putting your hand in a toilet and then licking your fingers.  

A blonde woman in an angel costume is kneeling next to a real donkey in a church Christmas pageant.
Just kidding guys–church is where you can drink wine in the morning, wear a halo, and hang out with farm animals.

Of course there are some legitimate things we will miss–seeing who polishes off too many candy-cane martinis and hooks up at the office Christmas party, or the look on my sister’s face when I gift her kid with finger-paints and a megaphone, par exemple. The good news is that lockdown basically encourages you to add Irish cream to your coffee and eat pie for breakfast while bingeing Christmas movies in your flannel pj’s. And I am so here for it.

When we are missing our families and friends this year, let us remember that the most loving thing we can do is to stay apart. Let’s keep each other safe. And in the meantime, figure out new ways to party, 2020 style. 

Maintain the traditions you can

Canadian Thanksgiving was in October (or as we call it, Regular Thanksgiving), and it was just The Banker and me. Did I still get a 15lb turkey for two people? You bet I did. Did I have it catered, so I wouldn’t even have to cook it? YOLO, bitches. It was ridiculous, and indulgent; it took up all the space in our tiny freezer. And it was worth it. While you may not be able to keep all of your traditions, make the most of the ones you can maintain.  

It’s time to bust out all your beautiful things.

Do it for the ’gram

If you love putting on sequins and a red lip or blinging out your décor for the holidays, but you’re feeling like nobody will appreciate it, allow me to introduce you to my friend, The Internet. With so much bad news out there I’m looking forward to scrolling through Insta and seeing your festive makeup lewk, your nutcracker collection, your fancy champagne flutes, and every sugary treat you make. Don’t tell The Banker, but I just ordered another 600 lights for our tree because this is no time for sitting in the dark.

A woman with MS stands in a white coat and watches while a Christmas tree is being bound.
more is more

Eat

Food and smell are associated with powerful memories. If you can’t be with the people you love, try to make the food you associate with them. Or publicly guilt your mom into making the fruitcake (“I have brain damage” usually works), and arrange for a curbside pickup. Is there a coveted family dish you’ve never made because your G always makes it? This is the year to have her teach it to you over Facetime (while you teach her Facetime). 

A Christmas tree in the background with a plate of treats including fruitcake in the foreground. The words Like a hug from my mom are written across the photo.
tastes like memories

Get gifting

If gifts are a part of your holiday tradition, get shopping. We’ve all been depending on Amazon lately, but think about ordering locally and supporting independent businesses who need us now more than ever. Watch for the annual TOA holiday gift guide coming soon, and in the meantime, check out past guides here and here. If scooping the best deals is your thing, take advantage of sites like Capital One Shopping where you can compare prices on certain products and brands.

Go for a drive

Put your hot chocolate in your travel mug and crank a holiday playlist while you cruise the bougiest neighborhood with the best lights game in town. No mask required. 

Start a new tradition

Nobody wants to sit through one more Zoom call where we all go around the square and moan about how much Covid sucks, while secretly feeling grateful the session will time out after 40 minutes. I recently discovered jackboxgames.com, a site that sets you up to play distanced games on your next video call. Quiplash is one of their most popular games (it’s kind of like Balderdash), and it provides so many laughs that I would consider playing this even if the world weren’t covered in plague. 

Cut corners

There’s good, and there’s good enough. Even without Covid, the holidays are exhausting, especially for those of us with MS. In the Before Times, if people were coming over, cutting corners meant shoving shit in a closet. Now you only need to keep one small section of your home camera-ready clean. If that’s still too much, you can just change the background on your next Zoom party. 

Empty wine glasses sit on a counter next to a toy Grinch.
Think of all the dishes you won’t have to wash replace, because you didn’t drop them.

Every year I have romantic notions of sipping cider and listening to jazzy holiday tunes while spending an evening lovingly wrapping gifts. The reality is unnecessary back pain, paper cuts, and running out of boxes and tape. Wrapping always takes ten times longer than I expect, and by midnight I’m either crying that it’s still not done, or too drunk to care. This year I’m having most of my gifts sent directly to the recipients meaning I hardly have to wrap anything. Let the choir sing.

Outdoor holiday carollers.
From the Before Times. I’m the one in the giant white hat. Naturally.

Reach out 

When you feel the shittiest, do something good for someone else. Give to charity, pick up the phone and call a friend who’s struggling, drop off cookies for your crankiest neighbour. Even if we have very little, giving what we can is a healthy exercise in self-care. When we are generous, we tell ourselves that we have enough. The holidays tend to make loneliness lonelier and this year will prove especially challenging for many. If you yourself are lonely, please reach out.

Saying no to something is saying yes to something else 

There are a lot of things we’ve been forced to say no to this year. FOMO is at an all time high, but if you have MS, you still may find yourself unable to keep up during the holidays. If saying no to whatever it is that’s not worth your precious energy means saying yes to a nap, or a glass of wine, or some time alone, remember, you are honouring your body and saying yes to you.

Neither MS nor Covid can stop the holidays

When I’m feeling down about a Covid Christmas, I remind myself that we’ve all survived disappointing holidays. There’s almost always some good and some not-so-good every holiday season, and if this season’s celebration isn’t ideal, we get to do it all again next year. December is a popular time for me to experience burnout and the fucking flu, so I’m going to embrace a cozy germ-free holiday this year, with lots of Netflix, a tree, a puppy at my feet, and The Banker by my side. More than ever, 2020 feels like a time to think about, and feel grateful for what I’ve got. 

Happy Holidays, Trippers! How will you celebrate this year?

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6 thoughts on “How To Make The Best Of The Holidays In Covid Times

  1. Rocking out to Christmas tunes in flannel pjs (barefoot, trust me it’s safer that way) while sipping something wet out of a plastic cup or coffee mug while wishing it was something else (for safety, lessons have been learned…sometimes the hard way?‍♀️). Dreaming of ALL the sugary, chocolate, scrumptious, decadent, almost sinful treats I used to be able to eat while I munch on gluten free pretzels and fruit or vegetables minus the yummy dip or cheeses.
    While hubby tends to the roaring fire in our basement family room that I am forbidden from tending to these days (safety first!) .
    Not what it used to be but this’ll have to due..MS definitely makes adjustments and sadly this year COVID has added to the list of dos and don’ts.
    It is what it is…just make the best of it. ?

  2. Thanks as always, Ardra – I for one am not-so-secretly thrilled the expectations are pretty much officially OFF. The reason sucks, but I like that it’s okay to do whatever it is you want to do however you want to do it. I hope everyone has lovely holidays and most of all peace and good health.

  3. The best part was the 3ft tree I took out of the box and that was it..ready..and my shopping for presents that were beautiful..and I’m going back to get me one..love the to Lynne..love Lynne..I also got myself slippers and learned it’s way smarter to use your walker and not to go out after you’ve had a bath..because I took my drunken looking self and with my cane I got a little unbalanced and R set me straight thank god for R..and we went home..but I got the slippers so it was good..I used my walker next time..Have yourself a Merry Little Christmas ❤️❤️Love Lynne❤️?❤️?❤️?❤️

  4. Covid really scares the hell out of me. At first, I thought it was just normal flu but then all of a sudden, the whole world is panic-stricken. Things might be hard for people with MS during the last year, but I hope it will get better in 2021.

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