Who
Do You Spend The Holidays With
By Alan Cohen
The holiday season brings with it
the inevitable questions, “Who will I spend the holidays with?” “Which
family members should I visit?” “Must I really go to this party?” Here
is the answer to all of your holiday questions, as well as any that
occur during the rest of the year or your entire life: Love yourself
enough to be where joy guides you.
Toward the end of his Hawaiian vacation, my friend Jack came to visit
me. As I drove Jack to the airport he confessed, “There were two things
I always dreamed of doing with my beloved, and waited to do with her
when she came along. One was to buy a house in a neighborhood I have
always loved, and the other was to visit Hawaii. Last year I decided to
quit waiting for my beloved to show up before I could enjoy those gifts.
I bought the house, and now I have come to Hawaii and had a stellar
vacation.” Jack went on, “Now I realize that I have done those things
with my beloved. My beloved, you see, is me.”
When I next saw Jack, he introduced me to his fiancée. When he found his
beloved inside of him, he found his beloved beside him. As you find your
beloved inside you, you will know exactly where to go and when, and find
many different manifestations of love beside you.
Over years of counseling people in relationship and life choice
quandaries, I have observed many happy endings. This has taught me that
no romantic, friendship, or family relationship issue is so overwhelming
that you cannot find your way home; indeed some of the most painful
predicaments are preludes to glorious triumph.
Take Hannah, for example, a young Jewish woman who fell in love with a
Muslim man. Hannah’s father was furious about his daughter’s romance and
forbade her to date Rashid. Over several years Hannah attended my
seminars and plodded through the saga of her star-crossed love. Finally
she mailed me a copy of a letter she wrote to her father explaining to
him that she appreciated all he had done for her, but this was her life
and this was the man she loved, and she could no longer deny her heart’s
calling. A year later I received Hannah’s wedding picture, and the
following year her baby’s photo. Eventually her father dropped his
resistance and accepted Rashid into his heart and family.
Then there was Erin, the wedding coordinator who could get everyone to
the altar but herself. When she finally admitted that she was in the
wedding business because she really wanted to be in a wedding, she let a
good man into her life. Then someone else planned the wedding at which
she finally walked down the aisle herself.
Wherever you stand on your relationship journey, any perceived deficit
can get offset with a healthy dose of self-love. Self-honoring is, in
fact, your first order of business. A love affair with yourself is not
egotistical or self-indulgent. It is a prerequisite to all acts of true
service to others. Those who love themselves have far more to give and
share than those who dislike or deny themselves. It’s hard for a hungry
person to feed others, and equally hard for a love-starved person to
give and receive from a lover. Light your own fire and you will
illuminate the way for others to light their own. They will catch your
and together you will amplify it.
Someone once sent me a pamphlet entitled, “Are you Letting Life Love
You?” I meditated on that question for months, and I am still doing so
years later. Every moment is a choice between letting love in or pushing
it away. The universe would take you for its lover…are you willing to
welcome it into your chamber?
This holiday season, find the courage to put an overwhelming sense of
“should” aside, and live from “would.” Where would love lead you, from
your heart, out of choice, guided by joy? Say “yes” to everything that
brings you closer to inner peace and “no” to everything that distances
you from it.
A couple whom I did not know well invited me to their wedding in my
town. I told them I would attend, but regretted my response. I told
myself, “This is the last time I will engage in a social situation out
of obligation. Next time I will honor my inner voice.” When the wedding
day came, an hour before I needed to leave for the ceremony I decided to
lie down to take a nap. To my surprise, I woke an hour after the wedding
began! My inner being commandeered my action and I ended up honoring my
true choice. Since that time I have made it my mission to honor my true
choices without having to fall asleep to do so. Like quitting smoking or
losing weight, it’s either now or it’s not. The one thing you cannot
postpone is joy.
This holiday season practice staying awake in self-love. Be the light
that the holidays seek to celebrate, and you will attend every party,
gathering, service, and ceremony — or not — with your true beloved.

Alan Cohen is author of many popular inspirational books, including best-selling, The Dragon Doesn’t Live Here Anymore and Mr. Everit’s Secret: What I Learned from the World’s Richest Man.
To receive information about Alan’s six-month Personal Coaching Program beginning in January, or to receive Alan’s free daily inspirational quote and monthly newsletter,
visit www.alancohen.com,
email admin@alancohen.com , or write P.O. Box 835, Haiku, HI 96708.
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