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For years, hosting Christmas wasn’t something I volunteered for—it was something that quietly became assigned to me. My house was the biggest, centrally located, and apparently that single fact turned it into the default holiday headquarters. No one ever officially asked. It was simply assumed. Every December, the same unspoken expectation settled in: I would host, I would plan, I would pay, and I would manage the chaos so everyone else could relax and enjoy the holiday spirit.
At first, I told myself it was a privilege. I convinced myself that being the one who brought everyone together meant something. I rearranged furniture to fit extra tables and chairs. I built menus weeks in advance, carefully balancing traditions, dietary preferences, and family politics. I spent days navigating crowded grocery stores, carrying heavy bags, and coordinating timing so that everything would come out warm and perfect at the same time. I cleaned before people arrived and cleaned again long after they left.
What made it harder was that everyone left happy. They packed leftovers, hugged goodbye, and told me how wonderful everything was. Compliments, however, don’t replenish energy. Praise doesn’t erase emotional labor. And over time, I began to realize that my effort had become invisible precisely because it was so consistent. When something is always provided, people stop seeing it as work.
This year, something shifted.
As the holidays approached, I felt a familiar knot forming in my chest, but this time I didn’t push it down. I paid attention to it. I noticed how resentful I felt before anything had even started. That’s when it hit me: I wasn’t angry about hosting. I was tired of carrying the entire load alone. I was tired of being the default solution instead of part of a shared tradition.
So, for the first time, I spoke up.
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