The holidays can bring joy… but they may also bring considerable strain, especially when the relationship with your partner’s family is less than comfortable. If you’re hoping to find ways to stay close as a couple rather than drift apart as the holiday season draws near, you’re in the right place. Let’s explore how you can move through this season with intentional, practical support for yourself and for your relationship.
When you’re with your partner’s family, you may find yourself feeling small, defensive, or annoyed in ways that surprise you. These reactive behaviors often stem from feeling powerless, judged, or trapped in old patterns from past experiences where you had little power or were unable to advocate for yourself. You might revert to avoidance, making snarky remarks, withdrawing, or splitting off with your partner rather than engaging. This kind of regression is common during the holidays because you’re already juggling more: travel, expectations, time with extended family, and perhaps a sense of obligation, on top of the everyday burden of managing life.
Psychologists note that recognizing those triggers helps manage them: you’re not just irritated because your in-laws insist on their traditions; you’re irritated because you feel unseen, devalued, or even as if you’re on display for someone else’s approval. When one partner senses these patterns, it’s easier to approach them compassionately.
Communication ahead of time is one of the strongest tools to reduce holiday stress and improve your team-feel. Many couples therapy professionals highlight talking about boundaries, roles, and expectations before the gathering. Here’s how to lay the groundwork:
Once you’re in the space—often with more people, more noise, more “shoulds”—you and your partner can stay grounded by focusing on a few practical steps:

If you’re finding that the holiday season with family triggers old wounds, patterns you thought you had healed, or major stress that spills into the rest of your relationship, it might be time for couples therapy during the holidays or targeted holiday counseling for couples. Here are some signs:

You feel repeatedly caught in the same arguments every year with little resolution.

One or both of you dread holidays with your in-laws so much, it affects mood, sleep, or connection during the season.

You’re feeling disconnected from each other because your partner’s family dynamic is draining you.

You want tools (beyond conversation) to manage conflict, stress, boundary-setting, and shifting roles.

Working with a therapist can help you explore what you trigger in one another, build new habits for this season, and strengthen your united front straight through the holidays into the new year.
The holiday season doesn’t have to be another battle in this age-old feud between family-in-law dynamics and expectations. With preparation, communication, compassion for yourself and your partner, and clear support for each other, you can move through it with more ease and, with a little holiday magic, maybe even enjoyment.
If you sense that the holidays are already creeping up with tension around family dynamics, don’t wait. Reach out to schedule a session with one of our clinicians. Whether for you individually, or for you and your partner together, there’s still time to explore how to make this season less about survival and more about connection. Together, we can create a plan that honors both your relationship and your boundaries.