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Kids Lose Christmas for Years Because Mom Can’t Move Past Her Father’s Death

by Carolyn Mullet
December 29, 2025
in Social Issues

Christmas should have been full of joy, but grief turned it into a long fight.

For one family, the holiday season has not felt like a holiday at all. Since her father died on Christmas Day 2022, this wife has stopped celebrating Christmas entirely. No decorations. No family traditions. For years.

Her husband supported her. He respected her grief. He avoided lights and tinsel but still got gifts for their kids. He listened to the therapist’s advice and tried to help her focus on healing. He took on more responsibilities, gave her space, and tried to keep peace.

But their daughters kept asking why they don’t celebrate like their friends. The husband watched their excitement every year fade. He tried encouraging her gently. He offered support. But as another Christmas approached, everything snapped.

This year he took it upon himself to help their kids celebrate. He planned. He decorated. They made memories. Instead of peace, his wife reacted with anger and withdrawal.

Now he’s left unsure. He wonders if he crossed a line or if his wife needs to make space for her family too.

Now, read the full story:

Kids Lose Christmas for Years Because Mom Can’t Move Past Her Father’s Death
Not the actual photo

'My wife's dad died on Christmas in 2022. She doesn't let us celebrate Christmas since then?'

My father-in-law died on 25 Dec 2022. Extremely sad, unfortunate, my wife has been taking therapy since then.

Although we've two kids (currently 6F, 8F) we didn't celebrate 2023 & 2024 Christmas, because my wife wasn't ready.

I respected that, didn't put lights or decos, just 2 pair of gifts for the kids.

Honestly speaking, me & our daughters didn't had a good bond with her dad, because he was terminally ill since years.

Since his death, I'm doing everything to support my wife. There's not a single advice her therapist gave me which I didn't follow.

Trips, gifts, taking over 60% of work, staying calm when she shouts, getting her positive books and pushing her to focus on her hobbies and what not.

Her therapist, since around a year, just says one thing, that my wife needs to push herself now. We can help her to a certain extent, she needs to make...

I was really excited for 2025 Christmas (mainly for kids, they kept asking us why we don't celebrate Christmas like x & y (their friends) which honestly drained my heart.

I've been encouraging my wife too since October.

I was really expecting her to move on this time but again, she started behaving the same a week before Christmas and now, I was honestly fed up with her.

For how many years are we gonna miss our family's Christmas, that too I call the best years, as our kids are of perfect age to celebrate it.

I asked her this in a straight tone, got no reply other than a moody behavior from her.

This time I decided to prioritize our daughters' happiness and did the arrangements, decorations with them,

while still trying to push my wife but she got highly irritated, upset as if why we're even celebrating.

Her behavior continued and I had a breaking point at some moment,

I hold her shoulders and asked her in a high tone about till when is this going to last and why she's so keen to ruin the best time of...

she's upset like a very spoiled teenager always AITA here. Her siblings and even mom have moved on and celebrating Christmas fully since 2024.

This story captures a painful, long-running conflict that affects everyone in the household.

Grief is intensely personal. Losing a loved one on a meaningful day like Christmas can indeed change how someone experiences that day forever. There is no right or wrong way to grieve, and emotional readiness varies wildly between individuals.

At the same time, this situation touches on a family balance that has eroded over time. The husband did not try to erase his wife’s grief. He respected her process for years. But the children also deserve celebrations and connection.

Watching kids repeatedly miss moments their peers enjoy can strain not just a marriage, but the emotional development of children.

The husband’s breaking point wasn’t born of callousness, but of watching those he loves lose out on fleeting moments. His frustration reflects both empathy for his children and genuine confusion about how long grief should define family life.

This tension between honoring loss and creating joy is emotionally charged, deeply human, and difficult to navigate without empathy on all sides.

Loss experienced around holidays often becomes a recurring emotional trigger. According to the National Bereavement Resource Guide, anniversaries of traumatic events frequently reinvoke pain and avoidance behavior.

Christmas, with its cultural weight and sensory load, magnifies emotional memory. When a loved one’s final moments intersect with a holiday, tradition itself becomes painful. It is understandable that the wife might struggle to revisit what she now associates with loss.

However, clinical research also highlights the importance of adaptive functioning. While early grief responses are intense, prolonged avoidance of life events can limit emotional recovery and affect family dynamics.

In a 2014 study published in the Journal of Loss and Trauma, researchers found that avoidance behaviors initially serve as coping mechanisms but can interfere with role functioning if they persist without integration into life events.

This study aligns with what the therapist reportedly suggested: the wife may have reached a stage where gradual re-engagement with holidays could be beneficial for emotional processing.

Children’s emotional well-being also plays a significant role in family events. According to child psychologists, celebrations like birthdays and holidays contribute to social development and family bonding. When traditions are consistently absent, children may experience feelings of exclusion or abnormalcy compared to their peers.

A 2020 article in Child Development Journal emphasizes that family rituals provide stability and shared memory that promote psychological resilience in children.

By avoiding celebrations entirely, parents may unintentionally deprive children of opportunities for joy, connection, and social learning.

Therapists often recommend a graded exposure approach to managing painful reminders of loss. This means reintroducing the holiday in ways that honor the memory of the deceased while allowing new positive associations to develop.

For example:

Commemorative traditions: Create specific moments within the holiday that acknowledge the loved one’s memory without overshadowing the rest of the experience.

Safe participation options: Let the griever engage in parts of the celebration that feel emotionally safer first.

Shared family goals: Set expectations that allow all family members to feel included.

Such approaches help shift the personal meaning of the holiday from a painful memory to something that carries both remembrance and life.

Marriage and family therapist Dr. Samantha Boardman stresses that emotional support should come with boundaries that protect relationships and children’s development. She writes that “supporting a grieving partner is not the same as taking over their life. Maintaining family life matters too.”

This aligns with the husband’s frustration. His efforts were not absence of empathy; they were attempts to balance his spouse’s needs with the broader family’s emotional health.

For families in similar situations:

Talk openly about needs. Ask what part of the holiday is painful and why.

Co-create new traditions. Let the family shape new rituals that acknowledge loss but foster joy.

Include children’s perspectives. Their experiences matter too and deserve validation.

Seek guided therapy discussions. Therapists can assist couples in finding ways to integrate grief with ongoing life events.

Check out how the community responded:

Many commenters stressed that children’s needs and family life should continue alongside grief, not be put on hold forever.

Fluffy-Pancake2106 - We don’t have little kids, yet we still tried to make the best of the day.

Reddit user - NTA. You’ve been supportive for years, and it’s valid to want Christmas for your kids.

BriefHorror - Everyone grieves differently, but life does not stop.

live-fast-eat-trash - She’s stagnant in grief. Your children shouldn’t suffer.

Giantsfan1954 - That’s unfair to your girls. Your wife needs to put family first.

Others offered personal context about using holidays to celebrate loss instead of avoiding them.

Sharontoo - We used Christmas to celebrate his memory. Ornaments, stories, and shared traditions.

Boggers111 - My dad died on my birthday. I still celebrate both days.

SorbetLost1566 - Has her therapist asked what she pries from her own kids?

This story brings up a deep emotional challenge.

Grief is real, powerful, and personal. Losing someone on a meaningful date can leave a lasting impact. No one should dismiss that.

At the same time, family life continues. Children grow. Moments pass quickly. Traditions provide connection, joy, and shared memories that shape childhood.

The husband in this story walked a long road of patience, clear empathy, and support. Yet at a certain point, the avoidance of shared family experiences began affecting his children’s emotional world. Balancing personal grief with family needs is one of the hardest parts of parenting and partnership.

Healing doesn’t mean forgetting. It means integrating loss into life in a way that honors the past while allowing joy in the present.

So what do you think? How can families find a healthy balance between grieving and celebrating? Should certain traditions change after loss, or can they be transformed?

Carolyn Mullet

Carolyn Mullet

Carolyn Mullet is in charge of planning and content process management, business development, social media, strategic partnership relations, brand building, and PR for DailyHighlight. Before joining Dailyhighlight, she served as the Vice President of Editorial Development at Aubtu Today, and as a senior editor at various magazines and media agencies.

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