The holiday period, especially at the peak of New Year's and Christmas, represents a unique temporally-eventual space rich in potential triggers – stimuli that initiate powerful, often involuntary emotional, cognitive, and behavioral reactions. Unlike the daily routine, where triggers are usually scattered, the holiday concentrates them, creating an effect of "emotional overload." Studying these triggers requires an integrative approach, taking into account the functioning of the limbic system, patterns of associative memory, and the pressure of social scenarios.
Odorant (olfactory) triggers. Smell is directly connected to the hippocampus and amygdala – centers of memory and emotions, bypassing the thalamus. Scents have the highest triggering power. The smell of mandarins, pine, certain spices (cinnamon, cloves) or traditional dishes (Olivier salad, roast goose) instantly activates autobiographical memories. This can evoke both warm nostalgia and painful memories of lost loved ones or past family conflicts. Research by Rachel Herz shows that the "smell-memory-emotion" connection is one of the most enduring.
Auditory triggers. Certain songs ("Last Christmas" by Wham!, "Jingle Bells", the soundtrack to "The Irony of Fate") become cultural constants. Their repetitiveness creates a powerful associative chain. For some, this is the background for joy, for others – a reminder of a specific, possibly traumatic period in life. The sound of glasses clinking, laughter, the specific "hum" of the festive crowd can also act as triggers of social anxiety or the feeling of "not fitting in".
Visual triggers. The abundance of twinkling lights, certain color schemes (red, gold, green), images of idealized families in advertising – all this forms an ideal that people unconsciously compare their reality with, which may become a trigger for a sense of mismatch and existential dissonance.
Triggers of social comparison. The holiday, especially through social networks, turns into an "exhibition of achievements": travels, perfectly set tables, happy faces. This triggers the mechanism of upward social comparison (comparing oneself with those who are better), triggering a sense of envy, inadequacy, and loneliness. Paradoxically, even positive content can act as a negative trigger.
Triggers of financial stress. The holiday itself, commercialized to the level of an economic phenomenon, becomes a continuous trigger. Price tags on gifts, the need to compile a long list of expenses, reminders of credit debt – each such micro-stimulus activates centers of anxiety related to financial security.
Triggers of family dynamics. For many, returning to the parental home or meeting with relatives includes a whole set of specific triggers: critical remarks from parents ("When will you get married?", "Why don't you have a normal job?"), the renewal of old roles ("rebellious", "quiet"), toxic communication patterns. The very geography of the home (the old room, the dining table) may serve as a trigger for regression to childhood behavioral models.
The "summary" trigger. The cultural scenario of the end of December as a time of reflection is a powerful cognitive trigger. It initiates the process of global evaluation of one's life over the year, which often leads to focusing on failures and missed opportunities for people with perfectionist or depressive traits, triggering a sense of guilt and hopelessness.
The holiday is a time when the absence of deceased loved ones is felt especially acutely. A trigger may be:
An empty seat at the table.
A special dish prepared by the deceased.
A tradition that cannot be repeated.
Also, the holiday may serve as an anniversary (anniversary reaction) of a personal trauma (divorce, serious illness, accident) that occurred during this period, making the temporal interval a global trigger.
In Germany, popular Christmas cookies "Lebkuchen" and mulled wine at markets are for many positive triggers of childhood (Gemütlichkeit – coziness). However, for some migrants or people with alcohol dependence, these same stimuli may be negative triggers of alienation or desire.
In the countries of the former USSR, television broadcasts of "Blue Flame", the film "The Irony of Fate", or the head of state's address are not just broadcasts, but ritual triggers that initiate a collective sense of belonging to the "imagined community" of the nation, but for dissidents of the past, these same images could trigger a sense of protest.
The paradoxical trigger of "joy". For a person in depression or mourning, persistent demands from others to "relax and have fun" ("Don't be a Grinch!") themselves become powerful triggers of guilt, anger, and alienation, deepening isolation.
From a neurobiological perspective, a trigger works on the principle of a conditioned reflex. A neutral stimulus (the smell of pine) in the past was repeatedly paired with a strong emotional state (joy of family celebration). As a result, it itself became a trigger for this emotion or its complex.
Management strategies include:
Identification and anticipation: Awareness of one's individual triggers allows for preparation for them.
Cognitive reframing: Conscious rethinking of the meaning of the trigger ("This movie is just a repetitive media product, not a measure of my holiday").
Creating new associations: Forming one's own, positive rituals that "rewrite" old neural connections.
Mindfulness practices: Observing the arising reaction to a trigger without immediate identification with it ("I notice that this smell is causing me sadness, but I am not this sadness").
Holiday triggers represent a condensed form of personal and collective history materialized in sensory and social stimuli. They act as keys opening up repositories of memory and emotions. Their power is not so much due to the stimuli themselves, but to the semantic and emotional load that is attributed to them by individual and cultural experience. Understanding the mechanism of their operation allows one to move from passive reaction to active engagement, transforming the holiday period from a potential emotional minefield into a space where even complex memories can be integrated, and new, healing associations can be consciously created. Ultimately, working with holiday triggers is working with one's own identity and history, where the holiday does not act as a given, but as a text that can be reread and partly rewritten.
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