The host appreciates the listeners' attention amidst the overwhelming noise of the internet, recognizing it as a privilege to have their time and focus.
The host has been running the podcast for eight years.
The host experiences a mix of pure bliss and joy, along with deep grief due to the loss of their mother earlier in the year.
The host's son is extremely excited about Christmas, particularly about getting cookies and presents, and is looking forward to experiencing the Polar Express.
The host's mother passed away in February, which has deeply affected their family during the holiday season.
The host embodies their mother's playful spirit by adding festive decorations to the home, such as tacky Christmas stockings and a tree topper.
The host advises embracing both joy and grief, holding both emotions close, and being present in the moment, regardless of the challenges.
The host references Walt Whitman's quote, 'Happiness is not in another place, but this place,' and Rumi's saying, 'Wherever you stand, be the soul of that place.'
The host wishes listeners grace, love, connection, and happiness, encouraging them to reach out if they need support during the holidays.
All right, team, as Christmas arrives and the holidays are here, I wanted to send off a quick little holiday message and a few reminders. But first, I want to start off with a massive thank you.
Thank you. A big thank you to each and every single one of you that tune into the show, that have subscribed on Spotify or Apple Podcasts or YouTube or wherever you tune in. It is just such an honor. I know that our lives, your life is probably a flood of people trying to get your attention and wanting things from you. And it can seem sometimes like the internet is this vast sea of hands trying to grab at your eyeballs and your ears.
And so I do not take it for granted that you take time to tune into my show.
And I have really tried over the last few years, because I've been running this podcast for eight years, to hone in on the conversations that I have, on the content that I produce, and make it more and more and more valuable for you. And so if there's ever a subject or a topic or a question that you would like me to cover, please do reach out to me. Hit me up on Instagram, at Mantox. And I would love to dive into whatever it is that you could be served by. One of the things that I...
Usually when I do a holiday message, I talk about the year and what happened, all those types of things. But I actually just want to talk about a quick holiday reminder. Sometimes for the holidays, there are mixed feelings. There's nostalgia, there's longing. For me this year, it really is a mix of...
pure bliss and joy and very deep grief. This is the first year that my three and a half year old son, Code, is really aware of the holidays and he's really aware of Christmas and he's super excited. And for example, tonight we're going to go take him to see the Polar Express. And so he's like beside himself that he's going to get to go ride a train for the first time because he loves trains. And so on the one hand, there's this beautiful opening of joy and
And watching, you know, the holidays through his eyes, the excitement, the sort of like pure, unadulterated innocence that's around it. I mean, he's just excited to like get cookies. That's what he keeps asking. I'm like, what do you want from Santa? And he's like, cookies and presents. And I'm like, okay. And he's like, but cookies, Dada, cookies. And I'm like, okay, buddy. So on the one side, there's that joy, you know, and there's that happiness and there's that beauty.
And on the other side, there is grief because my mom passed in February. And this year is the first year that she won't be around.
And my mom was somebody that, I mean, first off, her absence is deeply felt. It's something that has reverberated through the conversations that my stepdad and I and my sister and my brother have been having. It really is something that has sort of marked this
this year. And it's very different because my mom loved Christmas. She loved it. There was like this vibrancy and aliveness that would get sparked in her every single holiday season. And so to not have her here really brings me into contact with a very deep level of absence and missing.
and grief and sadness that she's not here to see her grandson, see my son, so excited about the holidays. She didn't get a chance to meet my daughter, who's now four months old. Obviously, has no idea what Christmas is and what's happening. But there's grief around this time of the year where we normally come together and celebrate, and it's about connection and community and love.
It can also be a very stressful time. I know for a lot of families and for a lot of people, it can be very, very stressful and you're bracing for impact of that one person that you're worried about seeing, or maybe you just went through a divorce or a breakup and you're not looking forward to being at home with the family and having all the questions from your family about what happened, or I don't really know what your situation is. But what I really wanted to convey is the holidays are almost never just one thing.
They're almost never, it doesn't even matter what holiday it is, but they're almost never just, you know, pure joy or pure grief. And it's our responsibility, I think, at least for me, to really hold both of those near and dear to us, to hold both of those parts of life and existence in our heart as we go through the holidays.
And one of the things that I've done is embodied my mom's playful and ridiculous spirit as we've entered into the holiday season. And so two examples, number one, for the last few years, my wife, Fiona, has not bought stockings, you know, like the Christmas stockings you hang above the fireplace or a tree topper.
And so in the spirit of my mom, who would buy the most god-awful, gaudy, ridiculous Christmas stuff, you know, like big dance, that five-foot dancing Santas and, you know, it would sing.
which one year my sister, for whatever reason, had this like giant red penis pillow with balls. And we stuck the giant red penis pillow between Santa's legs and then he's dancing. And you know, this like red penis pillow is like shaking around. And like, we called my mom into the room and she like walks in and looks at it and she's just mortified, right? She's like absolutely mortified that this is happening to the sacred Santa. Yeah.
But in the spirit of my mom, I ended up buying these, you know, kind of tacky Christmas stockings that are now hanging above the fireplace and a Christmas tree topper because my wife for the last two, three years has not done so. And so the rule in my house is if you don't follow through with it, then I will. And you have to live with whatever I get. So...
So, you know, I think we can have fun. We can enjoy, we can lean into the grief, we can lean into the missing, we can lean into the frustration. And it reminded me of a quote by Walt Whitman where he said, happiness is not in another place, but this place. Happiness is not in another place, but this place. Not for another hour, but this hour. And then Rumi said, wherever you stand, be the soul of that place.
And it's really just a reminder for me, and I'm just sharing this reminder with you as I go into the holiday season, to be in this moment, to be in the present moment, whatever it brings. Grief, joy, happiness, the worry that it's going to pass too quickly. Just be in the fullness of the moment as you go through the holiday seasons.
even if it's challenging, even if it's confronting, even if it feels like there's something missing. And so from my family to yours, I wish you nothing but the best. I wish you grace. I wish you just so much love and connection and family and friends.
And please do reach out if you need anything during the holidays. If you just want to share a message with me, please reach out. You can hit me up at Mantalks on Instagram. And again, thank you so much for tuning in to this show. I deeply appreciate it. And I appreciate you. All the best to you and yours.