The Toxicity Toolkit – Breakout Topics 4 – Holiday Preparation

Breakout Topics- Holiday Preparation

2-Week Toolkit to Detoxify your Thanksgiving.

Day 1- Using the tools over the holidays.


Day 2-Establish Ground Rules!

Two weeks from now, you will probably either find yourself on the hosting team, or the visiting team (even if you’re visiting through Zoom), and I cannot stress enough how important it is to set ground rules regardless of which team you find yourself on.

Statistically, the larger your gathering, the more likely it is that someone attending with be a toxic/abusive personality. If you did yesterday’s exercise, it should be easy to identify who these people are, if there are any in your group.

This exercise is also especially helpful if the event will include new or random people (as many thanksgivings do).

Hosting Team

If you’re hosting the event, it’s your job to make sure that there’s a venue, and enough food, plates, etc. It’s ALSO your job to set the tone of the event and YOU determine what is allowed or not. It is your home.

That means it’s your responsibility if your uncle is saying racist things and nobody feels safe countering it. It’s your responsibility to uphold your values regardless of who attends, and to make the event safe and welcoming for everyone. It’s your responsibility to make sure nobody has to endure abuse at your event.

Establish ground rules that reflect your values. If your family has completed weeks 1 & 2 of The Toolkit you already have your Family Values, Expectations, and Bill of Rights.

Use your journal exercise from yesterday to find the big themes. What behaviors seem to happen every year? What behaviors are you worried about? Which values do they violate? Use this to make rules that fit your home, and will protect everyone.

Visiting Team

Your crew is visiting someone else’s home, and they have the right to set the tone of the event. YOU have the right to decide which behaviors you’ll allow, and how you interact with them.

First, set ground rules for your own group. Talk together about any concerns you might have about attending Thanksgiving. Use your journal entries from yesterday’s exercise and your Family Values, Expectations, and Bill of Rights from weeks 1 & 2. Make the rules together.

Then, make plans for adhering to the rules? Do you speak up? Do you isolate? Do you leave? Do you have a representative from your crew bring things up to a representative from the host team? Only your family will know what the best plan is for your specific people.

Both Teams

Practice enforcing the rules, and responding to rule violations. Remember the importance of being gentle and direct. I’m going to supply some sample responses, but make sure you adapt things to your own family.

“This feels toxic, and I don’t want to participate.”

“This goes against my values, and the values of my family.”

“This conversation relies on an untrue or incomplete narrative, and it looks differently if you consider all of the facts.”

“That comment made me very uncomfortable, and I feel it’s important to speak up because I can look around and see how uncomfortable others are as well.”

“This conversation is unkind, and this isn’t the place or time for it.”

“That statement alienated people in this room, and that’s not ok.”

“Please stop making belittling statements. We’re here to have fun.”

Practice, practice, practice. You have two weeks, so bring up scenarios, and role play using your rules.

Print out your rules, and have them very visible during the event.

If you’re on the Hosting Team, send out an email to all of the Visiting Crews letting them know how excited you are to have them, and what the expectations are during the event. Thank them in advance for making it a safe, memorable, fun Thanksgiving.

Happy Holidays


Day 3- Practice!

Yesterday we set ground rules for our Thanksgiving engagements, and we practiced speaking up. Continue to practice speaking up in kind, gentle, direct ways.

What if those measures don’t work. Truly toxic people don’t like to be told not to be toxic. That’s why they get away with it year after year.

What happens after you say “Uncle Teddy, your misogynist comments are alienating the family and making us all uncomfortable. While you’re entitled to your perspectives, these views are not welcome during our Thanksgiving celebration.”?

Host Team

What happens when Uncle Teddy gets worse, or lashes out? What do you say? What do you do? Whose responsibility is it to act?

Practice telling Uncle Teddy, “We got together today to enjoy a safe, fun, enjoyable Thanksgiving. Your behavior is keeping that from happening, and you’ve been asked to stop. If this persists, you will need to leave. It’s unfortunate that you don’t want to find more meaningful ways of interacting. This is your chance to change that.”

Give a last chance, then follow through.

“Uncle Teddy, we asked you to come participate in our safe, enjoyable Thanksgiving, and provided rules to make it possible. You have repeatedly shown us that you’re not interested, and the rest of us deserve to enjoy the rest of the holiday. You need to leave now.

If it’s possible for well-behaved members of Uncle Teddy’s team to stay, and get rides home later, please consider offering this option.

Visiting Team

If you’ve interjected to stop the behavior, and it’s persisting, go to a representative of the Host Team and let them know what’s happened. Ask them to step in. If they refuse, decide whether to isolate your family at the event, to continue to engage with the repeated bad behavior, or to leave.

Leaving a toxic environment in the company of people you share mutual love and respect with is ultimately a far better Thanksgiving than staying in a toxic environment that has to be suffered through. You have no obligation to endure anyone’s abuse.

In addition to practicing gentle, direct responses to bad behavior, practice having conversations with the representatives of the Host Team about concerning behaviors, and practice politely, gently, exiting the situation should it be necessary.

Both Teams

Have discussions as a family about experiences from the past, and practice responding to them. As scenarios come to mind over the next two weeks, keep the conversation open with your family about how to handle them. Practice together.

Healthy Holidays!


Day 4- Bullies.

Sit down today with your team, and have a discussion about bullies. Talk about thanksgivings past. Talk about the people you know will be attending. Talk about attendees that you might not know.

Encourage all of the members of your family to talk about anybody from these groups that make them feel uncomfortable. Talk about which behaviors from the person cause the discomfort. Discuss what to do if these behaviors happen.

Decide on a family safe word that any member of your crew can use when they feel unsafe or violated. Talk about what the plan is when someone needs to use your word.

Keep practicing the tools from the previous days.

Healthy Holidays!


Day 5- Problematic People

Think through the exercises of this week together, and make a list of the people coming to your gathering that your notes have revealed to be problematic people. Also, make a list of people who are Safe Havens.

Visiting Team

Decide which adults on the team will be monitoring the interactions with toxic people. Decide who’s job it is to react should a toxic situation arise.

Host Team

In addition to following the advice to the Visiting Team, I recommend reaching out to the problematic people in advance.

“We look forward to seeing you on Thanksgiving. We hope that you will enjoy participating in our safe, fun, inclusive holiday celebration. Please be advised of the rules of our event, and know that anyone who chooses not to participate in keeping the celebration safe, fun and inclusive will be asked to leave. Remember guests are arriving at 10am and Turkey time is 1pm.”

Email the message to all of the Visiting Teams. Problematic people will be put on notice, and will learn that you’re comfortable addressing their behaviors. That takes a lot of power away from toxicity. The people on your guest list who would ordinarily suffer through the toxic situations will know that they aren’t expected to endure abuse this year. Such a win.

In addition, you can send a message to people you’ve identified as Safe Havens. Let them know how much their presence means to you. Tell them how much it matters that they contribute to safe, loving family time. Let them know that you intend to do the same.

Healthy Holidays!


Day 6- Home Team

We’ve talked about the Hosting teams and the Visiting teams, and their responsibilities in having a non-toxic Thanksgiving. Today we develop your Home Team.

Your Home Team is the group of people either hosting or visiting with you.

It’s important to spend time before the big day building your team. Practice the skills before this. Talk things out. Role Play. Get really good at communicating.

As things come up from Thanksgivings past, you can practice what to do when difficult situations arise. Knowing what to do before hand reduces panic, and increases effectiveness, especially in kiddos.

Practice supporting each other.

We already established a team Safe Word. Do you need more than one. Discuss discreet ways of saying “If feel unsafe.” or “I feel someone else is unsafe.” Have ways to alert the Home Team that someone feels uncomfortable or trapped.

Practice using your Home Team Safe Words.

Healthy Holidays!


Day 7- Reaching out to the rest of the group

Depending on when your celebrations kick off, you have a little more than a week left before Thanksgiving. I hope that the Holiday Preparations series has been helping you prepare.

If you haven’t already, take some time to reach out to the rest of the group to connect. Make sure you didn’t forget to send those email messages about the rules and setting the tone.

Remember the Safe Havens from the previous exercise.

Reach out to them, and let them know that you’re building your toolkit. Ask them about their hopes or concerns for the event.

Make them part of your team. Point them toward parts of the toolkit that address their concerns.

Build your nontoxic network.

Healthy Holidays!


I cannot stress enough how important it is to teach children at very young ages about consent and bodily autonomy.

Make sure your kids know that they can say “no.”

Makes sure everyone knows that the children at your event don’t have to hug, kiss, or sit on the lap of anybody they don’t want to. No matter what. Period.

Also, tell your children that it’s not ok for them to hug or kiss someone without their consent either.

Tell your child who to go to if they feel pressured, or uncomfortable. Practice the family safe words.

Keeping children safe has to be done on purpose. Hoping nothing will happen creates an atmosphere and culture that enables a variety of abuses, and they start here, with lessons on consent.

Safe and Healthy Holidays!


Day 9-Become a Safe Haven

Spend some time today reflecting on the characteristics of the people you find to be Safe Havens.

Think about all of the tools you’re building, and how you’re using them.

Keep practicing. Stay calm. Be Gentle. Allow absolutely no abuse.

Think of the people who will be attending Thanksgiving with you. Think of which people become targets, or don’t have tools of their own. Which people become smaller at family events? Who’s known for hiding out, or escaping into their phone?

If you can’t think of anybody, you may be doing a very good job of this at your events already. Otherwise…

Don’t let them feel alone. Don’t let them feel powerless.

Healthy Holidays

Day 10- Filling the Time Positively

One of the best ways to keep toxicity at bay over the holidays is to fill the time with positive interaction.

Have activities.

Direct conversation toward positive topics.

Fill the time and space with love instead.

Healthy Holidays


Day 11- Enduring Abuse

This is just a gentle reminder that absolutely nobody should be expected to endure abuse. It’s nobody’s job to be the target. No one should ever have to just take it.

Think about the times in your life when you’ve witnessed this, and decide right here and now that it stops in your presence.

Remember that you are powerful. You are well-equipped with the tools to navigate toxicity. Trust in yourself and the practice you’ve put in.

Healthy Holidays


Day 12- Being Gentle

The holiday is just a few days away, and I hope you’ve been practicing the tools in your holiday kit! I hope you’ve prepared yourself to stand up to people if need be. I hope you practice ways of shutting down the toxicity you encounter. I hope you’re stoked about being a Safe Haven at events for others.

It’s always good, in the midst of this to remember to be gentle. Remember to be kind. Remember to be good natured.

In preparing all of this, and the need for action, it’s easy to slip into defensive positions and behaviors. This is why we use the DBT tools, which require that we be in control of ourselves, remaining calm and kind, even when we need to be firm.

Healthy Holidays


Day 13- DEAR MAN


Day 14- GIVE, FAST


Day 15- Have Fun

The day is upon us, and you are well prepared.

Now is the time to remember to have fun. All of the things in the Holiday Preparations Toolkit are important, and it’s also important to remember why we celebrate holidays to begin with.

Go! Enjoy your family, or your Friendsgiving, of 5 Thanksgivings for those of you visiting many. I hope you have the best Thanksgiving of your life.

Sending love and light from my family to yours.

Healthy Holidays

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