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The Rural Voice, 1999-12, Page 20Corn and soybean prices have bottomed out. Pork has recovered somewhat from last year's unprecedented disaster but still not to profitable levels. All this, loaded on top of the normal strains of the holiday season. can magnify stress for families say two counsellors in charge of helping farm families cope with the the current situation. Stress in a rural community is a particular problem, says John Field. a St. Marys counsellor who has been working with OMAFRA and the Perth County Pork Producers Association to help families caught in the vice of last year's pork price collapse. Field says people in rural areas aren't as apt to seek help and talk about their trouble as urban people. It's taken 10 or 11 months to build a trust that allows people to come for help. he says. Often. rural people leave it too long until they're in real crisis situation. Problems are compound- ed at Christmas, Field says, because so many of the resources people need to combat stress are in short supply at Christmas — like time to be yourself. Similarly, a counsellor usually advises people suffering stress to get Tots of sleep and eat proper foods, but most people don't do that at Christmas. Still, whether you're pressed for money or you have no economic worries but feel pressed for time, there are steps you can take to lighten the Toad and make Christmas mor enjoyable say Field and fellow counsellor Gabriel Del Bianco of Innerfit Counselling Centre of Auburn who has been working with the Huron County Pork Producers and OMAFRA to help farmers battling stress. If you want to relieve the stress that's heightened at Christmas time "simplicity" is the key word, Del Bianco says. The so-called Y2K problem, the concern that there will be great dislocation because computer systems that control so many areas of modern life won't be able to deal with the changeover of their clocks to the year 2000, has awakened many people to the fact their lives seemed to have decreased in value, says Del Bianco who has been counselling for 17 years. Too many people have found that they were filling their week with just doing things, rather than getting value from what they were doing. Christmas ups the ante of stress, because people expect DEALING WITH AT CHRISTMAS The idealized vision of what C additional pressure on familie for yourself and your family, c hnstmas should be puts s at Christmas. Take the ounsellors urge. 16 THE RURAL VOICE time so much of it — and not just in terms of gifts. The pressure comes from the whole baggage that comes with the way perfect Christmases are portrayed in the media. "At Christmas we're supposed to be a family." Del Bianco says. We're supposed to have a closeness to all our family members. even if we don't like some of our relatives at other times of the year." Field agrees. saying that at Christmas we put family pressures on ourselves we wouldn't feel other times of the year. Because families are "supposed" to be together at Christmas, in the popular Lion of the holiday. people often feel a pressure to visit a family member that they wouldn't feel if it say, February. It becomes a double- edged sword, Field says. If you make the time to visit someone, you feel stressed. If you don't make the time to visit, you may feel guilt. You have to give yourself permission not to feel you have to visit if it's going to add stress to your life at Christmas, Field says. That's difficult in a rural society where family ties are so highly valued. Those societal pressures about the perfect Christmas create high expectations of the way the holidays should be the counsellors say. "We're all commanded to have peace on earth, even it' we don't feel it," says Del Bianco. In counselling people at Christmas he tries to help people keep proper boundaries on their lives, he says. He asks people to sit down and write down on paper what they want Christmas to be. "What do you value about Christmas'?" He asks people to define the kind of Christmas they want rather than trying to react to what they think Christmas is supposed to be. Part of the problem, he says, is that Christmas is like a wedding: it's something you plan for weeks and it's over in an hour. People worry and fret about buying and wrapping "perfect" Christmas presents and within a few minutes of opening, it's all over. One of the things his family has done is to slow the process down, Del Bianco says. Under the tree may be only two or three gifts each. But the wrapped boxes are not the real present: they just hold the first clue in a hunt for the real present. That clue leads to another and that to another