After the Holiday: Photos, Recaps, and Planning the Next One

RM
Riley Marsh
Holiday Planning Writer & Lifestyle Editor · Updated March 2026

Use a 15‑minute post‑event routine to save memories, reduce clutter, and set up your next countdown in seconds.

The 15‑minute close‑out

Photo hygiene for normal humans

Light reflection (actually useful)

Pin the next countdown

Stuff management


Related: Planning guide · Time zones · Budgeting · After the holiday

Photo curation flow

Pick the top 12, delete near‑duplicates, and caption names/places on 3 of them.

One great album gets revisited; a huge dump does not.

Memory anchors

Save one menu, one playlist, and one quote from the day into your notes.

These tiny anchors recreate the vibe next year in seconds.

Roll momentum forward

Schedule the next countdown link now—travel window, tickets, or school break.

Share the link while the group chat is still warm, then mute the thread and relax.

Use the Days After to Reset Gently

The countdown doesn’t have to end at midnight; the days after a holiday are part of the rhythm too.

  • Schedule one small task per day—like washing linens, tidying décor, or sorting photos—instead of doing everything at once.
  • Take a few minutes to write down what went well and what felt stressful this year.
  • Put a reminder on next year’s countdown with one thing you want to do differently.
  • Make space to rest, not just to clean up, so you start the next season with more energy.

Gentle resets make it easier to look forward to the next holiday instead of dreading the aftermath.

Using Reflection to Shape Next Year

The days after a holiday are a powerful time to notice what truly mattered—and what didn’t.

  • Write down three moments that felt meaningful and what made them special.
  • Note any traditions that felt heavy, expensive, or forced.
  • Use your notes to create a “more of this, less of that” list for the next season.
  • Consider adding a small reminder near the start of next year’s countdown to revisit those reflections.

You don’t have to reinvent the holidays every year—just gently steer them toward what feels right for you.

Being Gentle With Mixed Feelings

After a holiday, it’s normal to feel a blend of relief, sadness, gratitude, and fatigue.

  • Give yourself time to feel whatever shows up instead of judging those emotions.
  • Talk with someone you trust about one thing that felt beautiful and one thing that was hard.
  • Use a simple scale—like 1 to 5—to rate how sustainable the season felt for you.
  • Let that information shape how you pace yourself next time, even if the outside expectations stay the same.

Your emotional experience is part of the data you can use to plan differently in the future.

Honoring the Work You Put In

It’s easy to see what you wish had gone differently and forget how much unseen effort you contributed.

  • List a few ways you showed up—planning, cooking, coordinating, listening, or simply being present.
  • Recognize that emotional labor counts as real work, even if it doesn’t show up on a receipt.
  • Give yourself credit for any boundaries you held, even if they were uncomfortable in the moment.
  • Consider one small way to lighten your load next year without compromising what matters most.

Acknowledging your own effort is part of recovering from a busy season.

Creating a Gentle Transition Back to Everyday Life

After a big build-up, regular days can feel flat or disorienting.

  • Plan a few small comforts—like favorite meals or quiet evenings—during the first week after the holiday.
  • Give yourself time to unpack slowly instead of aiming for instant order.
  • Schedule one enjoyable activity that has nothing to do with cleaning or catching up.
  • Notice any lessons you want to carry into everyday routines, such as more shared meals or intentional rest.

Easing out of the season can be just as important as easing into it.

Checking In With the People You Celebrated With

Post‑holiday conversations can gently surface what worked well and what everyone might want to adjust.

  • Ask a simple question like, “What part of this year felt especially good to you?”
  • Invite people to share one thing they would happily skip or shrink next time.
  • Listen for patterns, especially around timing, travel, and emotional bandwidth.
  • Capture a few shared agreements while they’re fresh so you’re not guessing next year.

Reflecting together can turn one year’s effort into long‑term ease.

Looking for Small Signs of Growth

Progress around holidays is often subtle: a calmer conversation, a smaller argument, a gentler schedule.

  • Compare this season to a past one and notice where things felt even slightly easier.
  • Celebrate any new boundaries you held, even if they were imperfect.
  • Pay attention to how children or other loved ones responded to less hectic plans.
  • Write down one thing you’re proud of so you can remember it when next year’s planning begins.

Growth doesn’t always look dramatic from the outside, but it still matters.

Quick Ways to Put This Guide Into Practice

Reading about planning is helpful, but a few tiny actions today will make the next holiday or busy season feel very different.

Small adjustments now compound over future holidays and projects, especially when you revisit the same guide over time.

What to Revisit Before the Next Holiday

Instead of reading this guide once and forgetting it, plan to return to it briefly as the next busy period approaches.

A short revisit can turn a one‑time insight into part of your long‑term planning habits.

Sharing This Guide With the Right People

Some of the biggest changes happen when the people you plan with see the same information you're using.

Planning is usually a team effort; sharing context makes those conversations smoother.

Checking In After You Try These Ideas

The real test of any guide is what happens once you put it into practice for an actual holiday or project.

Reflection closes the loop and makes your future countdowns easier to navigate.

Keeping What Works, Letting Go of What Doesn't

Not every suggestion in a guide will match your life. The goal is to build a small set of ideas that reliably help you.

A personalized approach beats perfection every time when it comes to planning.

DateTaskAction
December 26Returns & exchangesGather receipts, identify returns
December 27–29Decoration sortingPack non-Christmas items first
December 30–31Budget reviewTotal holiday spending, plan payoff
January 1–2New Year resetSet goals, plan January activities
January 3–6Decoration storageFull Christmas takedown by Jan 6
January 7+Forward focusStart next holiday countdown, save monthly

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the post-holiday blues and how do I deal with them?

Post-holiday blues are a recognized mood shift that many people experience after a major holiday ends — particularly after Christmas and New Year. The combination of elevated anticipation, social activity, and sensory stimulation during the holiday followed by a sudden return to routine creates a mood contrast. Research published in Psychology Today and similar outlets describes this as an adjustment period rather than clinical depression. Effective responses: plan a small event for January (even a dinner), maintain social contact, start a new activity, and use the next holiday countdown as a positive forward-looking focus.

How do I store holiday decorations properly?

By decoration type: Lights — wrap around a cardboard tube or use a purpose-made reel to prevent tangling. Test and separate working from non-working strings before storage. Glass ornaments — individual tissue paper wrapping in a divided ornament box. Artificial trees — store in original box or a tree bag with a label showing size and style. Outdoor decorations — rinse off any salt or grime before storage, and use sealed plastic bins rather than cardboard boxes to prevent moisture damage. Label all bins with the holiday name and a brief inventory.

What should I do with holiday gifts I don't want?

Practical options in priority order: (1) Exchange or return — most retailers accept returns through January 31 for holiday purchases. Keep receipts and original packaging. (2) Regift — if genuinely useful to someone else, regifting is widely accepted. Store in original packaging with a reminder note. (3) Donate — Goodwill, local shelters, and Buy Nothing groups accept most items. Electronics and clothing are especially welcomed. (4) Sell — Facebook Marketplace, OfferUp, and eBay for higher-value items you will not use.

How do I reset my budget after the holidays?

The January budget reset: (1) Total all holiday spending across gifts, travel, food, and decorations. Compare to your pre-holiday budget. (2) Calculate any credit card balances from holiday spending — prioritize paying these off aggressively in January and February before interest accumulates. (3) Start the holiday sinking fund — divide your target holiday budget for next year by 12 and set up a monthly automatic transfer to a savings account starting in January. By next November, the fund is fully stocked.

When should I take down holiday decorations?

Christmas decorations: tradition varies. The most common practice in the US is removing decorations by January 6 (Epiphany/Three Kings Day), which marks the end of the 12 Days of Christmas. Practically, the weekend after New Year's Day is when most American households take down decorations. For mental well-being research suggests removing decorations sooner rather than later reduces the "past its time" effect — seeing Christmas decorations in late January prolongs the post-holiday adjustment period.

Related: All Holiday Countdowns · Blog · Christmas Countdown