Dr. Ellen Kenner
Clinical Psychologist
host of "The Rational Basis® of Happiness"
 
 

 

How to Ask
Dr. Kenner
a Question

(This has been a free public service since 1997)

Ask by phone:
The toll-free number is
1-877-Dr-Kenner
(877-375-3663)
Why free? See below.

Ask by e-mail:
Although you won't receive as thorough an answer as if you were to phone in live, you can still email Dr. Kenner a question

When to call:
Call any time before 10pm (Eastern Time). If she is not available, she will return your call as soon as she is free.

Call or e-mail?
You will receive the fastest, most accurate answer if you ask by phone. Most calls are answered. Not all emails are answered due to their large quantity.

What you can not ask:
Dr. Kenner does not take calls regarding suicide, medication, legal issues or any matter that threatens life or property and you must contact a local mental health professional, lawyer, doctor or the police if this is the case.

Why for free?
This has been a free public service since 1997. Why would a well known clinical psychologist answer your question for free and pay for the phone call too? Because Dr. Kenner makes her answer available on her podcast / talk show so others with the same issue can benefit. The show is a public service and is question-driven; your questions are the motor of the show.

This is not therapy
Although you will be receiving helpful advice from Dr. Kenner, remember that this is not therapy and cannot replace a fully contextual one-on-one relationship with a mental health professional.

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Enjoy Dr. Kenner's short podcasts on many topics.

Today's Podcast Topic...
What is an affair and why are they so tempting? - a short interview with Dr. Tiffany Kisler.
   
         
         
   
   
    Today's Romance Quote    
   

From Ellen's and Ed's new romance book: The Selfish Path to Romance - How to Love With Passion and Reason...

This is quote 42, from
Part 2
(Making Yourself Lovable)
Chapter 6
(Develop Genuine Self-Esteem)

"Selfless people cannot have self-esteem, because they have no self to esteem."

   
   
   
         
   
   
    This Week's Article    
   

The Meaning of Money
     "Let me give you a tip on a clue to men's characters: the man who damns money has obtained it dishonorably; the man who respects it has earned it.
    "Run for your life from any man who tells you that money is evil. That sentence is the leper's bell of an approaching looter. . . ."
(more)

   
         
         
   
   
    New Book    
         
   
The Selfish Path to Romance: How to Love With Passion and Reason / Dr. Edwin A. Locke and Dr. Ellen Kenner
   
         
   
   
   
Buy now through Amazon
   
       
         
         
   
   
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  The Secret to Avoiding the “I-Dread-the-Holidays” Syndrome  
    BY ELLEN KENNER PH.D.  
           
   

“I dread the holidays!” Maria was surprised to hear herself admit this openly as she sat in the lunchroom with her co-workers. Christmas music was playing softly throughout their office. “I have to send out holiday cards. The list has mushroomed with people I hardly know. That will take a chunk out of my life!

What I hate most, Janine nodded, is that my husband and I sentence ourselves to six hours of being on pins-and-needles during the family holiday “celebration” with my alcoholic brother and my obnoxious sister-in-law. I just wait for the sparks to fly.

I find holiday meals boring, Max added, and I have to decorate the whole damn house again. My mom expects us to entertain. She would be crushed if we didn’t all put on a happy face. It’s so phony.

The worst part for me, Evan added, is that it is anything but romantic. My wife is consumed with pleasing everyone else and I’m left out in the cold. I don’t even want to buy her a gift this year, but I’ll have to.

The holidays make me feel like a failure as a parent, Erika added. My kids expect me to buy them iPhones, new wardrobes . . . all I hear is “I want, I want, I want.” I’m going to make them work in a soup kitchen!”

Karina looked at them puzzled. “I absolutely love this time of year. It’s charmed for me. I love writing cards to dear friends. I love decorating our home with wreaths. I love it when my husband comes in and appreciates how cozy and welcoming our home feels. I love him! On Christmas Eve, we dine at a cozy restaurant—very romantic. And I enjoy buying a few special gifts for our kids.

As for my family, I’ve told my abusive father that I don’t enjoy the traditional family gatherings. He gets angry when I decline; his anger is less troubling than the alternative--of forcing myself to go! I refuse to fake happiness. We enjoy spending time with my husband’s family on Christmas Day; it’s special for the kids. His family knows how to make it fun.

Karina’s co-workers became uncomfortably silent. They did not live in Karina’s world. And they resented that she did not echo their complaints. Although a very private part of each one of them was longing for her joy—and curious about how she achieved such calm.

What is Karina’s secret? And what is the deepest cause of the “I dread the holidays” syndrome?”

Notice the complaints of each of Karina’s co-workers. What ties them all together? Dutifully writing cards to people you aren’t close to, dutifully throwing away chunks of time to please others, dutifully visiting relatives who make you feel on “pins and needles,” dutifully decorating mom’s house, dutifully “putting on a happy face,” dutifully pleasing everyone else but those closest to you, dutifully buying your wife a gift, dutifully buying your kids over and above what you want to buy them, dutifully wanting to impose duty on your kids by forcing them to work in soup kitchens.

In a word, the deepest cause of the “I-dread-the-holiday’s” syndrome is a four-letter word: DUTY—unchosen, unwanted obligations--forcing yourself to act against your genuine values. When you try to enjoy your life while drowning in a sea of duty, you undermine your happiness. You destroy any holiday cheer. You betray yourself. No wonder the softly playing Christmas music was irritating to Karina’s co-workers.

When you make choices around the holidays based on “I should . . . ” I must . . . ” “I have to . . . ” you are the main source of your own unhappiness—which is good news. You can say “no” to duty. And the alternative is not a “my-way-or-the-highway” approach, but genuinely asking yourself:

  • What would make my holiday a tad more enjoyable? Romantic?
  • Who would I enjoy spending time with?
  • Whom do I need to set boundaries with?
  • What would I enjoy doing?
  • What do I want to change?
  • How can I mesh my desires with my partner, my kids and those I love so that we all feel we are doing something we enjoy?

Karina’s secret is that she refuses to force herself to fake happiness. She is honest with herself and assertively honest with others. She is motivated by her healthy values in life, by wants—not by shoulds, ought tos, musts, and have tos.

Shedding a duty approach to life is never easy. The old guilt-ridden habits put up a heck of a fight. But if you learn to detect those moments when you get the “I-dread-the-holidays” feeling, ask yourself what it is you are specifically dreading and see if you can’t alter it. Duty-driven ideas, stored in your subconscious, may keep coming back but you always have the power to question them and to replace duties with things you truly value. Each time you have the courage to be true to your healthy values, you get a tad closer to enjoying the holidays--and more broadly, your life!

 
           
         
 
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  Publications Dr. Kenner has written many articles and presented many seminars and courses around the country. She is co-author of a serious guidebook on romance and has produced over 500 podcasts. See search bar above for topics.    
 

Articles
Courses and Seminars
Books
What is Happiness
Romance
Parenting
Career
Relaxation
Friendship

Humor How humor can help or hurt your chances for happiness
Emotions Emotions and logic are allies in your search for happiness
Morality
Terrorism Sometimes the way we cope with terrorism in our own minds and the way we deal with it socially have the opposite effect we intend

           
           
  Therapy
Self-Help
Dr. Kenner is a licensed psychologist with an active private practice. Below you can find a therapist and good self-help books. Cognitive Therapy is the gold standard of psychology. Find a Cognitive Therapist anywhere in the country.    
 

Therapy In Rhode Island
Therapy Outside Rhode Island
How to Choose a Therapist
About Dr. Kenner
What is Happiness

Ask Dr. Kenner a Question
Definitions Explanations of various
points discussed in this web site
Self-Help Articles

Obstacles to Happiness are not always obvious
Understand Your Emotions Emotions and logic are allies in your search for happiness

Thinking Skills (Under Construction) Happiness requires that you are satisfied that your mind deals with people and events in a rational manner
Valuing Skills (Under Construction) Happiness requires that you choose only rational values to seek out and work to obtain
Self-Help Books Dr. Kenner reviews books and audio she recommends on parenting, therapy, self help, career, romance, happiness and other topics.
Self-Help CDs

           
           
  Radio Show Hear Dr. Kenner's show The Rational Basis of Happiness® on many radio stations coast to coast and online. Times of day and days of week vary from station to station. In her 15th year on air, she has been a "top 250" talk show host for the past six years.    
 
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The Rational Basis of Happiness® and The Rational Basis® are registered trademarks of Dr. Ellen Kenner. This web site and its contents are copyrighted and are proprietary products of Dr. Ellen Kenner. Any  unauthorized use, reproduction, or transfer of this web site or its contents, in any medium, is strictly prohibited.
   
           
           
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