Holidays & Festive Periods
Top tips from us at EaCES:
Put a plan in place so you know what you are doing on the days you have off/Christmas well in advance. Final year? See our Graduation & Beyond page.
Organise a phone call with a friend or someone professional/talking line you can have a chat with. Check in with someone. See: Official Support and Emergency Help for contacts to talk to. You can message us on Twitter anytime in the holidays.
If you are a student, get in touch with your named contact and your society (if there is one) to ask what support is available. Also ask them what events are on and check the This Is Us community for meetups.
Create & Feel - use your emotions and make something. A cake, a drawing, a poem, journal, some music, a decoration, cook, paint, woodwork, garden or volunteer. Express yourself in any form that will help you feel and relax. Our Creative Corner may be of help here. Also see: Mental Health and Wellbeing.
Link-up: Throughout the holidays and on the day itself, stay connected. See our Meet Other EacES page. You can also sign-up for a pen pal too through the EaCES Pen Pal Exchange.
Care Leavers: To find out about services on offer over the Christmas period in your local area, we encourage getting in touch with your Personal Advisor, or your Leaving Care or Children’s Looked After Team to find out what these might be. If you don’t know who/how to contact these services, give Become charity a ring on their Christmas Care Advice Line: 0800 023 2033 or contact Who Cares? Scotland via their Helpline 0330 107 7540 or email: help@whocaresscotland.org.
Supporting your students in the Winter Holidays - we co-created a Practical Guide for all Higher Education staff to help them support care experienced and estranged students in the Christmas period. You could share it with the staff at your college, conservatoire or university to encourage them. Read it here!
The Christmas Dinner is an annual project founded by the poet Lemn Sissay OBE for communities to provide an amazing Christmas Day for care leavers aged between 18 and 25 – one they’ll never forget.
Each Dinner is organised locally by a steering group of people who come together to make the Christmas Day magic happen. There are around 30 dinners taking place across the UK, you can find the one closest to you via the link below.
Website: http://thechristmasdinners.org.uk/christmas-present/
Advice and Blogs for what to do with your time
How to Cope When You Are Alone on Christmas: In general, there are three ways to cope with being alone at Christmas. First, you can address your mental state and how it is contributing to your loneliness. Second, you can find things to do at Christmas that make you feel less alone. And third, you can plan ahead so that you are not alone this time next year if you don't want to be. By Arlin Cuncic ~ read the advice here
25 Ways to Spend Christmas Alone: is an American blog but we think it is still a helpful article for our community. By Ashley Singleton ~ read the blog here
Christmas Linkups
Become run Christmas Linkups: a time to check in and chat, as well as have fun with some games. If you are a care-experienced young person and are interested in joining the Linkups, please see: Link-Up - Become (becomecharity.org.uk)
Together Estranged run linkups for estranged people too, which includes students and graduates. Find out more on their website: Events | Find Support for Family Issues (togetherestranged.org)