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Back to work blues you’re feeling are real, and treatable

Dreaming at your desk about last week’s ski trip? Remembering your child’s face when she opened that “Star Wars” toy? Not remembering you have a meeting in 10 minutes? You are not alone.

Doctors don’t officially have a name for this. There’s nothing specific in the official manual of mental disorders. But the Twitterverse calls this the first Monday of 2016 blues or the #backtoworkblues or a “post vacation hangover.”

Feel familiar? This crankiness about the first Monday back to work is perfectly normal according to “There is probably more than one good reason for this,” said the professor of psychiatry and behavioral neurosciences at Loyola University in Illinois.

“It’s more than likely during the 10 to 14 days of the holiday season with Christmas and New Year’s we tend to go overboard even in the best sense — overeating, overdrinking and not sleeping enough — that all sets the stage for the post-holiday crash.”

This extra stress on your body, combined with the stark contrast of the joy and freedom of family and friend time with the drudgery of answering a zillion work emails, can be hard on your emotional well-being.

Not used to the usual stress you took in stride before the holidays, you may react extra badly this week and next.

“For many, the holiday season is like a dream world and hopefully people have had a good dream, but it is like a dream that ceases literally overnight,” Halaris said. “There is a real sense of loss that comes with this transition period that makes us all a little sad.”

Even if your holiday didn’t meet expectations, you still may not be happy about getting back to work and away from your crazy family.

“We see this in study after study. People tend to have high hopes coming into Christmas thinking time with their family will be like the Waltons or thinking Santa will bring us all that we want, but it never totally works out that way even if it was a really good holiday,” Dr. Randy Hillard said.

Hillard is a professor of psychiatry at Michigan State University. “That can leave you feeling let down, too. We see this every year with a lot more calls to the crisis line, a higher number of deaths and there are even studies that show the letters to Dear Abby sound much more depressed after the holiday.”

Winter adds to this perfect storm of gloom. It still gets dark early. Much of the world is cold. It’s wet. Seasonal Affective Disorder can be particularly acute if you enjoyed a sunny beach vacation.

So what can you do to bring back that holiday feeling even if you’re at the office?

“Treat all colleagues like they are insane for the next couple of weeks, it works with family members, too,” Hillard said. Know that most people feel like they are in the same sinking boat.

Ease back into work. “Don’t jump into the cold water, you’ll have a heart attack. Ease your way back into your routine,” Halaris said. Set small goals to feel a sense of accomplishment.

“If you ease into this with full awareness, rather than trying to plan a ton and hope to get it all done in the next 24 hours, it helps.”

Don’t dwell. Know that something you enjoyed has come to an end, but make peace with it and know it will come back again. Resist feeling sorry for yourself.

“Self talk and being optimistic is important,” Halaris said. Look at kitten pictures online if you need a little lift.

Take advantage of the break in your routine and start new office habits. Even if it is something small like being friendlier to random co-workers or getting up to walk away from your desk once an hour, it helps.

And do connect. People who are blue tend toward withdrawal.

“Push yourself to interact even if you don’t feel like it,” Hillard said. Company helps avoid misery. “Prescribe yourself an evening out with relatives or friends in the upcoming weeks,” Halaris said.

“Without, of course, being drunk or overeating or staying up too late to start the cycle over again. It can help you be mindful that while the holidays are over, yes, but you can have fun again soon.”

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