Subscribe
The latest psychology and neuroscience discoveries.
My Account
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
PsyPost
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Mental Health

Why there’s no place like home for the holidays

by Frank T. McAndrew
December 25, 2024
in Mental Health
(Photo credit: Adobe Stock)

(Photo credit: Adobe Stock)

Share on TwitterShare on Facebook
Stay informed on the latest psychology and neuroscience research—follow PsyPost on LinkedIn for daily updates and insights.

While Christmas playlists often include cheesy favorites like “Rockin Around the Christmas Tree” and “I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus,” there are also a handful of wistful tracks that go a little bit deeper.

Listen closely to “I’ll be Home for Christmas” or “White Christmas,” and you’ll hear a deep yearning for home, and sorrow at having to spend the holidays somewhere else.

Strip away the cursory Christmas rituals – the TV specials, the lights, the gifts, the music – and what remains is home. It is the beating heart of the holiday, and its importance reflects our primal need to have a meaningful relationship with a setting – a place that transcends the boundary between the self and the physical world.

Can you love a place like a person?

Most of us can probably name at least one place we feel an emotional connection to. But you probably don’t realize just how much a place can influence your sense of who you are, or how essential it is for your psychological well-being.

Psychologists even possess an entire vocabulary for the affectionate bonds between people and places: There’s “topophilia,” “rootedness” and “attachment to place,” which are all used to describe the feelings of comfort and security that bind us to a place.

Your fondness for a place – whether it’s the house where you lived your whole life, or the fields and woods where you played as a child – can even mimic the affection you feel for other people.

Studies have shown that a forced relocation can elicit heartbreak and distress every bit as intense as the loss of a loved one. Another study found that if you feel a strong attachment to your town or city, you’ll be more satisfied with your house and you’ll also be less anxious about your future.

Our physical surroundings play an important role in creating meaning and organization in our lives; much of how we view our lives and what we have become depends on where we’ve lived, and the experiences we’ve had there.

So it’s no surprise that architecture professor Kim Dovey, who has studied the concept of home and the experience of homelessness, confirmed that where we live is closely tied to our sense of who we are.

An anchor of order and comfort

At the same time, the concept of home can be slippery.

One of the first questions we ask when we meet someone new is “Where are you from?” But we seldom pause to consider how complicated that question is. Does it mean where you currently live? Where you were born? Where you grew up?

Environmental psychologists have long understood that the word “home” clearly connotes more than just a house. It encompasses people, places, objects and memories.

So what or where, exactly, do people consider “home”?

A 2008 Pew study asked people to identify “the place in your heart you consider to be home.” Twenty-six percent reported that home was where they were born or raised; only 22 percent said that it was where they currently lived. Eighteen percent identified home as the place that they had lived the longest, and 15 percent felt that it was where most of their extended family had come from.

But if you look at different cultures across time, a common thread emerges.

No matter where they come from, people tend to think about home as a central place that represents order, a counterbalance to the chaos that exists elsewhere. This might explain why, when asked to draw a picture of “where you live,” children and adolescents around the world invariably place their house in the center of the sheet of paper. In short, it’s what everything else revolves around.

Anthropologists Charles Hart and Arnold Pilling lived among the the Tiwi People of Bathurst Island off the coast of Northern Australia during the 1920s. They noted that the Tiwi thought their island was the only habitable place in the world; to them, everywhere else was the “land of the dead.”

The Zuni of the American Southwest, meanwhile, have long viewed the house as a living thing. It’s where they raise their kids and communicate with spirits, and there’s an annual ritual – called the Shalako – in which homes are blessed and consecrated as part of the year-end winter solstice celebration.

The ceremony strengthens bonds to the community, to the family (including dead ancestors), and to the spirits and gods by dramatizing the connection each party has to the home.

During the holidays, we might not officially bless our home like the Zuni. But our holiday traditions probably sound familiar: eating with family, exchanging gifts, catching up with old friends and visiting old haunts. These homecoming rituals affirm and renew a person’s place in the family and often are a key way to strengthen the family’s social fabric.

Home, therefore, is a predictable and secure place where you feel in control and properly oriented in space and time; it is a bridge between your past and your present, an enduring tether to your family and friends.

It is a place where, as the poet Robert Frost aptly wrote, “when you have to go there, they have to take you in.”The Conversation

 

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

RELATED

New research sheds light on how men and women differ in concerns about sexual addiction
Hypersexuality

Aggression in pornography has tripled over 25 years, study finds

November 12, 2025
Song lyrics have become simpler, more negative, and more self-focused over time
Mental Health

Do your musical tastes affect your well-being? Scientists now have an answer

November 12, 2025
Bacteria in water, 3d illustration
ADHD

Shared gut microbe imbalances found across autism, ADHD, and anorexia nervosa

November 11, 2025
From tango to StarCraft: Creative activities linked to slower brain aging, according to new neuroscience research
Addiction

Cannabis use associated with a reduction in alcohol intake

November 11, 2025
Maladaptive personality traits linked to hypersexual disorder in men, study finds
Cognitive Science

Cognitive disability might be on the rise in the U.S., particularly among younger adults

November 10, 2025
Mind captioning: This scientist just used AI to translate brain activity into text
Depression

For individuals with depressive symptoms, birdsong may offer unique physiological benefits

November 10, 2025
Playing musical instruments linked to improved brain connectivity in older adults
Cognitive Science

A neuroscientist explains how to build cognitive reserve for a healthier brain

November 9, 2025
New study unpacks the impact of TikTok and short video apps on adolescent well being
Mental Health

This university’s failed TikTok ban revealed a troubling fact

November 9, 2025

PsyPost Merch

STAY CONNECTED

LATEST

Scientists identify a crucial brain feature connecting genetics to intelligence

Study suggests smart drugs are used for optimization, not self-medication

Aggression in pornography has tripled over 25 years, study finds

New research examines: Can religion tame dark personalities at work?

Is anger the secret fuel for your next big idea? A new study suggests it could help

The debate over screen time may be missing the point, new research suggests

Don’t miss these 11 mind-blowing new neuroscience discoveries

Do your musical tastes affect your well-being? Scientists now have an answer

RSS Psychology of Selling

  • Are sales won by skill or flexibility? A look inside investment banking sales strategies
  • Toxic leadership: How narcissistic bosses shape nurses’ workplaces
  • How supervisors influence front-line salespeople
  • Age shapes how brains respond to guilt-based deceptive advertising
  • Is emotional intelligence the hidden ingredient in startup success?
         
       
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and Conditions
[Do not sell my information]

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy