Holidays bring good cheer and sometimes stressful exchanges.
Before sitting down for festive dinner, your checklist might include asking loved ones whether theyâre vaccinated against COVID-19.
Michael Ungar, a family therapist and professor in the School of Social Work at ±«Óătv, sees no point in avoiding a topic that could put yourself and others at risk. Instead, Dr. Ungar offers tips for preserving relationships with family and friends when views over vaccine statuses collide.
For each, Dr. Ungar draws parallels to his work with âpush/pull factorsâ used to reach people whose ideological views and actions can harm others and where prevention is the goal.
âNever forget to maintain the relationship.â
With the pull factor, "what youâre doing is saying âIâm vulnerableâ,â explains Dr. Ungar, who is also Canada Research Chair in Child, Family and Community Resilience and director of the Resilience Research Centre.
âAs in, âCould you please for my sake vaccinate because Iâd love to have you at the dinner table.â So, it's more of a gentler, âIâd like to have a relationship with you. But please donât put me at risk in that relationship.ââ
âKeep yourself safe â while being kind."
Secondly, the push factor is saying ââI canât take the risk of contracting a deadly disease.ââ
Dr. Ungar suggests proposing an alternative. You could say, ââFor this year, could we do a zoom call over dinner, so that you feel part of this?ââ
Dr. Ungar encourages people to ensure they are not making others feel excluded just because theyâre not there. As he suggested in his recent blog post on sending a care package shows you care while keeping yourself safe. "The push is thereâs got to be some limits here on reasonable social behavior and expectations of being in a community or a family,â he says. âThe boundary-setting [and] kindness provides a solution to the person. Thereâs something they can do to actually fix this, or they have the choice to simply not show up as well.â
âWhere there's a possibility to compromise or be understanding, show it and empathize.â
Dr. Ungar thinks talking through fears about the vaccine is helpful for everyone.
âAsk them where theyâre getting that information from,â he says. âItâs usually better to show some tolerance and just ask people why they think what they think and to ask them to explain it to you. And just ask them if thereâs any room for compromise on this, given that their decision could put you at risk and youâd like a relationship with them still. Thatâs very much the pull towards you factor. Itâs a gentler approach that says I value you in my life.â