This year’s Blue Monday may be worse than most – but cut yourself some slack
Try focusing on the silly joys in the coming days, writes Natasha Preskey
This coming Monday (18 January) is a date few lifestyle journalists are likely to forget. Since 2004, the third Monday of January has been known as the “most depressing day of the year”, after psychologist Cliff Arnall was asked by travel firm Sky Travel to devise a “scientific formula” for the January blues.
Arnall has since urged people to “refute the whole notion” of Blue Monday. But his creation’s legacy lives on in journalists’ inboxes, where each year well-meaning PRs offer solutions and coping strategies for the alleged day of doom.
Blue Monday’s creator may have been trying to sell us holidays (if only) but his suggestion that poor weather, post-Christmas debt and broken new year’s resolutions are likely to bring us down is, of course, not a complete fantasy. Especially in 2021, when ditching Dry January means cracking open a bottle of wine in your living room, and sitting on a park bench can attract attention from the police. This, Blue Monday number 17, will surely be the bleakest yet.
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