Sure, there is much to be said for the holiday spirit. However, research shows that playing too much Christmas music can be bad for your mental health. What? Yes, some music affects mental health in a negative way.
Christmas music, because if they don't, it really does stop you from being able to focus on anything else," said Blair.
The American Psychiatric Association claims about 61 percent of people experience stress during the Christmas season.
An expert on the psychology of music, Victoria Williamson, Ph.D, has spoken about how Christmas music affects the brain. She says it is due to the "mere exposure effect." The mere exposure effect is a psychological phenomenon where people develop a liking to things simply because they are familiar with them from constant exposure.
create the Christmas holiday season in the minds of many," the study reports.
The first few times you hear Christmas music can put you in a positive mood. In fact, exposure to seasonal music can link to positive feelings. But when you continue to hear the same songs constantly, the music will trigger a negative response in the brain.
Unfortunately for retail workers, Christmas music is good for businesses. For example, studies have shown holiday music puts shoppers in the spending mood and drives them to buy more.
"Music goes right to our emotions immediately, and it bypasses rationality," said Linda Blair. She also mentioned that Christmas music is likely to irritate people if it’s played too loudly and too early. "You're simply spending all of your energy trying not to hear what you're hearing."
Music involves multiple areas of the brain that induce emotions, involving reflexes, conditioning, emotional contagion, visual imagery, memory and expectancy. So, yes! Music affects mental health, and not always in the way you'd expect.
Related: Listening To This Song Reduces Your Anxiety by 65%
Sources: Daily Mail