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Heartfelt Christmas Wording for Coworker
When you're writing a heartfelt christmas card to coworker, the tone has to do two jobs at once — fit the moment and fit the relationship. Here are 10 wording ideas that thread that needle.
Christmas wording can be religious, secular, nostalgic, or modern. The best holiday cards capture the sender's actual feeling about the season — quiet wonder, family chaos, faith, or simple gratitude — rather than reaching for stock phrases.
10 Heartfelt Messages for Coworker
Wishing you a Christmas full of warmth, slowness, and the people you love most.
May your home be loud with laughter and your kitchen be loud with cooking. Merry Christmas.
Sending you love this Christmas — and a quiet hope that the new year is gentler than the last.
Merry Christmas. Thinking of you with so much warmth.
Wishing you the kind of Christmas that lingers in your memory long after the lights come down.
Wherever you are this Christmas, I hope you feel held.
Merry Christmas — I am so glad we're in each other's lives.
Sending love and light from our home to yours.
May this Christmas be soft, generous, and exactly the kind of slow you need.
Wishing you a Christmas full of small joys and second helpings.
Personalizing this further
Mention something specific from the past year — a visit, a project, a kindness. Reference a Christmas tradition you share if there is one. If the recipient celebrates differently or not at all, say "happy holidays" and mean it. A handwritten note inside a printed card is the upgrade that costs nothing and gets noticed.
A heartfelt card to coworker rarely fails when you anchor it to one specific moment between you. Skip the universal lines; reach for the one only you could write.
What to avoid
Don't assume the recipient celebrates Christmas the same way you do. Skip political references, jokes about how commercial the holiday has gotten, and complaints about family gatherings. Don't sign a card with only your name and "Merry Christmas" — at least add a line.