Ah, the yesterdays of Thanksgiving.
When I was a kid,
every year we celebrated the end of the year trifecta. You know,
after the drudgery and woe of school beginning, we looked forward to
Halloween, Thanksgiving, then Christmas, and each of those holidays
included house-wide decorations, everything from store bought items
to things we kids made ourselves in school. Do you remember the
turkeys made from your hand print? The construction paper pilgrim
hats? The colorful corn cobs that hung on the door?
So… it was just
me, then.
Thanksgiving was a
great holiday. However, as the popularity of Halloween and Christmas grew, it
squeezed down Thanksgiving to “that day where we're forced to go to
Auntie's house – but, hey, it's only once a year.”
Here's why
Thanksgiving's gone away: We do such big shows with Halloween and
Christmas (lights and animatronics and trees and sound and parties
and on and on) that, frankly, we're too tired to be bothered with
that third one, the one that's crammed in the middle. Face it. Due to
our absolute exhaustion, Thanksgiving got reduced to a day of
football, big eats, and coupon clipping for tomorrow's big sales.
There are those who
claim we should get rid of Thanksgiving; that it's just a way to make
ourselves feel good about the colonization of America so we can
forget the subsequent annihilation of the Native American population.
Hard to argue that.
However, we aren't
the only country that celebrates Thanksgiving. Canada also has a
holiday where they take a break, gather the family, and give thanks
for all they have – no “Indians” involved in their bit of
history. In fact, six other countries, Germany, Japan, Grenada,
Liberia, The Netherlands, and Norfolk Island, have some kind of
Thanksgiving festivity. Sometime in the fall, after the harvest, they
gather with friends and family and food, all to be grateful for what
they have.
It's time to restore
this poor holiday, or at very least, celebrate it for what it was
intended to be. Thanksgiving. I'm sure, if most of us look at our
lives, our families, and our friends, we consider ourselves more than
just lucky. We're crazy advantaged, crazy blessed, and crazy
fortuitous. That deserves more that one day, or one meal. It deserves
a bit of time for planning and preparation. It deserves a little
decorum and decoration. It deserves some thoughtfulness and
introspection. Be that at home, or at your job, or in all the malls
across America.
Take
a little time to remember why we're celebrating it at all. No, I
don't mean the pilgrims. I mean you. Your achievements. Your
abilities. Your life.
That's the best
reason to be thankful.
1 comment:
PROVO....well said!!! This use to be my favorite holiday because of what you said, simple-no razal/dazzle. Just giving Thanks, enjoying your family-friends. All is good! (For a day)....
Post a Comment