Thanksgiving is still my favorite holiday because it is the most resistant to crass commercialism. Halloween and Christmas have become impostors that pave the path to New Year’s Eve, but Thanksgiving remains the holiday for celebrating family and friends. It is the lull between two storms that blow powerful winds of spending, of buying more of what we don’t need in larger quantities.
Ouch. Someone just stomped on Halloween and Christmas with both feet – who could that negative naysayer be, and what did she say next?
The march is on, and good cheer has a price. Merry gentlemen, God doesn’t rest ye. O Holy Night, you’re not really silent. As a matter of fact, you’re all about the noise of cars, planes and people in a hurry to get somewhere. It’s time to travel; the highways and airports are hubbubs of activity. We are rocking around the Christmas tree. Every creature is stirring on the night before, during, and after Christmas. Hallelujah. Let’s make it a chorus.
Oh my goodness. Someone swallowed a Bah Humbug pill that turned her into an old “Eleanor-eezer” Scrooge type with too many tunes swirling through the memory banks in her brain. What kind of person would write this, and when did she write it?
To no one’s surprise I am the guilty writer, and I published this piece on November 10, 2011 – exactly twelve years ago today. This is neither a retraction nor an aha moment with a total change in my annual holiday philosophies, but hopefully I can admit when softer, less judgmental tones are more appropriate.
Sandwiched between Halloween and Christmas is the poor relation, Thanksgiving. On this lesser holiday, I am thankful for the memories of my family and our life before cell phones interrupted us while we feasted at the tables of my grandmothers. I am thankful for a grandmother who got up in the wee hours of Thursday mornings to put a turkey in a large cooker that was used only twice a year. I can still smell the aroma that permeated our whole house by the time we got up on Thanksgiving morning. The turkey was on its way to perfection. I am grateful to that grandmother for working ten hours a day, six days a week so that we would have a roof over our heads and food to eat. I feel her love today as I felt it then, but now I know how fortunate I was to have her in my life—and I also know that not everyone is so lucky.
Yes, this was also in the post twelve years ago today, and I am thankful for the softer tones, warmer images, more understanding of the challenges families face during holiday seasons when not everyone shares the abundance of love I remember or even the luxury to ponder the memories. Not all those who ponder are lost, but we need one holiday to call our own. I choose Thanksgiving.

