Thanksgiving used to be special. Well, I suppose it still is in many ways. But our culture has done its best to roll it into one, long, rolling holiday known as Hallo-Thanx-Mas. It used to be a true time of family and giving thanks and reflection. Anymore, it just feels like it is a day off to prepare for Black Friday (which starts at midnight this year).
I haven’t been posting daily messages of thanks to Facebook, but I’ve been reading the ones posted from friends of mine around the world. They are reminders of how thankful I am for family, for a job, a house, food, a job and the paycheck that comes with it, and so much more including simply life itself.
Growing up, Thanksgiving seemed about as big as Christmas. Most of my Thanksgiving memories stem from time around the kids’ table at Granny and Papaw’s. I don’t really remember those meals, but I look at pictures of those days and think about what it must have been like to have all of my Dad’s brothers and sisters around the table. They surely must have had to put a brace under the table just to hold it up from the sheer mass of food placed there.
And then there was that one Thanksgiving when Granny fixed a raccoon Papaw had killed…
I do remember days of food preparation in the kitchen. Every pot and pan seemingly in use at the same time. Ovens that may never have shut down in a 72 hour time period. Turkey. Dressing. Green beans. Corn. Rolls. Gravy. And on and on and on. Everyone made things at their own homes and brought them in for this one meal.
Before the meal the men would hunt and after watch football. The women would talk and cook and wash dishes. The kids…. well, we played and played and played like it was the only thing we would ever have to do in our lives.
Through the years I’ve celebrated Thanksgiving in Indiana, Illinois, Arkansas, Tennessee, Florida, Scotland, and England to name a few. This year Thanksgiving takes a new turn. My kids will be spread across the United States, and I suppose they are taking my grand kids with them. So this year Thanksgiving will be me, mom, and my brother, Steve. No big cooking schedule (so no big cleaning schedule either). We are going out to dinner.
Oh, there will be football later (the obligatory Lions game should be great this year!). And probably naps rather than playing.
But I am most thankful that my mom finally gets a break from years and years of spending days preparing for one meal. A break from constantly cleaning up only to break out the next round of pots and pans that will need to be cleaned again. A break from feeling like she has to get up every 3 minutes and get someone tea or offer seconds or dip out pie and cake onto a second or third round of plates that will soon need to be washed as well.
And like the Christmas of my 11th grade year when the totality of my gift receiving from my parents was a new pair of jeans, this year will create a special memory from its own sense of uniqueness. After all, when its all said and done, the memories we make are the most important possessions we will ever have.
Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours.






