November means jacket weather, pansy
planting, harvest moons and Thanksgiving. Unfortunately, this holiday seems
lost in the shuffle--squashed between trick-or-treat time and Christmas. Among
row upon row of Halloween costumes and Christmas decorations at stores, a
person might find a couple of paper turkeys, a few packages of napkins and
maybe a plastic cornucopia for Thanksgiving.
Artificial Christmas trees seem to
sprout up in store displays earlier each year, just an aisle over from shelves
replete with witch hats and plastic jack-o'-lanterns. Even before Halloween is
over, Santa and his elves have moved in to stack their wares on kiosks, endcaps
and shelves from floor to ceiling. Only the shrink-wrapped turkeys piled high
in a store’s freezer section give credence to the November holiday. Thanksgiving
is relegated now by most people as a hurried celebration piled high with food,
family and dawn-to-midnight football.
While it's true that every day should be
one of thanksgiving, the holiday itself is unique. What distinguishes it from
all other holidays is the fact that it was not begun in honor of an individual
or group or symbol. Thanksgiving began as an attitude toward life. Based on the
oldest celebration in our country's history, it's an exemplary event started by
the Pilgrims who came to this land in hopes of finding fertile soil for
planting seeds of freedom. They suffered hardships and losses, yet on a harvest
day in 1622, they shared a modest meal and thanked God for what they had.
That day became an annual observance and
continued through the birth of the United States. Several presidents and many
state governors proclaimed Thanksgiving days to be celebrated each year.
In 1863 during the midst of one of the
most challenging times in our country's history, Abraham Lincoln declared
Thanksgiving as a national holiday. Since then the observance has grown from
being a day dedicated to harvest time to one of expressing gratitude for all
things this free land provides in abundance and opportunity. Yet, sadly, the
commercialism of the two holidays before and after has grown to diminish our
recognition of its significance.
Thanksgiving is unique, and we should
give it greater consideration, rather than squashing it between Halloween and
Christmas. And like the leftovers we continue to enjoy from our tables on that
day, our gratitude should overflow with glad expressions all year long.
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