[Adapted from the Archives]
In the US, our Thanksgiving Day celebrations are renowned across the country. Traditions abound. We’re always sorry when people have to work…which happens more now that Black Friday, the biggest shopping day in the US., has pushed in on Thanksgiving Day.
For this week’s Friday Faves, our Thanksgiving Day regulars are posted below. Paramount over all the day’s festivities is thanksgiving itself – reflecting on and reviewing all we’re thankful for over this past year and always. God is good…present with us at every turn.
Photo Credit: Facebook, Singing News Radio
Holidays can be tough. Family doesn’t always cooperate, nor do our work schedules, or our health situations. Still we can redeem even the hardest days. I really appreciate the hacks in the link below.
Ten Pre-Thanksgiving Hacks (2019 Edition) – Shane L. Bishop
1) The Gathering – Our celebration of American Thanksgiving always involves some sort of gathering. When children grow up and start their own families, sharing them with their greater extended families on various holidays. I’m very thankful for the inlaws/in-loves inherited through marrying Dave, and we’re also thankful for our children’s inlaws. Whatever configuration you have, either for Thanksgiving or another occasion, here’s hoping for sweet times.
VCU International Thanksgiving Dinner – a few years back
2) Family Recipes – It’s all about the food, right? Every year finds family recipes honored through the generations. Uncle Mark’s oyster stew, MomMom’s strawberry salad, my mom’s cornbread dressing, and sweet wet cornbread (Aunt Stacie’s and Bekkah’s recipe neither of which I have).
Thanksgiving Dinner at Mom & Dad’s years ago – Feast on the bar
The dilemma is when the recipe is a bit sketchy…as in this video below (so reminded me of how my mom cooked – a little bit of this and a little bit of that…to perfection).
Do you have any favorite family recipes you’d be willing to share? Even if it’s just the story? Please! In Comments below.
3) Table Talk – With so many around the table, the conversation is never dull. There’s always some variation of the theme of “what are you thankful for” – and then we turn to topics as varied as the feast spread before us. We hear about new boyfriends, new babies, new jobs, etc., etc. Always fascinating and occasionally we learn something outside of the good news category – politics, technology, and the world. There’s always reminiscing on past Thanksgivings, when more dear ones were still with us. This time, what will it be?
4) Living Room Sprawls – After we leave the dinner table, and the dishes are washed and food put away, it’s find a place to sprawl in the living room. Either for a football game or a nap.
What favorite activity do you have besides those I listed? A walk outside? Playing football instead of watching? Table games? Talking family history with the old ones? Loving on the babies?
A Thanksgiving Treasure Hunt or a Gratefulness scavenger hunt:
Blog – Thanksgiving Treasure Hunt – the housewife modern Photo Credit: Facebook, Maude Metzger Meyers, One Thousand Gifts Study Group
One activity I would love to add to Thanksgiving is singing around the piano. We do that at Christmas time, but the video below, by People and Songs, below got me excited about pulling folks together to sing at other times of the year as well.
YouTube Video – People & Songs – Revelation – FB Live Living Room
5) All the Emotions – Because of the family nature of Thanksgiving, it’s as full of emotions as it is the annual carb load. This year our beloved PopPop (Dave’s dad) is gone from the table, nor will we be seeing Aunt Nancy on Black Friday. They both died this year and their loss is significant for us.
Then the emotions of all that’s going on in the lives of those we love – kids home from college, our littles in their various developmental milestones (and all they bring, as small as they are), marriages weathering the storms of life, friendships enduring distance, and the experience of peace…
Thankful.
[It is not always…these happier times and emotions, and for that we are there for each other. It is what family is meant for…]
Bonuses:
Christmas Playlist for the Roadtrip by Beth Wayland
Raising Memories: The Ultimate List of 100 Non-Toy Gift Ideas – Heather Lynne
Raising Memories: 100 Kid-Approved Stocking Stuffer Ideas – Heather Lynne
Happy Thanksgiving, Debbie! To you and all of yours. Loved reading this this morning and especially loved those hacks and scavenger hunts!
Our Thanksgiving will be low key this year as Susana has had the flu, and has passed it on to me. But still so much to be grateful for! Like your encouraging blog posts and long distance friendship. I sent Rafael that Travis and Lily Cottrell song this morning, to start our day right 🙂
As for traditions…a friend and I had started doing the Turkey Trot, but won’t make it this year. And my family loves an Eggnog Cheese Pie that I make every year!
Love you – blessings on your day!
Oh, Blythe, so sorry you’re sick. Eggnog Cheese Pie sound like a winner throughout the holidays. Sorry you will miss the Turkey Trot. I thank God for you, Blythe. You have always been such a cheerleader for us and your friendship has been a treasure from Day 1.
Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family!
Aaron, and to you and yours. Glad our paths have crossed via Nathan. Love your music as well.
Happy Thanksgiving !!! Just wanted to say that living room sprawls in your home- no matter what holiday/day are some of my favorite!! It’s harder to sprawl with littles but it is still so sweet and such sweet memories! Hope you have a wonderful day!!! Love you!
Thanks so much, Alicia. They are so lovely! Harder, as you said, with littles. It’s one sweet part of living room sprawls if you can get the littles to cooperate with naps of their own, sprawled out on MomMom or various uncles and aunts. Just the best!