If you are starting this day off in preparation for a
gigantic feast of turkey and dressing, mashed potatoes and gravy, candied yams
and green bean casserole, plus umpteen side dishes, salads, and maybe a ham for
good measure, you have likely been doing this Thanksgiving routine for quite a
few years.
Thanksgiving hasn’t always been so big. I can’t help
thinking of a new generation, just starting out, wondering how they will get “it”
all done. Among my friends, I’ve had at least two mention how a grandson or
nephew has moved to a new apartment, or just welcomed a first baby into a new
household. Fresh starts like these are just the setting for a new generation
clamoring for Thanksgiving to be celebrated at their house this year. I hardly imagine the board will be groaning
under their first attempts at feast-making—but the gathering will be just as special
as always.
I can’t help thinking about another someone who will be
doing her own cooking—this one far from home. Not in her own country, even. Try
picking up a package of cranberries for a Thanksgiving dinner when you’re
preparing it in Ireland.
I imagine she’ll be hard pressed to succeed at that feature of the meal’s mainstays—though
she did remind me of her shopping prowess when she once managed to procure
dried ancho chiles for a favorite soup recipe, upon her arrival in Cork.
With or without cranberries, she has been helping another forlorn foreign student cook
up a feast for several Americans on campus today, and will follow that up with
another joint effort back at her apartment this weekend—between turning in
several final papers, no less.
That reminds me of my own first Thanksgiving attempt. In our
humble one bedroom apartment, my galley-style kitchen became the scene of my
holiday culinary debut. It was the first in a long line of episodes in which a
fear of not having enough food for company—or dishes which my in-laws would,
you know, actually like—produced the
obvious outcome: more leftovers than our refrigerator could hold. The menu came
complete with a choice of four salads for starters—something which my family
has not let me forget. Of course, nobody chose;
they had to taste all of it. By the time we got to the main course, who knows
if anyone was still hungry.
Yet, it was on folding chairs that we sat around the tiny
table holding that feast. Our living room “suite” was an extra-long twin bed
covered in tie-dyed fabric, with bolsters along the wall behind us. I think we
had some beanbag chairs. Our bookcase was made of planks of wood held up by
cinder blocks—upon which our one proud possession, a stereo system, sat nestled
with our umpteen books. Hey, we were starving students.
As we pass along family traditions to a younger generation, often
it seems the memories preserved in their minds are of those grander, more
recent, variations of our efforts as hosts. It’s easy for teenagers to remember
the gatherings where they get together with their cousins while the older
generations settle in for more subdued activities. Not as clearly remembered
are those humble beginnings of the simple Thanksgiving gatherings when they
were toddlers and their parents were just starting out. Those earlier times,
however, were just as sweet—perhaps even more so.
I sometimes wonder whether that tradition of grand
celebrations sets the bar so high for the next generation that it provokes a
sense of competition. Somehow, each new generation has to be better than the
last. When it comes to more, though, in the realm of blessings, perhaps we face
a diminishing return. The more we have, the less grateful we seem to be for
each blessing.
As a country, too, we once had a small beginning. Once, it
was a time that demanded not just hard work to get by—it was a question of
struggling for survival. Whether you consider the “first Thanksgiving” to have
been a legend or a reality, there is no question that there was a time when
blessings were received with more thankfulness—every single blessing held a more significant meaning for its recipient.
After all these decades of bigger and better blessings, on
this day today, I hope that, whether you ate too much pie, or had to go for a
long walk before you could tackle that second round of leftovers, your sense of
blessing will remain as keen as it ever was in the time of your small
beginning.
I can't remember when I first cooked a Thanksgiving dinner - maybe never, come to think of it. I've been surrounded by grandparents and parents who did the cooking. For that I am most thankful. Now my sister has the honor of preparing all the good stuff while we bring the turkey and pumpkin pie. It'll be my turn at Christmas. I wish you a very blessed Thanksgiving, Jacqi.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Wendy! I hope yours was pleasant as well. And yes! There is much to be thankful for.
DeleteI hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving! I enjoyed the vision of your first dinner...four salads..you are an over achiever! Yes we all have much to be thankful for:)
ReplyDeleteAn over achiever? Hmmm... *bats eyelashes* ...now what would make you say that?
DeleteYour early memories of Thanksgiving in your one bedroom apartment is the "stuff" life is made from - so precious. I need to post something about mine - you'll understand where I'm coming from!
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to reading it, Iggy!
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