Traditions at Thanksgiving
We’re celebrating Thanksgiving this week in the United States.
Time for family reunions, food, fun, travel, football games, Black Friday,
and expressing thankfulness
The American celebration of the day began during the Civil War when President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a national day of “Thanksgiving and Praise to our beneficent Father who dwelleth in the Heavens.”
Football games and Black Friday were not included on that first Pilgrim Thanksgiving in 1621, but the basis for our modern Thanksgiving festivities remains the same.
Families will gather to give thanks for their blessings.
Our clan will bring all the Thanksgiving feast fixings to our youngest daughter’s home where her famous brine turkey will fill the house with yummy scents.
Years ago, she started a family tradition that has become our favorite part of the day. Besides being the best turkey cooker, she’s a professional photographer and scrapbooker. Every year when we arrive at her house, she hands out cards.
On that card, we write what we are thankful for that year. She snaps a picture with her Polaroid Instant Camera which we affix to our thankful card. Before we eat, we share what we’ve written on our cards.
At the end of the day, she gathers all the cards and puts them into a yearly scrapbook. The highlight of our yearly gatherings is looking back through Thanksgiving scrapbooks from years past.
We have a lovely day filled with traditions that remind me of Tevye’s words in the song from Fiddler on the Roof.
"Tradition. Without our traditions, our lives would be as shaky as... as a fiddler on the roof!"
Thanksgiving traditions, while lovely and touching, aren’t based on the things on the table or around the table but on the love that surrounds us.
May you have a blessed Thanksgiving filled with love.