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I always laugh when I walk into a store or shop of any consequence and see immediately after Halloween, Christmas decorations. What happened to Thanksgiving? Do we completely ignore our beloved day of thanks? Can we just skip the blissful traditional overindulgence in food and snooze? I think not. Bring on the Pie and cranberry sauce and if you are so inclined to partake in the cerimonial turkey, be ware of the tryptophan-induced coma that will most assuredly follow. So we overeat and sleep and overeat some more, herein lies our most decidedly "I'm starting my diet next week" Holiday. Even with the vast array of treats and sundries guaranteed to leave you groggy and longing for my favorite sweats, ultimately, I am left with the feeling that besides being awestruck at the sheer devastation that was once a heavily ladden buffet table, carefully adorned in festive, albiet somewhat kitchy decor, a simple unfettered gratitude for all things family. My eyes wander to my loved ones and I am once again reminded of how blessed I am for the incredible people that surround me and the wonderful life I have been given. I watch my family gather around eating and laughing with reckless abandon, and in that moment, all seems right in the world..
1 comment:
I'm totally with you, and I feel like this is a recent development, like in the last two or three years. It used to be that the day after Thanksgiving was when the stores went to town with their Christmas stuff, and even then, it was a little overkill. Too much of a good thing. This early just seems like junkie behavior. Let's delay our gratification a little, can't we?
The worst is the Christmas music. 6 straight weeks of songs I used to love become more grating than the theme song from "It's a Small World After All."
Congrats on the blog! Keep it up.
- Jim
Blue Pens? Or Black Pens? Take my poll!
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