Thanks Giving
My favorite Thanksgiving is I think yet to come, because you dont know what the future holds. Now in the past my favorite one has been every year. I said this because every year we eat hefty helpings of good Thanksgiving food. Some of the things that you might see on the Thanksgiving table to feast on might be yams, turkey, dressing,cranberry sauce, and etc……… Every year we prepare, pray, and the gain an exra 15 to 20 pounds because of all of the food we have.
We dont really have any unique family traditions. The only thing that we seem to do over and over is meet up at an certain family members house and feast. Usually during Thanksgiving it’s the cooler weather. We usually have windbreakers or something of that nature on.
We would get together to celebrate usually at my parent’s house for my mom’s side of the family. At Easter we always had a ham and many side dishes. Thanksgiving always brought a delicious turkey, sweet potatoes, scalloped corn and my favorite cranberry relish. For Christmas we had a ham, mashed potatoes, gravy, glazed carrots, and for desert pumpkin pie. We always had a Christmas tree of some sort with homemade decorations that us kids made. We also celebrated my brother’s birthday since he was born on Christmas Eve. A tradition of my own was to get my parents to let me open one gift on Christmas Eve, because my brother got his birthday presents and I thought it was not
On September 6, 1620, 102 men, women and children from England boarded a small cargo boat called the Mayflower and set sail for the New World. The passengers left their homes in England in search of religious freedom from the King of England. Today they are known as "pilgrims."
When I was younger, the two holidays I looked forward to were always Thanksgiving and Christmas. This time of the year always is the happiest because everything feels so refreshing because I am spending quality time with the people I love most. When it comes to Thanksgiving and Christmas, I always seem to have the most memorable good and bad moments. These holidays have very different meanings but have the same feeling because it symbolizes, good food, good times with family and a whole lot of drama.
How many people practice or celebrate traditions? I would say every person has their own unique traditions but, also share multiple traditions with others. A tradition is defined as an inherited, established, or customary pattern of thought, action, or behavior (Merriam-Webster;1828). Usually when one thinks of a tradition their ideas revolve around a holiday. My initial ideas were Christmas, Easter, or even Thanksgiving. I recognized a trait each of these had in common, saying grace. Saying Grace is a highly respected tradition in my family. At each of the holidays mentioned above, along with others in between, we say grace over our meal before eating.
Thanksgiving is a holiday that began hundreds of years ago. It was a celebration of many different things. One of the most important reasons for the celebration was thankfulness that many of the Pilgrims survived the first year of their new lives in America. Today, however, Thanksgiving seems to have a very different meaning to people. Their main focus is not being thankful for the things they have, but wanting more.
Being part of an eight-child family, I enjoy Thanksgiving with 30+ members and, although several have come and gone, it seems a new face takes their place with a marriage or the birth of a child, ever perpetuating the life circle that is my family. Last Thanksgiving, we lost one member to death but gained another through birth and one more through marriage, decreasing the room in the kitchen by one and adding one more high chair to the table downstairs.
It was a nice and sunny day. The sun was shining bright and the leaves on the trees gave a vibrant color of orange and red creating a magical fairy tale. The leaves on the ground dancing every time the wind howled. Families all around gathering together under one roof on this special day creating a delicious feast meant to feed a whole kingdom. The food being cooked filling the air with a spectacular smell of pumpkin, cinnamon, turkey, and other spectacular smells. The magical day that brings families together is known all across the world as Thanksgiving. This Thanksgiving while playing fetch with my owner’s family I learned that not complaining for one day can bring families closer together.
I stepped out of the chilly November air and into the warmth of my home. The first snowfall of the year had hit early in the morning, and the soft, powdery snow provided entertainment for hours. As I laid my furry mittens and warm hat on the bench to dry, I was immediately greeted with the rich scent of sweet apple pie, pumpkin pie, mashed potatoes, and the twenty-pound turkey my mother was preparing for our Thanksgiving feast.
Textbooks in today’s schools still tell the same story that has been handed down from generation to generation. Every year children dress up and put on plays about the famous story of the first Thanksgiving. No one knows the truth though or at least people pretend to not know the embarrassing truth of our “founding fathers.” Textbooks today give the candy coated version of good saintly Englishmen come to a better world and find good neighbors willing to help in their time of need.
A big part of Thanksgiving is a Thanksgiving feast. The feast usually consists of potatoes, corn, sweet potatoes, peas, gravy, stuffing, salads, buns and lots of other great food. The main part of the feast is usually the turkey. Other families might have ham, roast beef, duck or chicken. The dessert that is most likely to follow the feast is pumpkin pie. Other people may choose different desserts and food depending on their customs and beliefs for which they choose to give thanks. Let’s not forget the biggest and most important reason for this holiday – giving THANKS! People usually give thanks for everything they have. Their jobs, health, families or just being alive are just a few of the things that people give thanks for.
It is just something about the holiday season that brings the best out of people. My house has always taken the holidays serious from Thanksgiving to Christmas, my parents, siblings and I, all head back home to Kansas for Thanksgiving in a comparable little unplanned reunion. I always loved seeing everybody at Thanksgiving and the smells and sounds of Thanksgiving have always warmed my heart. Christmas is especially a special time for me and my house always does the typical traditions of Christmas. We all buy presents for each other, decorate the house, cook Christmas eve and Christmas day dinner, just the typical Christmas for our household. My dad and I have always gone out and find one present that we give to a random orphan at the local orphanage, we have done this for a few years apart as a tradition from his job. Holiday celebrations are often a real fun and festive time in my house. I loved everything about the holidays and I always look forward to it each year, and it is the people living in my house that are the reason for this too. We all just forget about the past for this little period of time and just appreciate everything we all have
Every time around Christmas my family on my dad’s side gets together. We always have so much fun together. Between exchanging gifts and just enjoying each others company.
My family is Catholic and follows the traditional western culture. Our Catholic religion meant that we celebrated Good Friday, Easter Sunday, Advent and Christmas. For Good Friday, we were not allowed to eat meat and on Easter Sunday we had to attend a church service. My family also had large family gatherings for
Christmas is my favorite holiday because it is the time of year that everyone should spend with their family and friends loving them unconditionally. Every Christmas, my family and I, on my mother 's side, join together on Christmas Eve to be able to spend time with the ones which we love. Considering that my family loves to eat, my grandmother cooks a ginormous feast! My grandmother loves to cook, but on Christmas she goes crazy. She cooks dressing, corn, potatoes, macaroni, green beans, sweet potato casserole, and my favorite pecan pie. After making sure everyone gets enough food, we all join in the living room to share stories and open our presents. My cousin, Brady Parker, always finds a way to make
Every Friday during football season, my dad and his brother take their mother’s, Nana, and their wives seat and place them in the stands at the very top on the fifty-yard line. My Nana has sat in that exact same spot for as long as I can remember and hasn’t missed a game, she’s 82. Another tradition is that my dad and brother go to the same breakfast place every Friday morning to eat. If we aren’t at the beach for the fourth of July, we are on top of the press box at the football field watching fireworks. Another family tradition that is my absolute favorite is Thanksgiving, my family meets at Nana’s house for lunch. After lunch we used to play football outside until all the dad’s got too old but now we all lay around and watch football for a little bit. Then the guys leave to paint the high school football field if we are still in the payoffs. The women stay and look at Black Friday deals. These family traditions might not seem like a big deal to others, but I enjoy those times with my family more than anything in the