Thanksgiving -- our Teflon holiday
Think of Independence Day and you think of fireworks and hot dogs.
Think of Valentine’s Day and you think of millions of men running
red lights to buy flowers and candy in time.
For too many people, Christmas is a retail blur, a time when we
are supposed to pause and reflect, but end up shopping and dropping.
Labor Day and Veterans Day? Those mean a three-day weekend. And
Mother’s Day has been reduced by a conspiracy theory to an occasion
invented by greeting card companies to boost sales.
But there is one holiday that has withstood every attempt to
commer- cialize it or morph it into something else. Thanksgiving is
our Teflon holiday.
There is no other holiday like Thanksgiving. First, there is no
icon associated with it. Think of Thanksgiving and you won’t think of
a smiling turkey as you would a bunny on Easter Sunday.
On Thanksgiving, no gifts are exchanged. Even a greeting card
exchange seems out of place.
Let’s face it -- one of the reasons Thanksgiving has remained pure
is that Thanksgiving is a very cumbersome word. It doesn’t roll off
the tongue like Easter or Christmas or even Halloween. And if you did
want to promote Thanksgiving, what would you use as your angle?
The second thing that comes to my mind is the mountain of food
that’s on the table and how many times I can reach for the stuffing
without knocking over a wine glass.
The first thing I think of is family. Thanksgiving has become one
of the great family unifiers, surpassed only by Christmas and, in
some cases, exceeding it.
For the past few years, we’ve been heading down to San Diego to
have turkey and family with Cay’s brother, Jay West, and his family.
I’ve calculated that Jay’s wife, Linda, spends about five months
preparing for the day. Unfortunately, five months is about what it
has been taking us to drive down to San Diego from Orange County.
The first year we went down, the traffic was bumper to bumper from
the moment we got on the freeway at 11 a.m. to the moment we got off.
It was a brutal four-hour trip that left us wondering whether we’d be
back next year.
The next year, we decided to leave earlier to try and beat the
traffic. The plan was to leave at 9 a.m. But like a lot of families,
our schedule does not permit timeliness. So, we left at 10 a.m.
That trip was a little better. We shaved an hour off, which was
made easier to bear by discovering a radio station that just happened
to be playing “Alice’s Restaurant” by Arlo Guthrie. Then, just like
swinging from vine to vine, we found another one. The kids had never
heard this Thanksgiving tradition, so they listened and laughed along
with Cay and me, who’d heard it countless times.
Once we get to San Diego, the day is wonderful. It’s nothing but
friends and family without the pressure to exchange gifts or cards or
adhere to any particular schedule. Whatever happens, happens. “Want
to eat around 4?”
“Sure, fine. Whatever.”
One of the challenges facing the Smiths and Wests is the seating
arrangement. It seems that it was not too long ago that there were
clearly defined kids and clearly defined adults. The kids ate at the
kids’ table and the grown-ups ate at the grown-ups’ table.
But cousins Mark and Laura are both in college now. Cousin Dana is
in college, too, and the only real kids who qualify to eat at the
kids’ table are our two.
That makes things difficult, because the kids who are not yet
grown-ups want to sit at the grown-up table (you can tell the
difference because our table has booze), but there isn’t really room
to accommodate them. So they end up squeezing these nearly grown-up
bodies into a tight area around a table that used to work just fine.
I like Thanksgiving because it brings back good memories. Growing
up, it was the one time of year that our family was always together,
regardless of where we had to come from to get home.
And even though I’m not looking forward to the drive, I can’t wait
to get to San Diego.
I’ve even thought of a way to beat the traffic. We’re leaving
tomorrow instead.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
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