Plenty to be thankful for in modern world
The first American Thanksgiving feast was celebrated over a three-day
period in 1621 in Plymouth, Mass., with European settlers sitting
down with about 90 Native Americans to meals consisting mostly of
wild game and fish. The fact the settlers were eating anything at all
was probably the greatest cause to celebrate that year -- the first
winter in Massachusetts had wiped out fully half of the original
Plymouth colonists.
It was a far different time of thanks in America than we find
today. The gratitude expressed around the turkey in 1621 pretty much involved the very basics, such as “Boy, am I thankful I didn’t get
the smallpox this year,” and “Boy, am I glad I didn’t freeze to death
last January,” and “Gee, am I grateful I ran faster than Bob when
that bear was chasing us.”
Times have changed considerably since then, as have the kinds of
fortunes for which Laguna residents can count themselves thankful.
There are, for sure, more things to be grateful for than the gift of
life.
We can be grateful for a vast network of volunteers who provide
goods and services for families and individuals who are faced with
poverty or who are homeless. Volunteers deliver lunches to seniors,
not just on holidays, but throughout the year. Other volunteers
coordinate fund-raisers that benefit the Friendship Shelter, Laguna
Shanti, the Boys and Girls Club or artists in need.
Local service groups raise funds so that charities can continue
helping the homeless, putting together literacy and art projects for
young and old, and running programs for people living with AIDS or
cancer.
And we can be grateful for this community that prides itself on
its commitment to maintaining its quality of life and ensuring this
is one of the best places to live
Happy Thanksgiving, everybody.
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