The following speech was given on Monday, November 25th at the Annual Ranney School NHS Induction and Thanksgiving ceremonies.
First of all, I want to thank Mr.
Zanowski and let you all know how honored I feel to be asked to speak today.
However, when Mr. Zanowski asked me to speak, little did he know that I’ve actually
been contemplating and reflecting about this holiday since 1981, which, for me,
became the year without a Thanksgiving. I was a sophomore in high school, my
older sister a senior. I was hyper-involved in activities like marching band
and technical theatre, so Thanksgiving came upon us all somewhat unaware due to
the chaos of the Fall term. That may seem familiar to some of you. My parents
were equally busy handling not only two teenaged daughters but also my 10
year-old brother and our two-year-old sister. It was Thanksgiving morning and
we were unaccustomed to the melee that ensued with all of us home at the same
time. I am not sure what the initial argument stemmed from, perhaps not wanting
to go to the in-laws for dinner, someone forgetting to unload the dishwasher,
the other someone not appreciating the first someone, but my parents were in an
increasing state of dissent. Without over-revelations, suffice it to say, that
my older sister and I had seen enough of the parental dynamics over our short lives
to know the ominous outcome was not going to bode well for a Norman Rockwell
family dinner that night.
My older sister thought fast and got
herself invited to a friend’s house. Her quick thinking paid off because by
3:00 that afternoon, my mother had already stormed up the stairs and slammed
her bedroom door tight, simultaneously we heard my dad pull away in the
driveway. My sister looked at me and our younger siblings with sympathy for a
fleeting moment, but that did not stop her from bolting out the door when her
friend’s car honked.
So there I was blinking down at my
little brother and sister, thinking, mmm, I don’t think we’re having turkey
tonight. Now, I want you to know, at
this moment I was neither distraught nor melancholy. I had prided myself on my
existentialist philosophies at that age and was fond of saying “what’s the big
deal, it’s just a day like any other day.” In fact, just two days prior I found
myself in debate with my US1 History teacher about how fake Thanksgiving seemed
to me. I readily dismissed the trappings
of tradition, pomp and ceremony that surrounded birthdays and holidays. Besides
I never really liked turkey that much, anyway.
So that night I heated up a can of Campbell’s split pea soup and sat eating quietly with my little brother and sister, thinking smugly to myself, see, who needs Thanksgiving anyway.
So that night I heated up a can of Campbell’s split pea soup and sat eating quietly with my little brother and sister, thinking smugly to myself, see, who needs Thanksgiving anyway.
My older sister came home a few hours
later and I handed off the sibling caretaking duties to her and left the house
for a brisk autumn evening walk. And this is where I found myself slipping into
my own bizarre nostalgic holiday film scene.
You know the moment I’m talking about: lonely jaded person walking through the streets, hands stuffed into coat pockets, collar turned up, misty breath swirling out of lungs. Cue: violins or folky acoustic “poor me” ballad. Lonely person looks from the sidewalk into the warm glow of other people’s homes, seeing smiling faces, imagining the sound of glasses tinkling, of laughter and love. Finally, lonely jaded person realizes the meaning of it all.
You know the moment I’m talking about: lonely jaded person walking through the streets, hands stuffed into coat pockets, collar turned up, misty breath swirling out of lungs. Cue: violins or folky acoustic “poor me” ballad. Lonely person looks from the sidewalk into the warm glow of other people’s homes, seeing smiling faces, imagining the sound of glasses tinkling, of laughter and love. Finally, lonely jaded person realizes the meaning of it all.
For sure, I had some strong emotions
on that November night. At first, I was only slightly willing to acquiesce to
the idea that Thanksgiving was necessary in any way, but my previous debate
with my history teacher began to resonate to me “if you do not celebrate something,
you’ve rendered it non-existent.” So when Mr. Semptimphelter put me on the spot
that Monday morning, “So, tell me about
your Thanksgiving. . .” There was an awkward
silence.
“I didn’t have one.” And
astonishingly to me, my eyes began to well with tears.
Mr. S. furrowed his brow
questioningly.
“Yep, I didn’t have one,” and in a
sudden epiphany, I added. “And I’m pretty sure I don’t want that to ever happen
again.”
My year without a Thanksgiving taught
me to value tradition and celebration as a key human quality. Humans give
special meaning to every thing in our lives. I would argue that creating
meaning is the essence of humanity. It’s what gives us art and music and
poetry. We name things, we establish habits and patterns, we give certain days
weight above other days in a calendar. And it is important. It represents a
kind of magic, I think. We can transform the ordinary into the extraordinary,
just because we deem it so. And this
holiday, above other holidays with its emphasis on gratitude weighs heavier in
meaning as I often think of the ultimate gifts for which I’m grateful and these
are life and the family and friends who continuously shape me in this life.
I’m happy to report that I’ve never
gone without a Thanksgiving again. Despite several years living away from my
family in other states or foreign countries, I have made an effort to always
celebrate this day, even if it has meant sitting in a Japanese KFC with
colleagues going around the table with our drumsticks and mashed potatoes expounding
upon the things for which we were thankful. My whole family, too, has come to
see Thanksgiving as one of the most important holidays in our year. We have
taken to a tradition of inviting different people to our house for Thanksgiving
each year. And my father has now, at least since 1983 established his own
tradition of reading Vermont C. Royster’s
“The Desolate Wilderness” and “This Fair Land” reprinted in the editorial section of the Wall Street Journal annually. In our family this
has come to be known -- insert full eye roll here – as “The Reading”. And my siblings and I joke that we need to invite new people to Thanksgiving dinner every year, because no one would want to come back a second year, after having to sit through “The Reading”.
has come to be known -- insert full eye roll here – as “The Reading”. And my siblings and I joke that we need to invite new people to Thanksgiving dinner every year, because no one would want to come back a second year, after having to sit through “The Reading”.
I will not indulge in excerpts of
this piece, but you’ll see it in the Wall Street Journal this week, as it has
been reprinted every Thanksgiving since 1961. Although if there’s someone out there that
knows exactly what I’m talking about, please find me after the assembly, we can
commiserate, and know that you’ll have a
standing invitation to my parents’ home for Thanksgiving dinner.
In truth, however, I, personally, love
and enjoy “The Reading.” I revel in the tradition, the pomp and ceremony, that
surrounds the whole day, but especially this climactic moment after dinner,
because it imbues the day with a meaning that becomes increasingly deeper each
year as my parents age. The existence of the tradition insures that Thanksgiving
will always happen, and will always have some kind of poignant meaning.
And so I hope if there is anyone
among you who has scoffed at tradition, or asked “what’s the point of this
anyway” that you were able to vicariously walk for a moment with me as the
“lonely jaded person looking through the happy windows.” I hope you can
recognize (without the split pea soup) that family matters, gratitude matters,
and Thanksgiving, because it’s a day
that tells us to stop the frenzy, to slow down a bit and think about these
things that matter in our lives – well, this makes Thanksgiving worthy of all the pomp
and ceremony it receives.
2 comments:
ELBEEPEE does it again! Beautifully written. Poignant and meaningful.
As usual, you brought me to tears! Thanks for sharing! Miss you!
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