Perhaps it has something to do with the simplicity of the
holiday. Christmas isn’t for everyone…and for those that do celebrate it’s
often marred by the hustle-and-bustle and overall pressure associated with
all the commercial craziness. Thanksgiving on the other hand, is ideally about
getting together with the people you care about…and hopefully feeling some
sense of gratitude for the people you have in your life. I guess that is
what makes it so appealing, and throughout the week I’ve eavesdropped on
numerous conversations that include something like “my 88 year-old mother is
coming into town” or “I’m picking up my son this afternoon at the airport” or “I’m
headed to my parents by the beach.” I’ve even witnessed otherwise stressed
folks change their entire demeanor when they cheerfully share that their
“youngest is home from college” or “the entire clan is coming to the country
home.” Almost every conversation I hear is about cooking, travel…and people.
Sure, there’s the occasional reference to “my annoying uncle” or “extremist
alcoholic sister-in law,” but for the most part the references are pretty
positive. At the very least…I’m convinced people seem to be smiling more.
The emails and phone calls I receive during Thanksgiving
week are typically nicer too. Invariably, some old friend or former colleague
will send an unsolicited electronic message that says something like “Hey
Bro…just want to wish you a Happy Thanksgiving” or I’ll get an email entitled
simply “Thinking of You.” Almost without fail some old friend will call “just
to say hello.” I don’t know about
you…but I don’t get many messages or calls like that in April or August. There
is a lot of magic about the holiday season, but there is something about
watching the big balloons float over Manhattan, a touch football game, taking
in the aroma of a roasting bird and seeing the perpetually pitiful Lion’s play
on a Thursday in late November that just makes everything better.
When I first arrived in DC in 2005 after moving completely
across country…it was hard. My wife, family and friends were all back in Los
Angeles, and as I’ve mentioned here before, I remember driving to the gym at
5am on the Wednesday before Thanksgiving feeling very alone. It was dark and
unseasonably cold, and as I headed southbound down Connecticut Ave from Cleveland
Park over the bridge that spans Rock Creek, I remember being struck at how
deserted the streets all seemed. Typically it was much busier, but I drove my
way around the Washington Hilton and down toward Dupont Circle, the streets
were absolutely empty. I remember feeling almost an ache…and sensing that I
could actually start to cry. The darkness and solitude were downright eerie…and
then it dawned on me like an epiphany why is all seemed so deserted. Everybody
else was home. Then…like the script of some corny movie…this morning’s song
started playing on WASH FM.
I’m not sure what you’re doing this Thanksgiving…but I sure
hope it has something to do with the people and family you care about the most.
Enjoy the simplicity of a truly special holiday. Watch a parade, have some
turkey, catch some football and if you can, hug a few of the people that matter
most to you and think about at least some of the reasons you should feel
genuinely thankful.