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Why Thanksgiving Is Hands-Down The Best
Holiday
By Dave Lloyd
The Thanksgiving season is upon us and just a few days from now,
most US citizens will be traveling too far on the worst travel
day of the year, to see family they'd rather not spend an
afternoon with and will likely see again in another month, and
eating far more than they should of some of the best food
they've ever tasted on what is a uniquely American holiday.
And while the cynics among us have hit a fever pitch with their
decrying of the commercialization and corporate marketing
rollouts that have been growing in waves for the last decades,
it remains that Thanksgiving is a top holiday for many US
citizens.
Of the Big Five, (Easter and July 4th plus the fall triumvirate
of Halloween, Christmas, and Thanksgiving) was there ever a
question. The three main reasons - least commercialized, most
bang for the buck, and one of the 3 times of real reflection all
year. Thanksgiving falls right in the middle of the peak
shopping season and therefore can't escape being part of the
marketing blitz. In fact, the day after Thanksgiving is always
one of the busiest shopping days of the year. However, the day
of Thanksgiving itself has remained largely untouched by Madison
Avenue, except for the necessary foodstuffs, in comparison to
Easter, Fourth of July, and certainly Halloween and Christmas.
Easter and Christmas marketing efforts are weeks long in
preparation and fireworks spending is also remaining strong. And
Halloween is a short-lived holiday that many kids look forward
to, but parents dread - not only for the candy that remains but
the late dark night and weeks of candy-grubbing afterward.
Thanksgiving, though, has remained true to it's roots - a time
to be with loved ones, eat good food, and travel as much as you
visit. As far as bang for the buck, though, nothing beats it.
While many begin turkey preparations up to a week ahead of time,
the overall preparation is simple. Just show up and start
eating. I mean, you've got to eat anyway on the last Thursday of
November. But you certainly don't have to look for eggs, light
dynamite on fire, buy 10x too much candy, or do everything
people do around Christmas - yet we all do it. Thanksgiving has
stayed true to its origins and provided much satisfaction for a
relatively easy investment of time, money, and effort. And even
if you are the host or cook for the year, other family are
always willing to chip in.
Finally, Thanksgiving truly is a time to sit back and consider
what you have to be grateful for. In fact, many families include
a time around the dinner table to talk about what they have and
are grateful to have. And besides one's birthday and New Year's
Day, there is no other specific time during the year when
everyone is reflecting collectively. So while the shopping
season will hit it's fever pitch shortly after Thanksgiving and
many will start stressing out over the few pounds, consumer
spending, and family interactions they'll take over the next
month, Thanksgiving will still remain the Last Great Holiday.
About the Author: Dave Lloyd has developed http://www.thanksgivingdinner.info
to provide Thanksgiving lovers, children doing Thanksgiving
research projects, and turkey, pumpkin pie, mashed potato, and
cranberry sauce recipe seekers with a quick way to find the
information they need. See http://www.thanksgivingdinner.info
for information.
Source: www.isnare.com
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