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Best way to handle going to two Thanksgivings
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<blockquote data-quote="Scent of Cedar *" data-source="post: 672831" data-attributes="member: 17461"><p>What do you think you will do, Serenity?</p><p></p><p>(Jumper has a relationship close enough that family are spending holidays together? :O) I love this for her.)</p><p></p><p>What would Jumper like you to do?</p><p></p><p>It is a special thing, to be invited to share family holidays. Each family's traditions are so different. Where I grew up, men would hunt in the morning, and watch football in the afternoon. Dinner would be between games (or at halftime), and would be fancy as could be. I still remember being a little girl watching the number of minutes left in the game and being so surprised when two minutes would stretch into an hour.</p><p></p><p>Yum on the leftovers.</p><p></p><p>***</p><p></p><p>Where we live in summer, the men still hunt this time of year. Football is huge, and everyone is a Packer or Vikings fan and goes to little bars to drink beer on snowmobiles and those poor dead dear are hanging everywhere or are on the hoods of people's cars and it's snowing.</p><p></p><p>And women hunt, too.</p><p></p><p>But not me.</p><p></p><p>A lady friend there: "Cedar, you do have that nerd thing going on." </p><p></p><p>It's the rhythm of life, there. Not only the changing of the seasons, but the intense involvement in every aspect of internal life. That is where the vitality springs from, there where everything is so changeable. Clothing and food and the colors of everything, changing all the time.</p><p></p><p>Very cozy and friendly there compared to here, where the weather is always some version of warm.</p><p></p><p>I must miss home.</p><p></p><p>Turkey tastes best when it's snowing outside.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Scent of Cedar *, post: 672831, member: 17461"] What do you think you will do, Serenity? (Jumper has a relationship close enough that family are spending holidays together? :O) I love this for her.) What would Jumper like you to do? It is a special thing, to be invited to share family holidays. Each family's traditions are so different. Where I grew up, men would hunt in the morning, and watch football in the afternoon. Dinner would be between games (or at halftime), and would be fancy as could be. I still remember being a little girl watching the number of minutes left in the game and being so surprised when two minutes would stretch into an hour. Yum on the leftovers. *** Where we live in summer, the men still hunt this time of year. Football is huge, and everyone is a Packer or Vikings fan and goes to little bars to drink beer on snowmobiles and those poor dead dear are hanging everywhere or are on the hoods of people's cars and it's snowing. And women hunt, too. But not me. A lady friend there: "Cedar, you do have that nerd thing going on." It's the rhythm of life, there. Not only the changing of the seasons, but the intense involvement in every aspect of internal life. That is where the vitality springs from, there where everything is so changeable. Clothing and food and the colors of everything, changing all the time. Very cozy and friendly there compared to here, where the weather is always some version of warm. I must miss home. Turkey tastes best when it's snowing outside. [/QUOTE]
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Best way to handle going to two Thanksgivings
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