I poured Half & Half in my cup and started to fill it up. Instead of coffee, I was pouring water. Apparently, I forgot to put water in the pot—again. I opened the top to pour in the water and saw a soggy filter. The problem seemed to be that after I had re-filled the canister with coffee the night before, I forgot to measure the coffee to put in the filter.
Not
wanting to pour hot water in the coffeemaker, I decided to pour it out. Then
the light bulb went off, and I remembered a packet of Folgers that was used
like a teabag. Anyway, I used some of the hot water to make a stop-gap cup of
coffee while the real-deal was brewing.
Regardless
of the coffee snafu, I was grateful that I wasn’t out of coffee. That would
have really been a bad start to the day.
In true
American fashion, I refused to let that sour a day of thankfulness for me. I
get it honest, because when I called my mom this morning to wish her a happy
Thanksgiving she said, “I woke up this morning, so I’m thankful for that.”
I was a
little worried about her because yesterday morning she said she had no plans
for Thanksgiving. Harold said I should invite her to eat shrimp with us. “Well,
she isn’t too crazy about seafood, and I know she will have invitations a lot
closer than us.”
She
went on to say, “I’m ready for Tommy to come and get me at noon for
Thanksgiving Dinner. Then, at four, someone will pick me up to go to Terri’s.”
Sounds to me like my mom is going to be well fed today.
Thanksgiving
was always one of my favorite holidays. My dad wanted all of us kids to be home
for Thanksgiving. When you have a big family, half were going to in-laws for Thanksgiving
and the other half for Christmas. Dad finally said they would take Thank
sgiving
and the in-laws could have us for Christmas. Of course, like Mom, we always
wound up having two Thanksgiving dinners. My mother-in-law always cooked enough
food to feed an army.
After
Dad died, we carried on the tradition for many more years, but eventually we
opted for a family reunion, and later, we mostly got together on Mom’s
birthday. Traditions change as our lives change.
When
Jim was in the nursing home, I had holiday meals with him. His mom would fix up
a plate of his favorites and I took it to him. I was thankful to spend that
time with him. When his appetite waned, he still had a taste for his mom’s home
cooking.
I’ve
crossed many speed bumps during my lifetime, but I’m thankful to be blessed
with family. We aren’t gathering in one spot today, but our hearts reach across
the miles to connect us inside a circle of love. I am thankful every day for my
family, not just today.
Millions
of Americans choose Thanksgiving Day to count their blessings. I think a better choice would be if we had 364 days to count our blessings and one day to wallow
in self-pity.
Copyright
© November 2021 by L.S. Fisher
http://earlyonset.blogspot.com
#ENDALZ
8 comments:
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