Happy Thanksgiving!
I've been writing this blog since 2006, and some of you - masochists that you are - have been reading it for almost all of that time. You've learned many things about me over the years, one of which is that Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday. In a crazy world in which we too often focus on fear and negativity* and the material things in life, it's good to have a day on which to sit back and reflect on the things for which we can be truly thankful.
We’re living in a scary time in which it’s easy to be distracted from things for which we can be thankful, because there is so much going on that is awful, and so many people who keep relentlessly reminding us of it. For me, this year the awful things included:
A political party that continues relentlessly to weaponize fear and hatred, which accepts - and, indeed, praises and amplifies - the most coarse, violent, and angry discourse, and which works tirelessly to undermine a political system it cannot win in a fair contest of ideas and policies;
The continuing horror of realizing that many Americans continue to accept frequent mass murder - even of little children - as an acceptable price to pay for the unrestricted "right to keep and bear arms;"
A deadly pandemic that lingers on, largely because ignorant fools conflate the responsibility for public health with unacceptable limits on their “freedom;”
A badly flawed legal system in which the degree of available justice is directly related to one’s skin color, political connections, and ability to pay astronomical legal fees far in excess of what ordinary people can afford; and,
A changing climate that is denied by those unwilling to see the obvious truth around them.
That all sounds pretty bad, and it is, but on the whole, though, it’s actually been a pretty good year for ol’ Bilbo. Although there have been many negatives, I have to consider myself a lucky man for a lot of reasons:
Surviving the pandemic for another year;
The patient and long-suffering love of a beautiful and amazingly talented wife;
Three loving and successful children of whom I am justly and endlessly proud;
Six adorable, intelligent, talented, and loving grandchildren;
A large and loving extended family;
A comfortable retirement**;
A roof over my head***;
Good health†;
Good friends;
The good fortune to be able to live in the United States of America - a country which, for all its faults, gives me the opportunity to enjoy all of the above;
The ability to write what I wish in this space without worrying about government censorship††; and,
The ability to enjoy the good things of the world that would be denied by those whose harsh and intolerant worship of a jealous, angry, and politicized God ignores the beauty and possibilities of the present in favor of rigid belief in a single religion and an imagined paradise in an unknowable future.
I have many things to be thankful for on this Thanksgiving Day, and it's only proper that I should take a few minutes to acknowledge that I am, as ever, most richly blessed.
I wish all of you, Dear Readers, Friends, the very happiest, healthiest, and safest of holidays.
Have a good day. Give thanks for the good things you have and the bad things you don't. And stay out of the stores this weekend ... you'll thank me.
More thoughts tomorrow, when we offer the final collection of Great Moments in Editing and Signage for the month.
Bilbo
* Yes, GOP, I'm talking to you.
** So far, anyhow. If the GOP succeeds in wrecking Social Security, I'll be looking for a large cardboard box in a more affordable neighborhood.
*** As long as we keep up the payments.
† Unless the GOP succeeds in gutting Medicare, and continues its efforts to eliminate the ACA with no coherent idea of how to provide health care to tens of millions of Americans.
†† Yet. Given the GOP's attitude toward the First Amendment (as opposed to its undying love of the Second), I'm keeping my fingers crossed.
Happy Thanksgiving, Bill.
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, I'm one of those long time readers that always enjoys (and usually agrees with) your posts.
I'd like to say the good outweighs the bad, but there is still so much bad that needs to be worked on. You're doing your bit by raising decent kids and grandkids, so thanks for that.
ReplyDeleteHTG! Have a great food day. Stretch it out. Stay up until 3 or 4 in the morning. Make it last as long as you can. Things go back to "normal" on Friday.
ReplyDeleteIt is good to always count one's blessings. that doesn't negate the bad, but it puts it in perspective.
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving to all!