Everyone
is seated around the table; the air is filled with a mix of traditional
Thanksgiving dishes and the aroma of various family members’ perfume and cologne.
The room seems impossibly warm yet no
one complains, for it’s difficult to decipher between the actual physical heat
and the warm fuzzies that being with family provides. My grandfather offers up a heartfelt prayer
of gratitude for all that the Lord has blessed us with, the prayer is closed
with the joining of everyone’s voices singing of the “Doxology”. The passing of plates starts, a guessing game
of “is this my fork, my neighbor’s fork, or the turkey plate’s fork?” begins –
it seems that the quiet moments of the beginning of the meal are long
gone. Eventually someone starts my
favorite part of the day, the actual giving of thanks and the chaos leaves as
quickly as it appeared. “I’m thankful
for…”
Each
year I try to come up with a new answer, something that is distinctly of the
year (for example this year I could say something about graduating). However what I am most thankful for does not
come and go each year. It sounds utterly
cliché to say that it’s my family and friends that truly fill me with the
Thanksgiving spirit, but it’s true. The
list of reasons why is never ending and always expanding, yet I think that the
aspects of these relationships that I appreciate most are often the ones that I
don’t notice every day. Near the top of
that list of reasons why is the mere fact that they cause me to forget about
the most obvious part of my life. Even
though the way I do things is almost entirely different than the vast majority
of people I know rarely do I realize what causes me to have to make those
adaptations. Instances like the other
day illustrate this point: my mom asked me a question about jump ropes and I told
her that I had no clue about the answer.
“How could you not know?!?” she asked, I simply pointed to myself, an “Oh”
was uttered as she answered her own question.
Experiences like my father bumping my chair up and down hundreds of
steps at Watkins Glenn State Park without thinking twice about it make me
realize how sacrifices are sometimes made so I can feel “normal”.
There
are times when it’s completely different circumstances that cause me to feel saturated
with gratitude. Like the time almost
exactly three years ago when I flew back to college with a fellow classmate and
dear friend when all the parts besides for the frame of my wheelchair were left
in Syracuse, while I was in Nashville.
Although that morning was excruciatingly long due to having to wait
around for the airline to determine where exactly the pieces to my chair were, I
was never alone. The entire existence
the Wheel Deal is due to the prodding of my best friend, and the resurrection of
it is the product of some of his very late night pep talks. I feel quite ordinary most of the time and
forget that I’m different. Even times
when I am cognizant of my uniqueness the thought that others might actually
want to read about those differences doesn’t usually cross my mind. Sometimes you just need to be reminded not
only of the fact that you are special, but also that you can share what makes
you that way. I am undoubtedly grateful that
I have friends and family that do that.
As I continue
to grow into adulthood it becomes more apparent that thanksgiving isn’t
something that happens on the last Thursday of November each year, it should be
an everyday practice. With age comes the
realization that reality doesn’t always play nice. It’s easy to feel like you’re being beat up
by the punches that life sometimes throws at you. However we’re not called to be victims of
circumstance or “bad luck”. With a
mixture of hard work and having the right attitude your outlook changes and you’re
able to bob and weave when those punches come your way. The feeling of life taking too much from you
can be combated by giving thanks for even the little things. When I can’t get somewhere because of my
chair it would be easy to get discouraged by those circumstances, but what good
would that do? Instead I think about all
the things that I can do, and how there are more opportunities than ever for
people who are disabled. When I can feel
the awkward stares, or when people talk to others I’m with but not to me
because of my chair it’s sometimes difficult not get a little agitated by their
ignorance. I’m forever thankful that I can
surround myself with people that I can joke with about being disabled cuts that
mindset of being annoyed with society off. It seems almost sad that there is only one day
a year where the practice of giving thanks is given top billing. You
don’t need to have a feast every day, and it would be impossible for New
York City to shut down the streets used for the Macy’s parade on a more than
yearly basis – yet that doesn’t mean that Thanksgiving only has to happen once
a year. Also a byproduct of thanksgiving
is that feeling of warmth I described earlier. I’m positive stems from counting of one’s
blessings. I know that because my hands
are freezing right now and I’m sure the ground outside is dusted with frost,
yet I feel immeasurably warm inside.