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Reasons to Be Cheerful

 

Here’s a holiday idea to startle the fam.

Bring a clipboard to the Thanksgiving table. And sometime between the first sips of pinot grigio and the last bites of pie, pass it around and around the table. Squeeze a little gratitude out of everybody.

Too shy to make your family think that hard? Then do it yourself.

Name 50 ordinary things you’re thankful for. None of them can be general—you can’t say “food” or “lodging” or “friendship.” And your gratitude doesn’t have to be high brow; it just has to be sincere. Believe it or not, all this inventorying the ordinary will feel really, really good.

Not only that, but I think there is some new research to suggest that gratitude burns calories, lowers cholesterol, tames lactose intolerance, counteracts carbohydrates, fights wrinkles, sharpens eyesight, stimulates brain function, tones abdominal muscles, melts fat and heightens sexual performance. Don’t you feel more grateful already?

1. I’m grateful the Red Sox won.

2. I’m grateful that my younger daughter still likes me to read to her in bed at night.

3. I’m grateful for Grade B maple syrup.

4. I’m grateful for early 20th-century French poets.

5. I’m grateful for people who browse at Barnes & Noble, but buy at the Book House and the Open Door.

6. I’m grateful my older daughter continues to indulge my unhealthy attachment to backgammon.

7. I’m grateful for antibiotics and antiseptics and antidepressants and antibodies and antinomianism. (Go look it up.)

8. I’m grateful for Zebra mechanical pencils and narrow-ruled notebooks.

9. I’m grateful for the Green Street panini—with extra pesto—at the 1795 Café in Schenectady.

10. I’m grateful for friends who are as depressed as I am about the outcome of the election; the rising religious right; the war in Iraq; Israeli-Palestinian relations; our attitude toward Europe, our attitude toward education, poverty, women and gays at home; new Cabinet appointments, and the probable direction of the Supreme Court.

11. I’m really grateful for those friends.

12. I’m grateful that I cry and laugh so easily.

13. I’m grateful that Rod Stewart has only two CDs of standards; I would be even more grateful if he stopped recording altogether.

14. I’m grateful that I come from a family whose evening entertainments include impersonating fruits, vegetables and sizzling bacon.

15. I’m grateful we don’t even require illegal substances to move us to such heights of physical comedy.

16. I’m grateful I learned how to cook.

17. I’m grateful my oldest daughter prefers cleaning to cooking.

18. I’m grateful for room service.

19. I’m grateful for Saratoga Springs geyser water, which I actually like and which my mother thought was as effective as prune juice—something I have never been grateful for—in aiding digestion.

20. I’m grateful for the Scotia Diner—and for Lois, who works there.

21. I’m grateful my dentist is a bit of a nut and that my massage therapist is obsessed with muscles.

22. I’m grateful that though Targets and McMansions are popping up all over the region, you can still see a breathtaking stretch of the Mohawk River where Forts Ferry meets River Road.

23. I’m grateful for Peebles Island, where there are no houses, and where the Hudson and Mohawk Rivers join their waters.

24. I’m grateful for the smell of extinguished candles.

25. I’m grateful for skin.

26. I’m grateful for soft wool sweaters.

27. I’m grateful for dry red wine and expensive parmesan cheese.

28. I’m grateful for the people whose lives brush mine in ways that feel gentle and comforting.

29. I’m grateful for being fed up enough to stop trying to build bridges between people who are much happier with dissension and isolation.

30. I’m grateful for Glenn Gould, Keith Jarrett, Bill Evans, Hank Jones.

31. I’m grateful for the third and fourth movements of Beethoven’s fifth symphony; and for more classical music chestnuts than I care to admit in print.

32. I’m grateful for Johnny Hartman singing “Lush Life” and “You Are Too Beautiful” and John Hiatt singing “Feels Like Rain” and Elvis Costello and Tony Bennett singing—separately—“My Funny Valentine.”

33. I’m grateful I know the Pips’ part to “Midnight Train To Georgia.”

34. I’m grateful for movie quotes. (“You talkin’ to me?”)

35. I’m grateful for some things that are nobody’s business.

36. I’m grateful for not being able to decide upon a single favorite writer, though Robert Frost, despite his apparent curmudgeonliness, would score high in the poetry area and Wallace Stegner, who I truly believe was a good man as well as a sublime writer, would probably take the prize for fiction.

37. I’m grateful to live in the Northeast, except between mid-January and May.

38. But since I do, I’m grateful for fatwood and fireplaces.

39. I’m grateful for George Inness’ painting “At Home In Montclair” which is in the permanent collection at the Clark (though it’s not always up).

40. I’m grateful for the Ketchup Advisory Board.

41. I’m grateful for my estate-sale fur coat—which should not even be near the word “ketchup.”

42. I’m grateful for Crabtree & Evelyn patchouli bubble bath.

43. I’m grateful for pig-headed, outspoken liberals who know how to laugh.

44. I’m grateful for soft-spoken, deeply feeling liberals who know how to mourn.

45. I’m grateful to know both.

46. I’m grateful my older daughter knows how to get royally pissed off.

47. I’m grateful my younger daughter is every bit as wise as she is kind.

48. I’m grateful for people who have bumper stickers on their cars that say “God bless everyone. No exceptions.”

49. I’m grateful our forebears’ idea of Thanksgiving was to gather and give thanks, even though they probably didn’t agree about everything.

50. I’m grateful that, though humans seem hard-wired to carp and criticize, we remain, as the poet, Richard Wilbur, wrote, “Obscurely, yet most surely, called to praise.”

—Jo Page

jopage@graceniska.org

 


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