Yesterday, we had the annual Thanksgiving potluck for our school faculty and staff. Yes, it's 2 weeks before Thanksgiving--I see that as a good thing. We can enjoy a Thanksgiving dinner, and 2 weeks later, we'll be ready to enjoy another Thanksgiving dinner.
But it was also a practical choice. My boss is on vacation next week, and we don't want to have an additional Thanksgiving dinner the week of Thanksgiving.
When we ordered the turkeys and a ham, we thought about having it delivered, as we've done in past years. I said, "I'll save the school the $30 plus tip delivery fee. I'll go pick them up."
Yesterday I rued that choice. We had steady, steady rain--not torrential, but soaking. I came back from picking up the turkeys and the ham, and I was soaking wet. By the end of the day, my sweater was still damp.
But we had a delightful meal together. Unlike some places I've worked, where we're lucky if people bring a half-eaten box of crackers and a hunk of cheese, or a tired veggie platter, we have all sorts of deliciousness: several kinds of mac and cheese, several kinds of stuffing/dressing, a beautiful salad, a queso bean dip (homemade, not just an opened can), the old-fashioned sweet potato casserole with a brown sugar and pecan topping, a homemade cranberry and pecan relish, a corn casserole, and a variety of desserts.
It's the kind of meal I could eat every day with no complaints--although I would gain a significant amount of weight if I ate that way every day.
It reminded me of the best potlucks of the churches of my youth: lots of yummy food, lots of chances to talk, the proclamations of how wonderful it was to eat such delicious food together, a warm glow that will last for many months.
And also, thoughts of who isn't there (faculty on field trips, people no longer working at our school, people away traveling)--both at my current school, and all the people I'm missing from past workplaces. And the wondering where we will all be this time next year--a habit from my family of origin.
I wonder if anyone else felt a spiritual tingle during our time together. I know that I'm often the only one. I said a silent prayer of thanks--and as we all pitched in to clean up (yes, almost all of us, regardless of gender or position), I continued to say thanks--both verbally, to my colleagues, and silently, to the one who prepares a table for us all.
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