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Carson and the candy corn

Thanksgiving was ample opportunity for me to see my family in action. Holidays tend to brief out the best and worst in people, even the littlest ones. Perhaps the proper commentary on this is that the littlest ones recognize that, in the hub of activity among the adults, the opportunity for mischief is unbridled and they can get away with…well, anything. This past Thanksgiving was no exception and the littlest of my extended family were out in full force keeping the adults on their toes.

When people say it takes it a community to raise a child, they aren’t kidding. The main reason for this cliche being that children have the energy of ten adults at any given time and they can wear an adult down in the time it takes for one of them to throw an energizing temper tantrum. In a medium-sized home on a holiday, the nooks and crannies to hide in and do whatever your little heart desires are endless. Carson, my cousin’s son who is a new toddler, took this to full advantage.

It helps that when Carson smiles the adults in our family will give him whatever he wants.

During the day, each table in the house had a bowl of peanuts and candy corn resting upon it for guests to snack upon while waiting for a meal or recovering after a meal. There were plenty of these and they were refilled throughout the day. Carson discovered the bowls immediately upon entering the house and would sneak a tiny handful whenever no one was looking. At one point, my cousin Ashley noticed that something was wrong with Carson’s belly button.

It was orange.

He’d stuck a candy corn in there until he got hungry later.

He would climb chairs and adults would sneak him candy corn.

He would crawl under tables with a bowl of candy corn.

Nothing in life had ever tasted as good to him as candy corn.

Carson rarely even babbles. How did I know that he loved candy corn?

At the end of the evening, I watched him slyly walk over to the coffee table. His little eyes were shining and drawn to that bowl of orange. He pinched his fingers together and grasped a single candy corn and raised it to the sky in victory. A look of pure bliss crossed his face as he placed that candy corn in his mouth, closed his eyes and smiled as he chewed.

I don’t know that I’ve ever seen a human being in such a state.

It was beautiful.

Yes, Carson loves candy corn.

We checked his belly button before he left.

We wanted to make sure there were no rogue candy pieces there.

Yes, there was a candy corn thief at my Thanksgiving celebration. And I am thankful for him.

Jillian
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And for this we give thanks…

In a year where, at times, I would rather have given up than given thanks, Thanksgiving rolls around and I am once again reminded that there are holidays to come that will be filled with joy and happiness if I allow them to be as such. There are circumstances beyond my control and people and situations that cannot be changed that cause me unhappiness, but there will always be days during the year where people will come together for the better and it is a reminder that few things in life are permanent.

Thanksgiving is always a loud affair. There is no real way that it can be less when you pack around 50 people into a small house. It can’t be a quiet, completely civilized affair when there are at least 10 children in that bunch. We started the lunch at my aunt’s house where she had set up the Wii for the kids and found a surprise: my cousin had me a Mii of great-grandma. So, the superstar of the day was Great-Grandma Z as all the great grandchildren wanted the chance to use her Mii to hula hoop, play tennis and cross country ski.

There was a moment of prayer and the kids jumped into line for what looked like way too much food for the amount of people that were in the house. Casseroles and noodles and turkey and ham and rolls and every carb you could ever want lined counters, the stove and multiple tables. As the little ones picked through the foods they would eat, the adults sat at the tables and talked. The rain turned to sleet but no one was concerned. There was plenty of food and no one needed to be anywhere immediately. The scents of holiday food enveloped us in comfort and we ate plate after plate of food.

And did it again.

And then again.

And had some dessert.

And then ate more food because you can’t waste food.

And ate some more and there was still MORE food.

About that time, the wind howled and the sleet turned into fat flakes of snow that hugged the cars and the sky turned dark. AJ, who rarely sees snow of any real accumulation in TN, yelled that there was snow and he was going sledding! The adults started to get groggy and talk of naps and Black Friday shopping.

As the snow continued, there was a thief on the lose…a candy corn thief…

To be continued…

Jillian
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And I want to thank you

thanksgivingI have a post in my head that says thank you.

However, it is impossible to express what is in my heart adequately to those that have supported me all these years or for those who have supported me for just today. I don’t know how to say thank you in a way that conveys what I really mean to my friends who have been there for me all of my life and those who have just come into my life, in a time of great turmoil and are surely confused by the tornado I call a life.

How is it possible to give adequate thanks for all the good events and the bad that shape a life?

Thank you.

Jewel has a song in which she says “In the end, only kindness matters.” I believe that is true. I have a hard time living kind, but I experienced kindness today and I want to express my gratitude.

I hobbled into the gas station and slowly walked around the store and gathered my items. My nose was red and I was shivering. Leon and AJ were still out in Leon’s car and I was trying to be quick so we could get on the road to head to my mother’s house for Thanksgiving.

I filled my arms and walked to the cash register. As I placed the items slowly onto the counter, the cashier finished her conversation with her co-worker and turned to see what I was buying.

Orange Juice.
Halls cough drops.
A single pack of Dayquil cold and flu.
Carmex lip balm.
and Starburst fave reds (which I hoped I would be able to taste and ended up not even opening).

She looked at me with kind eyes and I didn’t say anything as I saw them fill with pity. “Aw, you must be feeling crummy, aren’t you, honey. Feeling sick?” I nodded and said that yes, I was, and thanked her for asking. As I was leaving, she said, “I sure hope you feel better soon.”

I thanked her again and got into the car for the long ride in which I slept deeply.

That small act of kindness–acknowledging that I felt bad and wishing that I felt better–made me feel better than I had in days. The one on one connection with a stranger that reminds us that we are not alone.

I am thankful, indeed.

Happy Thanksgiving.

Jillian
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About Me
Life is like a game. We all have challenges, thoughts, opinions and beliefs. Often, it feels like something out there, life, karma, catty people, or blue shells (for the Kart lovers), seeks to bring us down. Luckily, we always get up. This is where I wear my heart on my sleeve and my foot in my mouth.
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jillian@blueshelled.com
P.O. Box 252, Franklin, TN 37064

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We are members of one great body. Nature planted in us a mutual love, and fitted us for a social life. We must consider that we were born for the good of the whole. Lucius Annaeus Seneca