November 28, 2025 a thought for today, It is difficult to get many heads under one hat. Danish Proverb
Photos in my life yesterday
This upload challenge was titled “thankful.” This was a table setting for this holiday.
Next is “a pop of color.” This was wandering through my digital archives looking for an image for this challenge and found this one that I shot a few years ago.
Life today. I made my mom’s recipe of Waldorf Salad to take to Mt. Sterling for the holiday. I also made some Welsh Rarebit for an appetizer. It was good to see some family and friends and have a meal full of all kinds of foods to sample. Along with something that was called Drew’s Banana Pudding for dessert. It tasted much like, again, my mom’s banana cream pie. So it was a bit of remembering for me, not only with the foods but for my son, Bob. He was on my mind so when I picked on of the photos for today is was one of him.
An interesting happening was Jessie had a little house kind of thing for cats that their furry family member had out grown. She offered it for Bobbi. When I got it home and put it down for her to examine she walked around it slowly, poked her head in, even climbed in. Then she would come out look around as though looking for another cat in the house. After that she wouldn’t eat her dinner and kept looking in different places in the house for another furry friend. I put the bed behind the basement door until I can get it washed.
I didn’t get yesterday’s blog and photos uploaded yesterday so I did that the first thing this morning.
Today has been one of the kind I enjoy, moving through the day with a relaxed feel. I have gotten several little household chores out of the way along with some searches on subjects that popped into my head as I wrote and came onto things that interested me and to fact check.
As is habit now, I have worked on the letters and photos before I started the laundry. I didn’t get it done yesterday.
The word today is night. The dawn is not distant, nor is the night starless; love is eternal. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. If Confucius wasn't born, the long night would have no bright lamp. Mencius. To thine own self be true, and it must follow, as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man. William Shakespeare. How lovely are the portals of the night, when stars come out to watch the daylight die. Thomas Cole. I often think that the night is more alive and more richly colored than the day. Vincent Van Gogh. Even the darkest night will end and the sun will rise. Victor Hugo. Night is certainly more novel and less profane than day. Henry David Thoreau. Last night I begged the Wise One to tell me the secret of the world. Gently, gently, he whispered, "Be quiet, the secret cannot be spoken, It is wrapped in silence." Rumi. The darkest night that ever fell upon the earth never hid the light, never put out the stars. It only made the stars more keenly, kindly glancing, as if in protest against the darkness. George Eliot. Each morning sees some task begun, each evening sees it close; Something attempted, something done, has earned a night's repose. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. For nature gives to every time and season some beauties of its own; and from morning to night, as from the cradle to the grave, it is but a succession of changes so gentle and easy that we can scarcely mark their progress. Charles Dickens.
Article summary: How the Plymouth Pilgrims took over Thanksgiving – and who history left behind. Thomas Tweed, Professor Emeritus of American Studies and History, University of Notre Dame. At theconversation.com. I am sharing it a couple of days late for this year’s celebration. It’s always good to learn about history and traditions. I think I bit off more than I can chew with this one. It is much longer than I needed and from my point of view a bit complicated. It is talking about how many Thanksgiving types of days have occurred in history. It mentions how some became controversial to the point of causing problems among groups of people. The one most well known and celebrated of course is called Thanksgiving Day and is shown at celebrated in 1621 with the Wampanoag Native Americans and the English Pilgrims in Plymouth, Massachusetts and was eventually made an official holiday by. I also learned in research further that many Native Americans do not see it as the celebrated event in 1621. To some of them it is a reminder of loss of land and violence eventually experienced due to “colonization.” In the article it states how this original celebration is tied to religious history and ties to “narrowed conceptions “ of “who belongs in America.” The author mentions that in that line of thought it is excluding some groups of people, as other groups of “Native Americans, Catholics and Jews.” One group of people called Cahokians had thanksgiving feasts “five centuries” before the famous Pilgrims feast. The article went on to mention that the pilgrims who arrived in America were Puritans who “denounced” the Catholic portion of the Church of England. As for other days of thanksgiving, during the American Revolution there was a “Day of Thanksgiving” to “commemorate” a victory at Saratoga in 1777. In 1863 a lady named Sarah Hale made an effort to “pitch” an idea to Abraham Lincoln to make a national Thanksgiving holiday. It is my understanding from the article that the “harvest feast of 1621" became the one most depicted as The Thanksgiving Day celebrated today. The author indicates that some of the art work depicting the celebration as seen today was not always correct in the artful presentations. The Pilgrims were added to some of the art work later than in the earliest pieces. Then the author says that the Pilgrims were not the first Europeans to land in North American and give thanks. Moving on in the article, it is mentioned that Saanich Catholics founded St. Augustin in 1565 where a Mass was held with some Native Americans in attendance. Twenty years later an English group made an effort to form a colony in North Carolina where a Jewish man was an engineer. As the years went by there were disagreements over the “official” Thanksgiving holiday. One major happening was in 1924 when the US borders were closed for four decades by the Immigration Act of 1924. As the article was coming to an end it mentioned that “Americans kept telling the Pilgrims’ story after U.S. immigration policy became more welcoming in 1965".
It’s another DoorDash night. I haven’t decided yet what I am in the mood for.
Photos in my life today
The next image challenge was titled “family.” The images I got yesterday weren’t up what I wanted to upload. I found this one in my wander through the archives. It is my Bob whom I missed at the table. He is and has always been my angel unaware, in spirit now.
image.”
Joy
bonus....not my Bobbi but still a family fur baby

























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