Grandparenting
Through the Holiday Season
by Fay A. Klingler
One thing I’m learning
from my “Meridian” readers is that there are many right
ways to grandparent. I love to hear about your wonderful
experiences. Thank you for sharing.
This month, my column is
dedicated to unifying, Thanksgiving crafts and/or traditions.
Of course, the most important thing you can do for your
family this holiday season is to spread a message of
peace, safety, healing, and love. You do that by making
a conscious effort to recognize each visitor by name,
greet him or her with a smile and, where appropriate,
a hug. Prior to your family gatherings, kneel in prayer
and request the Spirit’s guidance. Ask that His love
be felt in your home, or wherever the get-together(s)
is held. Then listen not only to the promptings you
receive, but open your ears in compassion as you visit
with individuals attending the function.
If you are going to someone
else’s home for Thanksgiving, consider presenting the
hostess with a gift, possibly a plant or a book. If
you give a book, take the time to read it to the grandchildren
in the home before you leave. One book I recommend is
Grandad’s Prayers of the Earth by Douglas Wood,
illustrated by P.J. Lynch. Not only is it a lovely story,
the artwork is breathtaking.
Perhaps you have a flair
for expressing yourself. Write a poem, revealing your
feelings of gratitude for members of your family. Share
it, either by reading it or providing a written copy
for those in attendance.
On Thanksgiving, Nancy
Beck traditionally shares the following declaration
by Abraham Lincoln given in 1863 in the middle of the
Civil War, stating his desire for a national Thanksgiving
Day. From what I understand, this rendition, however,
is not accurate. It combines pieces of his “Proclamation
Appointing a National Fast Day” (given in March of that
year) with parts of his “Thanksgiving Proclamation.”
(The “Proclamation Appointing a National Fast Day” can
be found here.
You will find his “Thanksgiving Proclamation” here.
Nonetheless, Nancy’s idea is superb. She prints the
proclamation and rolls and ties it with a beautiful,
satin ribbon, and puts a copy on the plate of every
guest.
“I print it on one page
of very nice stationary. I suppose you could assign
this to one of the children and have them go creative
with pretty autumn leaves, etc. A nice bow makes an
interesting 'something' on the table,” wrote Nancy.
“Before we bless the food, we have someone at the table
who is designated ‘important reader of the document’
read it as others follow along on their documents. It's
pretty powerful, and beautiful prayers always follow
the reading.”
>Nancy hopes this family
tradition encourages each guest to appreciate what an
inspired man President Lincoln was.
THANKSGIVING
PROCLAMATION
“It is the duty
of nations as well as of men to
show their dependence on
the overruling power of God;
to confess
their sins and transgressions in humble sorrow –
yet, with
assured hope that genuine repentance
will lead
to mercy and pardon,
and to
recognize the sublime truth
announced
in the Holy Scriptures,
and proven
by all history that
Those
nations are blessed whose God is the Lord.
We know
that by his divine law, nations, like individuals
are subjected
to punishments and chastisements in this world.
May we
not justly fear that the awful calamity of civil war,
which
now desolates the land may be a punishment to
our national
reformation as a whole?
We have
been the recipients of the choicest bounties of heaven.
We have
been preserved these many years in peace and prosperity.
We have
grown in numbers, wealth and power
as no
other nation has ever grown.
But, we
have forgotten God.
We have
forgotten the gracious hand which preserved us in peace
and multiplied
and enriched and strengthened us.
And, we
have vainly imagined in the deceitfulness of our hearts
that all
these blessings were produced by
some superior
wisdom and virtue of our own!
Intoxicated
with unbroken success,
we have
become too self-sufficient to feel the necessity
of redeeming
and preserving grace;
too proud
to pray to the God that made us.
It has
seemed to me, fit and proper that God should be solemnly,
reverently
and gratefully acknowledged
as with
one heart and one voice by the whole American people.
I
do therefore invite my fellow citizens in every part
of the United States,
and
also those who are at sea
and those who are sojourning in foreign lands,
to
set apart and observe the last Thursday of November
as a day of
Thanksgiving
and praise to
our
beneficent Father, who dwelleth in the heavens.”
Abraham
Lincoln
3 October 1863
Possibly each person at
your holiday table could share something about the person
next to or across the table from them. Before the blessing
on the food, each person could take a turn, saying “I
am grateful for . . . because . . . . Think about baking
muffins, rolls, or biscuits for the holiday meal. In
one muffin, roll, or biscuit put a whole walnut (candy
or raisin). The individual who gets that special bread
would be the first person to express his or her thanks.
Perhaps you could make
a gratitude bush, using a real or a fake plant. Guests
could write on small papers what they are thankful for.
The papers could be hung on the branches of the plant.
Another idea would be for guests to bring scrapbook-size
pictures (possibly three-dimensional) showing what they
are thankful for to hang on the plant.
“Several years ago,” wrote
Claudette Borrowman, “I purchased a soup tureen that
is shaped like a turkey and also colored like a turkey.
We always use it on Thanksgiving Day. The kids love
that.” Using familiar items adds to the joy of family
members—a special tablecloth, colored plates, or decorations.
The tablecloth idea is explained further in The LDS
Grandparents’ Idea Book (by Fay A Klingler, published
by Spring Creek Book Company), page 127.
One tradition to consider
is taking a walk following the holiday meal. Perhaps
special walking sticks would be in order. I met a delightful
couple from the state of Washington—Rebecca and George
Copple. In the fall, Rebecca goes into the woods near
her home to cut vine maple sticks. She drys them and
sometimes peels them to make marvelous canes or walking
sticks for family and friends.

While
the adults are cleaning up after the meal, you might
provide a holiday craft for the grandchildren. Here
are patterns for a turkey door hanger.
Print the turkey body on
cardstock and help the children cut it out. They could
color or paint it with crayons, watercolors, or washable
markers. You could provide googly eyes or buttons to
place on the face.
Click
to Enlarge

Print the turkey tail on
cardstock and help the children cut it out. They could
color it or they could glue items to it before attaching
it to the body. For the tail, consider using art foam
pieces, feathers (real or craft), colored construction
paper, dried leaves (real), plant stems, felt, cloth,
tongue depressors, or netting. The grandchildren could
even add glitter, write something they are grateful
for on paper feathers, or include a bow tie at the turkey’s
neck.

It may turn out looking
like a “turkeycock,” but it will be a grandchild’s treasure
and a fun memory of craft making.
