Dr. Julie Barrier Christian Blog and Commentary

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When Granny Comes Marching Home for Thanksgiving

  • Julie Barrier

    Dr. Julie Barrier, along with her pastor-husband, Dr. Roger Barrier, have taught conferences on marriage and ministry in 35 countries. The Barriers are founders and directors of Preach It, Teach It…

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  • Updated Nov 16, 2012

I believed, at the ripe old age of eight, that Thanksgiving was a wash-a “teaser” holiday that prevented Grandma from early shopping for my Christmas Barbies (She never bought me anything but underwear, but I was still hopeful).
We got one measly day off from school for turkey day. Bummer. Playing pilgrims and Indians paled in significance to singing carols in a classroom filled with holly, decked halls, and jolly teachers. At Thanksgiving, our only art project was dressing a pine cone with little turkey-feather behinds and white button eyes.

 

The poor "pilgrim" students had to stand in a straight-line singing “We Gather Together” to bored parents. (I’d rather have my teeth cleaned). Pilgrims were pretty straight-laced. They didn’t party like the Indians. They simply sat at the table, folded their hands and looked pious. The only redeeming pilgrim activity was their creamed corn demonstration. Pretty gooey. Pretty good.

 

I did love to be an Indian. While the shy children too afraid to protest were shoved into starched white collars and black stovetop hats, the Indians got to choose cool names like Eagle Feather, Pig Knuckle and Limping Deer. We donned our paper-feather headdresses, beat the living daylights out of coffee-can drums, and hooped and hollered until math class. My math teacher got creative and used wampum to teach subtraction. Cool.

 

All the good pumpkins had been carved at Halloween, so the cafeteria ladies improvised with butternut squash and a bloated sweet potato pie instead of pumpkin pie. We kids weren’t high on pie anyway. Give us a Snicker or a cherry Jawbreaker and we’d be sucking on sugar ‘til Christmas. I wore my feather headdress all day. It made the lunch-line lady laugh.

 

I felt invincible striding into P.E. with my rubber red tomahawk. I must have looked menacing because very few of the “Red Rover” boys wanted me to come over. However, I was just a lowly squaw in the tribe. Freddie Howell got to be Chief Bigfoot. He tried to scalp the first graders until the three o’clock bell sounded. We were so sick of his bullying; we started calling him “Chief Big Mouth.” At the end of the day, we surrendered our costumes to Mrs. Baird and dashed home.

 

The Wednesday night before Thanksgiving was spent in ritual preparations for the family feast. As preschoolers, my sister Kathy and I were assigned the task of napkin folding. By first grade we graduated to carrot peeling, and by middle school we had the awesome task of removing the raw turkey guts and shoving Stove Top stuffing up the gobbler’s behind. Daddy frantically removed the debris from the carport to make room for arriving guests. Mom shouted orders from the kitchen. The aroma of spiced cider and gravy filled the kitchen, wafting deliciously into my bedroom. I drifted off into candied yam and cranberry dreams. Occasionally through the night, I heard Mom open the creaky oven door to squirt the turkey baster.

 

Early the next morning, the entourage of extended family and invited guests began to parade through our front door. Grandma and Grandpa Tacker, Grandma and Grandpa Blakely, Aunt Ivelle, Uncle Paul and cousins Donna, Paula and Kim. Pastor Jones’ family came, too. I loved Pastor Neal because he treated kids like big people. I was also excited because I had a crush on Buddy, the eldest Jones boy. He didn’t know I was alive.  All he cared about was who would get the gizzard.

 

Bedlam erupted as all the cousins tore through the house. Aunt Ivelle and Grandma Moy guffawed with giggles so loud they broke the sound barrier. The men slapped each other on the back and fought over who would carve the turkey. (The carver had squatting rights to pre-dinner turkey tasting.) The dads wrestled the TV remote away from the kids as the Macy’s day parade processed down Broadway, quickly flipping channels to find the big game. Those thanksgivings were celebrated before the days of multiple flat screen TVs and video games, so my cousins, sister, Buddy and Betsy played hide and seek and told ghost stories until the dinner bell rang.

 

At noon my father sanctimoniously gathered the troops from the sofa and backyard. We all held hands and bowed our heads for the blessing.

 

This was my big debut. Every year one child was chosen to say the pre-feast prayer. I closed my eyes and began to thank God that I could still hold my sister at arm’s length when she tried to punch me in the stomach. I praised God that Mom always left one warm chocolate chip cookie on the cookie sheet for me to scarf. On rare occasions, I grabbed a ball of raw cookie dough without her reproach. I glorified God that my buck teeth wouldn’t be shackled with rubber-banded braces until I was eleven. I was pleased that the ushers didn’t mind if I chomped my Wrigley’s spearmint gum during church, and I was especially blessed that Grandma B allowed me to dump as many marshmallows as I wanted into the sweet potato casserole.

 

Just as I started to get rolling, Daddy elbowed me and quietly suggested that I be thankful for more important things. (After all, Pastor Jones was listening, too.) So I puffed out my chest, took a deep breath and pontificated in hallowed tones.

 

“Dear LOOOORRRRDDDD, I thank Thee for Thy beauteous bounty and Thy sanctification.”  Sanctification was a big word I often heard in church and I assumed it had something to do with Santa’s vacation. He would definitely need one after the Christmas rush. I pleaded with God for the welfare of the children in Africa, beseeched him for every sick person I knew and interceded for the President of the United States (even if he were a Democrat.) Dad cleared his throat to urge me to wind it up, but I was on a roll. Finally, when the turkey was iced over and the biscuits were burnt, I said “Amen.” For some reason, no one ever asked me to bless the food again-at least not on Thanksgiving Day.

 

After dinner, I sank down into my bottomless beanbag chair, bloated and bulging. But in a moment of quiet reflection (and between burps) I did recall a few blessings of real significance. Mom and Daddy had taken me to church since before I could crawl. I met Jesus at seven. Lana Rouse, my best friend, asked Jesus into her heart when I told her how He much He loved her. We were baptized on my birthday in matching dresses. I was so thankful my parents loved each other, and that I had a cute little sister. I was so pleased I had nice teachers at school and friends who hung out with me even when I was cranky. I was glad Mom read me More Little Visits with God at bedtime. She told me that Jesus put little children in His lap and held them tight. At that moment, I felt like He was hugging me tight, too.

 

My heart warmed as I felt God’s smile and His peace. Maybe Thanksgiving wasn’t such a lame holiday after all. Maybe it was the best day ever!

Taken from Julie's Story, www.preachitteachit.org