The most recent iteration of this column came in 2020; parts of it date back fifteen or more years. The cover artwork was created by the inimitable Anthony Beard.
Consider it a quasi-retired blogger’s fallback credo in times of holiday-inspired gluttony.
“Cutting and pasting leaves more time for mandated eating and drinking.”
Over a period of years, I’d pause only momentarily to update the previous Thanksgiving Day column before rushing off to Vietnam Kitchen for the Baylor family’s holiday tradition of K-8 or clay pot catfish, and often both.
Ironically, this habit of appending something topical to hurriedly regurgitated past musings soon came to resemble the procedure at family gatherings occurring throughout the nation during this uniquely American celebration.
Unfortunately, Vietnam Kitchen ceased being a factor in 2015, when the restaurant commenced a fresh tradition of its own and began closing on Thanksgiving Day. 2016 found us vacationing in Catania, Sicily, where I swapped Southeast Asian staples for Pasta alla Norma, followed by a delectable mixed grill of horse meat.
With each bite I dreamily pondered revisionist Kentucky Derby thoughts.
Abroad again in 2019 (be still, my throbbing heart), our Thanksgiving meal was taken at Gostilna Pri kolovratu, a cafe and eatery in Ljubljana, Slovenia. Located strategically opposite the cathedral, this restaurant dates to 1836 and has been recently revitalized by new ownership. Sadly, it seems not to have survived the pandemic.
The food at Gostilna Pri kolovratu was impeccable: barley soup with sausage; Vodnik salad from the 1799 “classic” Slovene cookbook (local greens, beets, cauliflower, hard boiled egg); lamb knuckle (sun-dried tomato and balsamic reduction); ribeye steak. The wine was Slovene merlot and the parting glass Pelinkovac, a bitter herbal liqueur. We actually had our dessert of Prekmurska gibanica (layered cake) and štruklji dumplings earlier in the day while strolling, not realizing an evening return was in the offing.
This year we’re cooking at home with the help of turkey tenderloins prepared in the crockpot, and while normally I’d prepare for the task by going to the store — the package store, that is no sense interfering with THAT most noble and enduring of traditions — this year my legacy as a practitioner of the drinking arts, whether on Thanksgiving or any other delightfully pagan occasion, is complicated by hip replacement surgery in five days.
I’m playing it straight, and taking my drugs. Eating? Yes. Drinking? Not until I can navigate the path to the bar without leaning on a cane.
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It will surprise no one to learn that it isn’t my habit to “give thanks” in clichéd terms to non-existent deities using code language I personally find meaningless, although from each according to his credulity, to each according to his needs.
This isn’t to imply that I refrain from thankfulness.
Top billing goes to Diana, who is my rock, followed closely by friends both old and new. They comprise a diverse extended family and are greatly appreciated.
With the advent of Pints&union in 2018, the family has grown.
I can’t put into words what this pub-building experience has meant to me. In the aftermath of my career at NABC, it was understood that a stint in the wilderness would be necessary to purge and cleanse. Joe Phillips needed a rhythm guitarist, and here I am, doing what I do best. It has been redemptive, and I’m very appreciative.
That asshole shouldn’t have fired me, but here we are — and there he goes, fleeing New Albany for Louisville.
Anyway, I’m still benefiting from the three years of civic notoriety (2016 – 2018) as an under-employed dissident and “non-person.” It afforded me unprecedented opportunities to learn and felt like a graduate degree without the onerous tuition — and I’m thankful for the education. Any day is wasted without an opportunity to learn, and a whole new stack of books awaits. I’ve read more during the past few years than at any time since college, and it has kept me sane.
Overall, I’m constantly reminded of my good fortune after more than six decades on this planet. There has been lots of dumb luck, and I’ve also “made” some of my own breaks. Serendipity and opportunism both have played roles. I’ve worked, worried, absorbed and forgotten in equal measure, with time still on the clock for restorative boreassing.
Balance. That’s always the most important thing.
For a quarter-century, until the ownership coalition at NABC dissolved, I was able to make a living from drinking beer, most often in my natural preferred habitat of the public house. It was a business, but at the end of the day intangibles and ideas mattered far more to me.
They still do, in spite of the way the Pints&union gig ended. I won’t let him take that away from me in a spiritual sense.
Being in a position to educate and challenge always was the real motivation, because the pub truthfully remains the poor man’s university. I tried to make my former workplace perform this function as often as humanly possible, and I did my level best to reformat the experience at Pints. If an opportunity arises at a new venue, so it will recur.
One thing I don’t regret at all is the absence of filthy lucre.
There were times when a higher percentage of it might have been useful, but I remain a reluctant capitalist. I’ve never been rich and likely never will be, but I’m delighted to stand on my record when it comes to teaching, agitating, creating lasting memories and trying to get to the heart of the matter — whether it’s beer, localism, travel, complete streets, running for mayor, music or all the above, tied together as they should be, sensibly and coherently, because absolutely nothing exists in a vacuum.
Legacies needn’t depend on wealth. They’re about doing what you can, while you can, as best you can, and producing a body of work impervious to calculations of interest, percentages and historical revisionism. Decades later, if someone smiles because they recall good times at the pub, then it’s the very best return imaginable on my time and investment.
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As an aside, there aren’t many parts of my first career in business that I genuinely miss. It was time to go after 2015, and I went. I’m writing about those years right here.
However, I do miss some of the crazy things we were able to organize during the “imperial” period, such as Saturnalia, the annual celebration of winter seasonal and holiday beers. From 2004, Saturnalia was calibrated to begin each year on the day after Thanksgiving, and to run through Christmas.
I liked it far better than Gravity Head.
In pre-Christian Rome, Saturnalia was the annual winter solstice celebration coinciding with the feast days for Saturn (the god of sowing and the harvest), Consus (god of the storage bin) and Opa (goddess of plenty). Many of our contemporary winter holiday traditions derive from Saturnalia’s pagan roots, including the hanging of wreaths and garlands, donations to the needy, prayers for peace, time off work to be enjoyed with family, and of course eating, drinking and merriment.
There was a resonance to Saturnalia because so many fine people return home for the holidaze. It always seemed to me that winter seasonal beers provided the most suitable accompaniment to the joys of reconnecting, sharing war stories, and remembering those who no longer are with us — the folks I’m very thankful to have known while they were here on earth.
As this column heads for the stretch, it’s time for some boilerplate.
A few years ago in the Jeffersonville Tom May Good News Bugle, I made an observation.
There’s never any better time than Thanksgiving for an iconoclast’s thoughts to be made public.
Naturally, it’s futile to expect anyone to read my outpouring of words Thursday, on the holiday itself. Given the inability of many New Albanian readers to wade through my commentary without scratching their heads in confusion, it’s plainly impolite to ask them to waste valuable time gnawing leftovers to engage in a frustrating, household-wide search for seldom-used dictionaries and thesauruses.
But I am nothing if not stubborn, so let’s revisit the notion of “iconoclast”:
1. A breaker or destroyer of images, esp. those set up for religious veneration.
2. A person who attacks cherished beliefs, traditional institutions, etc., as being based on error or superstition … rather like your humble correspondent.
Regular readers know my heroes have always been iconoclasts. From Socrates through Tom Paine, and not exempting 20th-century polemicists like H. L. Mencken, there’s nothing as thrilling as an iconoclast taking a headlong swipe at unexamined assumptions.
The most wonderful aspect of iconoclasm is that personal dissipation does not pre-empt the message. It actually may enhance it.
Consequently, it is my duty to remind you that Thanksgiving, while perfectly enjoyable from a hedonist’s standpoint, and wholly conducive to this bibulous trencherman’s standards, actually stands for something of importance.
This certain “something” isn’t the prevailing pastel-colored viewpoint of Puritans and Natives merrily gathering for a quaint New England picnic, pausing only occasionally from the consumption of corn chowder and non-alcoholic cranberry wine to pray before their respective deities.
The need for apologetics aside, and whether or not Squanto miraculously facilitated a peaceful first Thanksgiving at Plymouth Rock, the subsequent history of the white man on the North American continent featured the unabated slaughter of Native Americans, incessant pillaging of the environment, and an exculpatory doctrine of “manifest destiny” interwoven with prevailing religious belief, as intended to ease the consciences (if any) of those pulling the triggers.
We’ll leave the open approval of African-American slavery, emanating for many generations from Christians occupying American pulpits, for another day of faux “thanks.”
In the context of real American history, and to the exclusion of mythology and wishful thinking, the holiday we term “Thanksgiving” is ironic, to say the very least. I prefer reflections on all human history to be in accordance with the record, and as events actually occurred, without the tidying impulse to obscure and sanitize them.
I accept that people in all places and times do what they can with what they have, and believe that the best we can hope for is to learn from the past in the hope of learning worthwhile lessons and avoiding mistakes. In my opinion, the worst error of all is to misrepresent the historical record to justify theological needs.
Like what happened to Jeff Speck’s traffic study when it finally was “implemented” beyond recognition for maximum monetization by New Albany’s resurrected, non-book reading Orwellian cadres.
Yes, I observe Thanksgiving, too. It’s just that I do so realistically, dispensing with personality cults and fake facts.
Meanwhile, America’s Christmas shopping season started on July 4, and it will reach a crescendo on the day frenzied pop culture vultures have dubbed Black Friday.
Pavlov’s overworked and fever-ridden mutt can be expected to salivate continuously as university economics school analysts (I’m gazing at you, IU Southeast) read imported tea leaves to guess whether holiday season retail sales will be sufficient to keep Wal-Mart, Best Buy, Home Depot and Meijer’s solvent for another year as Amazon’s dark clouds continue to roll ever closer toward a One Store State.
I prefer the idea of Plaid Friday, and shifting my shopping to independent small businesses. But at least there’s food on Thanksgiving, even if the Vietnamese joints are all closed. Iconoclasm aside, I always enjoyed the traditional Norman Rockwell bird-spread. This year we’ll enjoy a scaled-down version. In 2025, who knows where we’ll all be?
After all, to each his and her own tradition. May yours be peaceful, and not harmful to others. As they say in Haiphong: Một hai ba, yo! The phrase means “cheers” — or maybe it’s “someone bring me the leftovers.”