Ink, Stiil,
Don't be surprised if your questioning isn't finished. What your - our - WSes did was horrendous, especially if you want to R. The answers were so awful to me that I couldn't take in the info and its implications the 1st time around. The big questions I asked again and again. And again and again. For years the Thanksgiving road trips were occasions on which I asked big questions that I feared I was forgetting the answers to.
Thanksgiving has a lot of grief and bitterness for me. We almost always traveled to my home town for the holiday, because my 90+ year-old mom lived there, and it was her favorite holiday.
It was on the Thanksgiving trip in 2010 that I realized something was very wrong with my W. Every other song played on the radio for 1,000 miles (each way!) was Taylor Swift's 'You Belong With Me' while my W was trying to reach her 'client' on her phone. What a terrible trip!
Then my mom died the day before Thanksgiving 3 years ago, because Covid 19 made her eat alone in her apt in assisted living, and no one knew she was choking on her lunch. (Well, yeah, the place gave her a call button, but she was too proud to wear it, which was part of her feistiness and charm. Seriously. Besides, life hadn't been fun for the previous 5 years. Mind you, she was fine until she broke her shoulder and lay on the floor for 18 hours - more refusal to wear the call button or remove decorative area rugs from between her BR and bathroom - which forced her into assisted living, made her give up her car, give up weekly bridge sessions, seeing friends, etc. As she lost her friends, she said, 'I have to make younger friends,' and she did. See? Charm, if you like feisty. )
Now we're only 800 miles from home with son and GS. It's still our favorite holiday. Despite our misfortunes around Thanksgiving, despite what's going on in this world, we still have much to be thankful for.
It's eminently possible for us to comprehend both the good and the bad in life. It's eminently possible to know that even while Thanksgiving is heavily impacted by a d-day or other recent grief within the past few years.
As Pearl Buck used to say (translated from Chinese), we eat a lot of bitterness in life. If that's what's top of mind, there's no getting around it. Feel the bitterness, but know that you can get past it and probably will - but it will take longer than you think it should.