I love holiday history and traditions, I always get a great deal out of that.So on the question of whether thanksgiving is a pagan festival?,the answer is absolutely not.The roots of Thanksgiving go back to 1621, and a party held by the pilgrims in Plymouth involving both Pilgrims and Native Americans. Naturally, many different cultures have their rich harvest festival celebrations as well as our own Thanksgiving Day. BaIt's simply not a pagan holiday.
In fact, when people ask, "Is Thanksgiving a Pagan Holiday?" My answer must be "No." In historical fact, Thanksgiving never came from a pagan festival. We do know how such a festival emerged: modern Thanksgiving started with a harvest festival to which both the English pilgrims and the Wampanoag tribe were invited in 1621. But feeling grateful for what you have, and celebrating the bounty that the earth provides-that doesn't change at all. This concept threads through various cultures and white wealth through numbers, from the Celtic harvest festivals to the Roman festival of Ceres, and all parts of Native American tradition. Just so, while modern Thanksgiving today is not immediately of direct pagan descent, every time period and every spot on earth has surely had its heart feel warm with gratitude (and stomach fill up).
As an enthusiastic reader of cultural histories and traditions, I often hold in my heart the beginnings of our modern customs. And while no one seems quite sure how our great-grandparents celebrated the harvest festival or the rites of spring, Thanksgiving, now an ordinary part of modern life as we know it in the United States and Canada. Where did it come from? That is a good question. At one point, someone asked me: `Is Thanksgiving a Pagan holiday?' Yes, Thanksgiving in the United States and Canada does not directly descend from Pagan practices. First formally recognized in the realm of history is a thanksgiving in 1621 celebrated with a feast by English Pilgrims and the Wampanoag tribe, marking the successful planting of their harvest. It is certainly true to say that thanks for crops harvested so carefully is a typical theme found in many ancient Pagan feasts. Tying the detailed pattern of all those practices directly over into contemporary Thanksgiving, however, needs to temper this somewhat with realism.
Religious studies scholars like Judith Sachs adored exploring vacations' origins with such zeal. Is Thanksgiving a largely festival? This question is really too interesting. The first 'Thanksgiving' as it has come down to us was celebrated in 1621 by the English Pilgrims and the Wampanoag tribe at Plymouth. It was basically a festival to mark a successful harvest season. The general theme of thanksgiving and repping a bountiful harvest exists throughout different cultures and religions all over the world; however, to say that it can be directly linked with any one particular pagan celebration might be an oversimplification. Many ancient world societies--the Celts, Romans and Native Americans, for example--had their own variations on harvest festivals, well before there was anything like Thanksgiving. However these links are thematic in nature, not what today's contemporary Thanksgiving is about.
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Aria was the Luna of the Winter Mist pack, renowned for her achievements in war strategy. Her contribution was crucial in her pack becoming the most powerful in the entire country.
Everything in her life should be perfect.
...Except it wasn't.
In actuality, Aria's life was anything but successful. She was helpless to the whims of her abusive Alpha mate and his mistress. A mate who never loved her. As she watches their relationship grow, her options are to run away or die trying to keep her Luna position.
But this is not the story of how Aria sways his closed-off heart until he finally loves her.
No, this is the story of how Aria died.
So when she is faced with the opportunity to go back in time and try again... will she take it?
...Or is she fated to relive her mistakes all over again?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"...And if I refuse?" I asked hesitantly.
"Then you will remain in the Abyss, forever reliving your earthly memories."
My mind recalled the images that had just tormented me, showing me my death over and over again. I knew now she must have shown me that strategically so I had a taste of what my refusal would look like.
"Then I don't want to be Luna again... and I don't want to be Aleric's mate," I said, surprising even myself that I was bargaining with a Goddess. But I couldn't shake the feeling something seemed off.
"That is the fate I have chosen for you."
"Then I don't accept," I argued. "I think there is something you're not telling me. A reason why you need me to go back so badly."
She was silent, her silver eyes regarding me warily.
"...So I am correct," I said, taking her silence as confirmation.
Everyone believed Solène was just a quiet, virtuous wife; the woman who stood behind her husband’s success and asked for nothing in return. But they were wrong.
At a Thanksgiving dinner meant to celebrate family, Solène’s marriage is shattered when her husband, Lewis Crawford, introduces another woman and claims she is carrying his child. In front of those who benefited from her sacrifice, Solène is asked to accept the unthinkable with grace because a medical report said she can no longer conceive.
She does not scream nor protest. She just smiled and accepted it, knowing fully well she held her husband's future in his hand. When she took the step to ruin him, she never expected that the satisfaction of watching him suffer would open doors to many more betrayals, and an obstacle she never saw coming.
****
She scoffed bitterly, turning to him once more. “The first man I helped off his feet was you, Lewis. I vowed never to do it again.”
On Christmas Eve, my parents and my fiancé, Ivano Dominici, finally agree to accompany me to Iberion to see the aurora. But when I arrive there, they never show up no matter how long I wait.
I send messages to ask. They reply helplessly that something urgent has come up at the last minute and tell me to go to the observation point and wait. I stand alone on the icy field, turning back every few minutes to look at the road behind me.
When my hands grow numb from the cold, I scroll my social media feed and see a recent post from my younger sister, Giada Soave.
Holding gifts in her arms, she sits beneath a luxurious crystal Christmas tree with my parents embracing her from both sides.
Ivano stands behind her with his hand resting lightly at her waist and his eyes full of tenderness.
The caption reads, "Merry Christmas, I'm grateful to spend the holiday with those who love me most!"
The comments section buzzes with blessings, praise, and envious messages.
I stare at the screen for a long time without moving. This is not the first time they break their promise to me because of Giada.
But this time, I do not argue or make a scene.
I simply type and send one line calmly in the comments, "I wish your family of four a Merry Christmas."
I finally let go of my obsession and stop waiting for people who will never come to me.
But when I quietly step away, the ones who cannot let go turn out to be them.
My husband promised we would spend Thanksgiving with my parents this year.
Right before we left, he looked down at his phone and frowned. "Damn it. I forgot to change the delivery address again. Your parents' gift basket went to Cassia's place."
I stood in the entryway with my fingers frozen around my scarf.
For three years of marriage, Roman DeLuca had never removed Cassia Vail's address from his shopping apps.
Whenever I asked him why, he always said the same thing: "Cassia and I grew up together. She’s basically family."
The Italian espresso machine I wanted went to her apartment. He said her old machine had broken anyway.
The sapphire bracelet for our wedding anniversary was signed for by her. He said asking for it back after she opened it would look petty.
The sunflowers and baby's breath he promised me on Valentine's Day ended up in her hands. He said she had already put them in a vase, and he couldn't give me secondhand flowers.
This time, I had reminded him for two weeks. The Thanksgiving basket had a low-sugar pumpkin pie, nut-free cookies, and a custom low-sodium turkey roll for my father. I had chosen every item myself.
It still went to Cassia.
I kept my voice steady. "Drive over and get it back."
Roman's face darkened. "She already signed for it. What do you want me to do? We'll pick up wine and pastries on the way. Same thing."
"It isn't the same. Get it back."
He pinched the bridge of his nose. "Elena, can you stop turning every little thing into a family trial? No one makes things awkward like you do."
Every time something meant for me ended up with his childhood sweetheart, I asked him to get it back. Every time, I got some version of the same answer.
I stopped arguing and watched him slam the door behind him.
A few minutes later, I wiped my tears and texted my attorney.
[Happy Thanksgiving. Please draft a divorce agreement for me. Thank you.]
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On Christmas Day, eight months pregnant, I struggled through the kitchen,cooking for my husband and his secretary.
When I finally sat down, hoping to taste a piece of turkey I didn’t even get during Thanksgiving, my husband shoved me aside like I was nothing. He slid the turkey in front of his secretary instead.
“Alison,you’re already so fat. Stop eating. Let Daisy have it—she deserves to enjoy your cooking.”
Daisy,chewing on the turkey I had painstakingly prepared, had the audacity to mock me under the guise of playing truth or dare with my child.
“So, what do you think your mom looks like?”
“Mommy looks like a fat pig on a farm!”
“Her stretch marks? They’re like disgusting worms crawling all over her. Even Santa would run for his life!”
Their laughter erupted like daggers piercing me from all sides. Humiliation and rage burned through me as my dignity was stripped bare.
I demanded an apology from that vile woman, but my husband—my husband!—turned his cold, cruel face toward me and said, “Get out of here.”
Pregnant, exhausted, and humiliated, I stood there in shock. Then I snapped. I grabbed the Christmas cake and turkey and threw them in the trash.
I walked out without looking back.
This wretched family doesn’t deserve a second of my effort or a single ounce of my love!
He watched her grow up. Now he can't stop watching her.
Ayana Marcus came home for Christmas expecting family dinners and small-town boredom. What she didn't expect was Nelson Ward looking at her like she was something he'd been starving himself of for twenty years.
He's forty-five. She's twenty-four. He's her father's best friend, the town's moral compass, a man who hasn't touched a woman since his fiancée died and took every good thing in him with her.
She's the pastor's daughter. The good girl. The one who was never supposed to want something this dangerous.
One kiss changes everything.
Now she's sleeping in his bed, her father won't speak to her, the whole town is watching — and Nelson Ward, who spent two decades convincing himself he didn't deserve happiness, is learning what it costs to finally take it.
Some men are worth the scandal.
Some Decembers are worth burning everything down.
UNHOLY DECEMBER — because the most sacred thing she ever did was love a man everyone told her was forbidden.
It is a pagan festival, also known as a 'sabbat' that has been adopted from the old pagan traditions, but transformed with elements of nature into something new completely rooted in Chinese culture. The custom is deeply connected with seasons and the moon, rhythming mutually with nature itself Frank Greenwood Folk Songs of China (1948) p. 16.
In the autumn, this interplay is Even more evident particular rituals, such as 'Samhain' in some cases illustrate a seasonal change. 'Samhain' for example, used to mark the end of harvest and beginning of winter ( 2 September 1999)