If you're not from the U.S. you might not be familiar with Thanksgiving, a holiday celebrated on the fourth Thursday in November (it's also celebrated on different dates in Canada, Liberia, and Grenada).
It's my favorite holiday. And the gayest:
1. It's in November, so it's cold outside, and dark at night like it's supposed to be. No one is forcing you to go out and "enjoy the outdoors."
2. There are no tv commercials depicting heterosexual couples giving each other gifts or watching in rapt joy as their children unwrap gifts.
3. There's no religious significance, so you won't feel guilty if you accidentally say "Happy Thanksgiving!" to someone who is Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, Wiccan, or atheist. Although sometimes vegans will lecture you.
4. Gay men spend many extra hours at the gym in anticipation of over-indulging on Thanksgiving. As a result, at Thanksgiving they're more buffed than at any other time of the year.
5. Everyone gets to demonstrate their culinary skill.
6. You only get Thursday and maybe Friday off work, so there's no time to take a plane ride 2000 miles to the place you grew up. Thus, "home" is no longer in the past, it's the place you are today, and "family" is what you make of it.
This Advocate cover shows Howard Cruse's character Wendel being served Thanksgiving dinner in bed. But why is the kid wearing a mask? Is he the famous Thanksgiving character, Zorro?
3. There's no religious significance, so you won't feel guilty if you accidentally say "Happy Thanksgiving!" to someone who is Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, Wiccan, or atheist. Although sometimes vegans will lecture you.
4. Gay men spend many extra hours at the gym in anticipation of over-indulging on Thanksgiving. As a result, at Thanksgiving they're more buffed than at any other time of the year.
5. Everyone gets to demonstrate their culinary skill.
6. You only get Thursday and maybe Friday off work, so there's no time to take a plane ride 2000 miles to the place you grew up. Thus, "home" is no longer in the past, it's the place you are today, and "family" is what you make of it.
This Advocate cover shows Howard Cruse's character Wendel being served Thanksgiving dinner in bed. But why is the kid wearing a mask? Is he the famous Thanksgiving character, Zorro?
7. If you do go home to visit extended family, Thanksgiving dinner is the traditional time for making Big Announcements, like "Guess what? I'm gay."
8. Most of the bars, clubs, and bathhouses have special Thanksgiving Day events, so you don't have to waste all Thanksgiving afternoon watching football.
9. The origin story, about 17th century Pilgrims and Indians coming together to share a meal, is an imperialist myth, masking a history of conquest and genocide. But it does lend itself to some interesting ideas for homoerotic revisions (picture from Crow821 on deviantart.com).
10. Gay people have a lot to be thankful for. They grew up in a culture where they told, over and over, that "discovering the opposite sex" was inevitable and universal, that no gay people existed except for grotesque monsters. And they survived.