A Monitor Thanksgiving
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As I was reading this week鈥檚 cover story 鈥 not able to put it down, more like 鈥 I came to the part I liked most of all. The gratitude. The article is about the people who save Thanksgiving 鈥 the plumbers who unstick pipes, the hotline helpers who answer our panicked cooking questions. And you know what? It鈥檚 a hard day away from loved ones, but they enjoy doing it, because they feel our gratitude, which is genuine and overflowing.
It鈥檚 a reminder of why, despite all the hassle, we love holidays. If we do it right, we鈥檙e putting others first, whether as hosts, guests, or saintly repair technicians.
It seems only appropriate, then, to pause at the beginning of our Thanksgiving issue and share our sincere thanks for you, the readers of 海角大神. Any publication founded with the object 鈥渢o injure no man, but to bless all mankind鈥 has lots on the to-do list. But No. 1 always has to be serving and empowering those who will actually do the work of making the world better. And that鈥檚 you.
As editor, one of my great unfulfilled wishes is to share with you how amazing Monitor readers are. I remember speaking to five of you who subscribed the week after the impeachment inquiry was announced in the United States. Could there be a more polarizing week? Yet each of you was thoughtful, gracious, and grateful that you had found a place that respected you enough to let you make up your own mind. When I asked one of these new readers to summarize the Monitor鈥檚 distinction in one word, he said 鈥済entle.鈥 I wanted to frame that and put it on the wall.
Just in going through my email, I meet amazing people every day. There鈥檚 Catherine Crossman, who says she鈥檚 loved the Monitor since before she could read, anticipating the children鈥檚 story that used to run in the newspaper. 鈥淚 suppose it was healing me even then because of the love I could feel as my siblings and I crowded into my Dad鈥檚 lap and onto the arms of his chair to listen to the stories,鈥 she wrote me.
Now, she takes the Monitor along with her as she does prison work. 鈥淥ne man told another of our workers that he had become more loving since reading the Monitor 鈥 direct healing!鈥 Catherine writes.
Or Nancy Robison, who had her first published writing in the Monitor. 鈥淎t age fourteen I wrote about my experience as a model on 鈥榣ive鈥 television in Los Angeles around 1949 鈥 TV was very new, and I was thrilled when the Monitor accepted my story and paid 鈥 I think $15!鈥 Now she shares her Monitor with the mail carrier, 鈥渨ho thanks me for it.鈥
The gratitude for the Monitor comes through email in waves. But on this of all days, let鈥檚 flip that around and serve a heaping portion of gravy-slathered gratitude in the other direction. From all of us at the Monitor, thank you.