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For most of us today, comparatively, every day is a feast, and many of us approach the winter holidays with a grim mistrust of the pleasure we're supposed to be making: How much weight am I going to gain this season? How many holiday parties am I supposed to juggle? Call me an uptight Seattleite, but celebrating abundance with more abundance sometimes seems as crass as roast lambs covered in gold and peacocks sewn back into their own feathers.
Rather than putting out the "groaning board," perhaps we should reconsider the feast. If the feast is the opposite of privation, what is it we are lacking? A sense of connection to the food we eat? A feeling of belonging to our own community? Or the recognition of the sacrifice that gives meaning to excess? For this year's holidays, perhaps feasting could mean driving an hour out of town to buy a turkey from the farmer who raised and slaughtered it. Maybe it means giving your neighbors bottles of the cordial you made this summer from the plum tree in your backyard. Perhaps it simply means eating and drinking consciously—not thinking about calories but about the astounding systems we Americans have created to supply feasts for our millions of tables. In the age of assured abundance, perhaps gratitude for this accomplishment is what we lack the most.