Tag: SalesGiving

  • SalesGiving

    Thanksgiving is supposed to be all about food, family, and gratitude. These days it seems like it is about scoping out Black Friday sales and camping out in front of Best Buy.
    In the past few years it seems like companies have taken Black Friday sales to the extreme with most stores opening their doors for sale at 6 P.M. on Thanksgiving Day. I may be a traditionalist, but isn’t the point of a Black Friday sale that it takes place on Black Friday? In recent years, companies have started creeping back the hours; first moving to 4 A.M., then midnight, then they gave up all pretenses and opened at 8 P.M. Thanksgiving Day. However, it seems like they have gone as far as they can go because last year they started opening at 6 P.M. and this year will probably be the same.
    Along with the encroaching Black Friday sales is the new practice of skipping over Thanksgiving entirely. Most stores do not even bother to wait until after Halloween to put out the Christmas decorations. I do not know many small children, but I imagine that, especially in Southern California where the leaves only change color from lack of water, the dearth of fall decorations might confuse them. In the monochromatic area of Southern California, the only semblance of fall we had were the Pumpkin Spice Lattes and fake leaf decorations.
    I find it equally depressing that the holiday we decide to forget is the holiday made to celebrate thankfulness and family and instead we focus on holidays where we beg strangers for candy or we receive presents from family. Then on Thanksgiving, when we are finally forced to accept the holiday, we spend the day camping out in the cold so we can buy things at low prices.
    Feel free to stand in line for stores decorated in tinsel, but at the very least remember that Thanksgiving is supposed to be about turkey, pumpkin pie, and celebrating our good fortune.