2021
November
24
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 24, 2021
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

To call the past few years a time of upheaval is a pretty huge understatement. Now we’re witnessing what economists are calling the Great Resignation, the unprecedented decision by many Americans to voluntarily quit their jobs and ask what they really want from life.

In some ways, this time of year is about doing just that. Yes, there are big meals and presents and holiday music. But amid all that is time for reflection on what really matters.

Which raises the question: Given all we have been through – what we have learned about the preciousness of life, the amazing diversity of our humanity, the fleeting joys and persistent struggles – is it possible that we are essentially renovating our societies?

Renovations take no small amount of scaffolding and disruption. The Great Resignation might also be called the Great Reconsideration. Our expectations are changing, recalibrating along higher hopes for equality and fairness, compassion and safety, freedom and responsibility. Those are some big-ticket items. They might require punching through a few walls or some rewiring. But even amid the dust, this season shows us glimpses of what might come.   

Maybe the lesson of any of our seasonal holidays is exactly what all the Hallmark cards say it is – that gratitude and goodwill and grace do matter, and that taking time to reorient our lives around them renews us. So this Thanksgiving, whether we’re at home or eating a meal with thousands of friends at Fort Bragg, it’s worth considering that the renovations we most need are the very things we are now pausing to celebrate.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Cooks gather fresh produce and other ingredients from a huge refrigerator in a kitchen at Fort Bragg in North Carolina. It takes nearly a year to prepare for the base's Thanksgiving feast of thousands.

The Explainer

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Calabaza en tacha is pumpkin cooked in brown sugar syrup with cinnamon sticks and orange slices. It is traditionally served on Día de Muertos, Day of the Dead, in regions across Mexico.
Courtesy of Martha Boles
Martha Mae Dorsey Boles, shown here in her late 20s, recently turned 103. She remembers growing up with a boy and girl who would later become jazz artist Nat King Cole and Pulitzer Prize-winner Gwendolyn Brooks.

The Monitor's View

AP
Afghan refugee girls watch a soccer game from a distance near Ft. McCoy, Wisc.

A Christian Science Perspective

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Kirkikis/iStock/Getty Images Plus

A message of love

Leah Millis/Reuters
President Joe Biden high-fives 16-month-old Breklyn Petroelje as he gathers with U.S. service members and military families during a Thanksgiving event at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, on Nov. 22, 2021.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. With the Thanksgiving holiday in the United States Thursday, the next issue of the Daily will be Monday, Nov. 29. But keep an eye out for a special edition on Friday that showcases our new podcast on People Making a Difference.

More issues

2021
November
24
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