Off Topic A place to kick back and discuss non-Monte Carlo related subjects. Just about anything goes.

What are you Thankful for ?

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
  #1  
Old 11-24-2010, 12:40 PM
Space's Avatar
5 Year Member3 Year Member1 Year Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Beach`in Florida
Posts: 33,585
Question What are you Thankful for ?

Hi Member's,
Besides `Life & your Monte Carlo
What are you Thankful for
in 2010 ?
* Please post/share your thoughts.
We will look forward to reading them.


Thanksgiving History: First Pilgrims in the New World

- The history of the first Thanksgiving began in September 1620, when 102 passengers aboard the Mayflower ship sailed from Plymouth, England, to the New World. The Pilgrims set their sights on land ownership, prosperity and the opportunity to freely practice their Christian faith without the oppression of the Church of England .
The Pilgrims' uncomfortable voyage across the Atlantic lasted 66 days. They stopped near the tip of Cape Cod, but they had intended to drop anchor at the mouth of the Hudson River, much further south.
They crossed Massachusetts Bay a month later and established a village at Plymouth.

Most of the colonists remained aboard the Mayflower because of the first harsh winter, but suffered illness and exposure. Only about half of them lived to see the first spring in the New World, according to History.com .
In March they began lengthy and positive relationships with local Indians who taught them how to cultivate the land.
After the Pilgrim's first corn harvest proved successful in November 1621, Gov. William Bradford organized a celebratory feast with the colony's Native American allies. That first Thanksgiving feast lasted three days.
The Pilgrims held a second Thanksgiving celebration in 1623 after a drought threatened their crops. The concept spread throughout the region and nation for the next few centuries.
President Lincoln scheduled Thanksgiving for the final Thursday in November in 1863 as a time to ask God to heal the nation torn apart by the Civil War. President Franklin Roosevelt in 1941 signed a bill making Thanksgiving the fourth Thursday in November.


From your Monte Carlo Family
 

Last edited by Space; 11-24-2010 at 12:43 PM.
  #2  
Old 11-24-2010, 01:04 PM
Space's Avatar
5 Year Member3 Year Member1 Year Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Beach`in Florida
Posts: 33,585
Default

10 Reasons to Be Thankful





Count your blessings, we're told, but it's just not in our nature. We'd rather count our problems. Our species survived by reacting instantly to threats, and the ancient humans who stopped to smell the roses made easier targets for predators.

Today, the predators are mostly gone, but we're still so primed to pay attention to bad news that we tend to ignore what's going well. As soon as we solve one problem, we take the progress for granted and find a new cause for alarm. Every now and again it doesn't hurt to take stock of just how good we have it. Start counting:

1. Free time
As much as we complain about being busy, the typical American has more free time than ever-more than five hours per day, according to time surveys by the U.S. Census Bureau and researchers at the University of Maryland and Penn State. That's a gain of nearly an hour since 1965 and a gain of about four hours since the 19th century. In Victorian England, when life expectancy was only about 50, workers put in 60-hour weeks, from age ten until they died.

If you feel too busy, it's probably only because you're doing so many other things than work. Over the course of a lifetime, you typically spend no more than 20 percent of your waking hours on the job, and experts say there'll be even more free time in the future as life expectancy keeps increasing and work hours keep shrinking. By 2050 in the industrialized world, others project, the average workweek will be just 27 hours.


2. Peace

Wars and terrorist attacks will always make headlines, but it's remarkable how many of the world's 6.7 billion people now live in peace. In recent decades, despite the growth in population, the number of war casualties around the world has declined, according to the Human Security Report Project from Canada's Simon Fraser University. And despite a new fear of terrorism following 9/11, terrorist casualties have been declining in recent years.

In some earlier generations, a quarter of the male population died violent deaths. Over the past century, even counting the world wars, a person's chance of dying from war or violent civil strife was less than 2 percent, according to John Mueller, a professor of political science at Ohio State University. That means that the scourge of war is now comparable to the statistical risk of driving a car in the United States.

3. A roomier American dream
While some people are struggling to keep their homes, the vast majority of Americans still have plenty to be thankful for when they walk through the front door. In 1950 the typical new American house had one floor with 1,000 square feet, two bedrooms, and one bathroom-and even that bungalow was beyond many people's means. Nearly half of Americans didn't own their homes, and more than a third of homes lacked complete plumbing facilities.

Today, more than two thirds of Americans own their homes, and the typical new house has two floors, at least three bedrooms, two and a half baths, and more than 2,200 square feet of space for the family.

4. The reader's revolution
In 1970 barely half the people in the world were literate, and many of them could afford only a few books. Middle-class people needed installment plans to afford an encyclopedia. Local libraries offered a limited selection of books; new titles went on sale in bookstores but soon disappeared unless they were bestsellers.

Today, more than 80 percent of the world's people can read, and 22 percent have access to the greatest library in history. The Web provides classic books and reference works like Wikipedia free of charge, and the online network of booksellers means that no book ever really goes out of print. Whatever it is, old or new, someone somewhere will sell it to you, often at a bargain price.


5. The horn of plenty
The royal dinners at Versailles might have had glitzier place settings, but Louis XVI would gaze enviously at the food in a middle-class home or restaurant today: kiwifruits from New Zealand, South African peppers, Thai pineapples, Italian gelato. He'd be amazed, too, at the way we take fresh produce, fish, and meat for granted in every season.

The king's subjects, of course, would be even more envious. France was one of the world's richest countries in the late 18th century, but the average Frenchman consumed less than 2,000 calories per day-about the same level as people in the world's poorest countries consumed in the middle of the 20th century. Today, the typical person in a poor country consumes 2,700 calories daily, a nutritional improvement made possible by farmers growing more food at lower cost.

While the occasional food shortage or price spike grabs our attention, the long-range trend is what really matters. While incomes have risen since 1950, the inflation-adjusted price of food has declined by 75 percent, according to the World Resources Institute. So it represents a smaller and smaller portion of our paychecks.

Food is so plentiful that in many countries, the old concerns about hunger have been replaced by worries about obesity.

6. More wilderness
Once you travel beyond the sprawling exurbs of America, you'll find plenty of open space and peaceful forests. Many of the prairies and woodlands cleared by settlers have returned now that the land is no longer needed for agriculture.

In recent decades, America has gained 70 million acres of wilderness, which is more than all the land currently occupied by cities, suburbs, and exurbs, according to Peter Huber, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute. And more people than ever can get to that wilderness because of a technology that we now routinely curse …

7. The modern automobile
Granted, cars emit greenhouse gases and create maddening traffic jams, but consider what else they do. Compared with the models on the road in 1970, today's cars burn less gasoline per mile and emit 98 percent fewer pollutants. That's why, despite the doubling of the number of cars, there's much less smog in the air.

The basic sedan today offers more creature comforts and safety than the luxury cars of old. The fatality rate has declined sharply, and cars have become so reliable that it's rare to come upon that once-routine sight on the shoulder of the road: a driver forlornly staring under the hood.

8. The platinum age of television
Forget the so-called golden age of TV. Shows from the '50s look positively primitive compared with Mad Men, 30 Rock, or The Amazing Race. When a few networks had to appeal to the lowest common denominator, television really was a wasteland-just as Hollywood so often churns out mediocrity when it's aiming for box office blockbusters.

With hundreds of channels today, TV producers don't have to please everyone, so they can appeal to niche audiences with quirky programs: sophisticated dramas, edgy comedies, and documentaries that aren't just educational but riveting. When children are happily learning about Mayan engineering on the History Channel or quasars on the Discovery Channel, that box is no longer the boob tube.

9. Retreat from Armageddon
During the Cold War, the United States and the former Soviet Union had about 50,000 nuclear warheads aimed at each other. Since then, they've agreed to get rid of 90 percent of them, and tens of thousands of those weapons have already been eliminated. As Gregg Easterbrook observes in his book The Progress Paradox, “Historians will view nuclear arms reduction as such an incredible accomplishment that it will seem bizarre in retrospect so little attention was paid while it was happening.”

10. Memories
The gift of longer life has usually been accompanied by the loss of memories, but we'll be luckier than our grandparents. Besides the new memory-improvement drugs being developed, we've got digital photos and videos and e-mails to recall our best personal moments and the Web to instantly help us remember who sang that song or which year the blizzard hit.


In the past, only nobles could hire scribes to write their histories and artists to depict their deeds. Today, we all have records of our lives to pass on to our descendants, to comfort us as we age, and to remind us, every now and then, to count our blessings.
From Reader's Digest -



One of the many things I'm happy & thankful for is the
internet & having a computer


Please come out & post what you are
Thankful for ?
Oh, I'm thankful that you have a computer `2 : )
Thanks for all your contributions to our
Monte Carlo Family
 
Attached Thumbnails What are you Thankful for ?-n253421755515_9182.jpg  

Last edited by Space; 11-24-2010 at 01:18 PM.
  #3  
Old 11-24-2010, 01:58 PM
Montelicious's Avatar
Monte Of The Month -- December 2010
Monte Of The Month -- November 2014
5 Year Member3 Year Member1 Year Member
iTrader: (3)
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Georgia
Posts: 4,861
Default

Something I remain thankful for is being lucky enough to have home cared for my Mother when she was diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor back in 2005. I could go into more detail but I will spare you. She only lasted 6 weeks and passed at home like she wanted and in no pain due to where the tumor was growing, but it is a very profound special sharing experience no one can ever take from me and one I will never forget. My Monte "The Black Rose" is a memorial to her. For those of you who still have your Mothers, appreciate every moment. Sorry, but holidays are still hard with her not here. I am also thankful for my niece and nephew and another nephew due to be born in Jan. I could go on but I think that is enough for now. Have a great Thanksgiving everyone.

Let's all give thanks for what we have, even the little things because remember there is always someone else out there that has it worse than us. Never take things or people for granted and treat every day you are still breathing as a gift!
 
  #4  
Old 11-24-2010, 02:32 PM
The Popcorn King's Avatar

Monte Of The Month -- July 2009
I'M NOT OLD, I'M JUST WELL MARINATED.
5 Year Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Henderson, NV
Posts: 6,996
Default

I'm thankful for another day in Paradise.
 
  #5  
Old 11-24-2010, 03:57 PM
Ricks 2006 SS's Avatar

Monte Of The Month -- May 2013
1 Year Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Albertville MN
Posts: 4,389
Default

I'm Thankful that all 4 of my Adult children are healty. All 8 of my grand kids are are as well. I'm thankful that I have a very beautiful loving family that cares for one another. And A loving wife that put up with my CRAP!!! I hope all you on here have a great weekend with your Family & friends......Rick
 
  #6  
Old 11-24-2010, 04:04 PM
Taz's Avatar
Taz
Taz is offline

Monte Of The Month -- March 2014
15 Year Member
10 Year Member5 Year Member3 Year Member1 Year Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Windsor
Posts: 18,646
Default

I'm thankful I don't have to go shopping this weekend, and put up with the insane people at the malls.
 
  #7  
Old 11-24-2010, 04:09 PM
Montelicious's Avatar
Monte Of The Month -- December 2010
Monte Of The Month -- November 2014
5 Year Member3 Year Member1 Year Member
iTrader: (3)
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Georgia
Posts: 4,861
Default

Originally Posted by Ricks 2006 SS
I'm Thankful that all 4 of my Adult children are healty. All 8 of my grand kids are are as well. I'm thankful that I have a very beautiful loving family that cares for one another. And A loving wife that put up with my CRAP!!! I hope all you on here have a great weekend with your Family & friends......Rick
You too Rick!
 
  #8  
Old 11-24-2010, 07:22 PM
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: USA
Posts: 548
Default

I am thankful for my caring family and my absolutely amazing girlfriend
 
  #9  
Old 11-24-2010, 08:40 PM
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: minnesnowda
Posts: 26
Default

oxygen, I wouldn't be where I am today without it
 
  #10  
Old 11-24-2010, 11:30 PM
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Little Rock, AR
Posts: 1,429
Default Thankful

Originally Posted by Montelicious
Something I remain thankful for is being lucky enough to have home cared for my Mother when she was diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor back in 2005. I could go into more detail but I will spare you. She only lasted 6 weeks and passed at home like she wanted and in no pain due to where the tumor was growing, but it is a very profound special sharing experience no one can ever take from me and one I will never forget. My Monte "The Black Rose" is a memorial to her. For those of you who still have your Mothers, appreciate every moment. Sorry, but holidays are still hard with her not her.
I still have my Mom. She's in a nursing home but she is doing as well as expected. She can't walk anymore and dementia is slowly taking her from me. I am having lunch with her tomorrow and will cherish the moment.
I am Thankful to have been adopted and raised by two loving parents and to be Living in country where we are free. I'm thankful for my job.....my girlfriend.......a home to live in....All of the Service Men & Women whoserve our Country.
Those of you who have your parents : Continue to show them Love, Honor and Respect but most of all....Love.
Happy Thanksgiving everyone !
Go Hogs !
 

Last edited by nascar43; 11-24-2010 at 11:32 PM.


Quick Reply: What are you Thankful for ?



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:42 PM.