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Spiritual Thanksgiving

Beyond the Turkey – A Spiritual Perspective on Thanksgiving

November 23, 2025 By Terry Swejkoski Leave a Comment

Thanksgiving often arrives with a checklist. We worry about the turkey being moist, the house being spotless, and the conversation staying polite. We stress over Black Friday deals and focus intently on what we have acquired over the last year. This is the holiday through the lens of the ego—a performance of abundance rather than an experience of it.

But what if we stripped away the performance?

When we look at this holiday through a spiritual lens, particularly one inspired by the principles in the book Consciously Live What You Feel, the day transforms. It shifts from a celebration of “having” to a profound recognition of “being.” Let’s explore how we can move from an ego-driven holiday to a spiritually grounded celebration of life itself.

The Ego’s Thanksgiving: “More is Better”

The ego thrives on comparison and accumulation. When we approach Thanksgiving from this mindset, gratitude becomes conditional. We are thankful because we got the promotion, because we bought the new car, or because things are going our way. This form of gratitude is fragile. It depends entirely on external circumstances.

The Trap of Conditional Gratitude

The ego says, “I will be grateful when…” or “I am grateful for this specific object.” While there is nothing wrong with appreciating material comforts, the ego uses them as a measuring stick for self-worth. If the turkey burns or a family argument breaks out, the ego’s version of Thanksgiving is ruined. The peace is shattered because it depended on perfection.

In this state, we aren’t truly present. We are either anxious about the future (Will everyone like the food?) or dwelling on the past (Remembering old family grudges). The ego keeps us trapped in a cycle of “doing” rather than allowing us to settle into “feeling.”

The Materialistic Distraction

Society often encourages an ego-centric Thanksgiving. The day is wedged between food consumption and goods consumption on Black Friday. The focus shifts rapidly from “Thank you for what is here” to “What can I get next?” This keeps us on a treadmill of desire, preventing the stillness required for genuine spiritual connection.

The Spiritual Thanksgiving: “Enough is Here”

A spiritual perspective, aligned with the teachings of Consciously Live What You Feel, asks us to look inward. It suggests that true abundance isn’t found on a dinner table but in the observer’s consciousness.

Gratitude as a State of Being

From a spiritual viewpoint, gratitude is not a reaction to good fortune; it is a state of being. It is the recognition of the life force that flows through us every moment. We stop looking at what we have and start appreciating that we are.

Our work at the Conscious Clarity Center always reminds us that our feelings are the gateway to our truth. When we consciously live what we feel, we stop suppressing our emotions to keep up appearances. A spiritual Thanksgiving allows space for all of it—the joy, the grief, the quiet moments, and the loud ones. We accept the present moment exactly as it is, without the ego’s desperate need to fix or control it.

Connecting Beyond the Surface

When we drop the ego’s defenses, our connection with others changes. We stop seeing family members as characters in our personal drama who need to behave a certain way. Instead, we see them as fellow souls on their own journeys.

This shift in perspective dissolves judgment. If the meal isn’t perfect, it doesn’t matter. If someone makes a snide comment, we can respond with compassion rather than defensiveness. We understand that their behavior comes from their own internal state, not from us. This is the freedom of conscious living.

Practical Steps for a Conscious Thanksgiving

How do we bridge the gap between these two perspectives? How do we move from the stressful demands of the ego to the peaceful acceptance of the spirit? Here are practical ways to shift your mindset this holiday.

  1. Set an Intention Before the Guests Arrive

Before the chaos begins, take ten minutes of silence. Sit with yourself. Set an intention to remain grounded in your feelings. Decide that your peace is more important than the event’s perfection. Remind yourself that you are not the host, the cook, or the entertainer—you are a spiritual being experiencing this day.

  1. Practice “Feeling” Over “Doing”

Throughout the day, check in with your body. Are your shoulders tense? Is your breathing shallow? The ego lives in tension; the spirit lives in relaxation. If you feel stress rising, step away. Breathe. Acknowledge the feeling without judging it. As Consciously Live What You Feel teaches, we must be willing to feel our truth to live consciously. Don’t paste a fake smile over genuine fatigue—honor where you are.

  1. Shift the Conversation

Ego-driven conversations often revolve around achievements, politics, or gossip. Try to steer the dialogue toward connection. Ask questions that invite depth:

  • “What has taught you the most this year?”
  • “What brought you the most unexpected joy recently?”
  • “How are you truly doing, on the inside?”

These questions bypass the ego’s resume and speak to the soul.

  1. Redefine the Feast

Instead of viewing the meal as a product to be consumed, view it as energy to be shared. Eat slowly. Taste the food. Appreciate the earth that grew it and the hands that prepared it. This mindfulness acts as an anchor, keeping you present in the physical reality of the moment rather than lost in mental chatter.

  1. Release the Need for Approval

The ego craves validation. “Did you like the pie?” “Is the house warm enough?” Let go of the need for your guests to validate your efforts. Your worth is not on a plate. Serve with love, and let that be enough. When you detach from the outcome, you are free to enjoy the process.

Embracing the Shadow Side of the Holidays

It is important to acknowledge that holidays can be difficult. For many, Thanksgiving brings up feelings of loneliness, loss, or past trauma. The ego tries to hide this, insisting that we should be happy because it’s a holiday.

A spiritual perspective offers a gentle alternative: acceptance.

If you feel sad, let yourself be sad, and if you miss a loved one, honor that grief. Consciously Live What You Feel encourages us not to run from uncomfortable emotions but to move through them. There is a profound holiness in grief when it is felt fully. It is a testament to love. By allowing yourself to feel, you are being more authentic than if you pretended everything was fine. That authenticity is the highest form of spiritual practice.

Conclusion: The Gift of Presence

This Thanksgiving, you have a choice. You can engage in the frantic dance of the ego, chasing a picture-perfect holiday that doesn’t exist. Or, you can step back and rest in the awareness of your own spirit.

The turkey will be eaten. The dishes will eventually be washed. The guests will leave. What remains is you.

By choosing to consciously live what you feel, you give yourself and your loved ones the greatest gift of all: your actual presence. You bring a sense of calm to the chaos and a depth to the shallow waters of social obligation.

Let this Thanksgiving be less about the stuffing and more about the soul. Let it be a day where you stop performing and start living.


Ready to dive deeper into authentic living? Give the gift this Christmas that will last a lifetime. Explore the transformative insights in Consciously Live What You Feel and begin your journey toward spiritual freedom today.


 

Filed Under: Emotional Well Being, Paradigm Shift, Spiritual Growth, Terry Swejkoski Tagged With: Conscious Living, Gratitude, Mindfulness, Spiritual Thanksgiving

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