Kudos to you David....we've done that as well. It's hard work, but it makes you realize what really matters. These folks usually go under the radar all year, so it feels good to lend a hand.goofyfoot wrote:Pointing my compass towards one of the downtown missions to help wash pots, pans, and utensils and serve meals to the down 'n out. Been doin' it for several years. Time was single men and an occasional single woman were queueing up. Breaks my heart to see mothers with young ones in tow lining up now. I find it tough to swallow that those in power allow this to continue to happen in America, the richest nation in the history of.....well, you catch my drift. Keep on keepin' on. Peace, out.....Goofyfoot.
This year, we're running the food drive, so we'll be running from the church to the place that serves the folks who need it.
Wednesday night, the cutting and chopping begins. We usually have about 30 +/- this year looks about the same so we need to get a head start. We'll be making two turkeys and a ham this year. We're usually up until like 2am getting everything ready.
Thursday always starts by watching the Thanksgiving Day parade in NY CITY and feel home sick for the first half of the day. TOO much to list for the menu, but we have 7 different types of potatoes, Chestnut & Sausage and sage stuffing AND Oyster Stuffing (REALLY OLD New England Recipe), but we should have enough left overs for about a week! Sounds GROSS but it is amazingly good!
BLACK FRIDAY, Janey & the kids drag me out at 4am to go to some forsaken store to get trampled looking for those insane sales. This became a tradition since we moved to Florida, I have NO IDEA why. The kids drive to add an extra bit of excitement to the day!
Saturday, I slip into a coma. When I'm able to move again, I practice a lot. I have about 60 songs to go over for Sunday services.
Sunday, play a good part of the day! The musical highlight of my week. Get home about 8pm and do the coma thing again.
