This essay explores effective family communication strategies during holiday gatherings, specifically focusing on Thanksgiving family meetings. The author examines how to navigate family conflicts respectfully, balance different traditions and viewpoints, and create inclusive environments for meaningful dialogue. Through personal reflection, the essay demonstrates the importance of choosing battles wisely, addressing uncomfortable topics directly but diplomatically, and fostering communication that reduces rather than increases family conflict.
In most households, Thanksgiving is a time where families can exist in a place without metaphorical walls between people and ideas, and share conversation in a common context. But just as the Mbongi conversation is aimed at creating a more socially stable life, Thanksgiving family meetings must also be conducted with sensitivity. I do not always see eye-to-eye with my husband’s family about how to cook the family turkey or sides, for example, but I have learned not to present my ideas in a confrontational manner. I try to be the bigger person, and turn conflicts about what are ultimately unimportant matters like food into a discussion, rather than an argument. I have learned to pick my battles without demeaning myself (or my efforts at cooking).
I try to make sure that there is room for everything everyone wishes to bring to the table, including different foods, significant others, and topics. There is a delicate matter of balancing being tolerant of other people’s points of view, however, and not sticking up for what is right. I want to be tolerant, but not a doormat. I think over the years I have come to embrace, more and more, the value of communicating in a respectful fashion, rather than bottling up my feelings and thoughts. But when I speak, I try to be very conscious of separating those feelings from those thoughts.
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