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What do you do when Thanksgiving doesn’t feel like it used to? In this episode, Rhonda invites you into a gentle, honest conversation about family, gratitude, solo holidays, and how to create a Thanksgiving that truly honors where you are: full heart, messy feelings, and all.
Thanksgiving used to mean family, favorite foods, and leftovers until life shifted, families changed, and traditions faded. In this deeply personal episode, I share honestly about how I’ve learned to meet Thanksgiving as an adult: sometimes in a crowd, sometimes alone, sometimes grieving what once was.
We explore how to honor the bittersweet layers of this holiday, the gratitude, the loss, the pressure to pretend, and the freedom to choose something different. I talk about learning to check in with myself, finding new rituals like “100 gratitudes and 100 acknowledgements,” and discovering that your solo moments can be sacred, too.
Wherever you are this Thanksgiving: surrounded, solo, or somewhere in between, this episode is an invitation to presence, honesty, and gratitude for exactly who you’re becoming.
What You’ll Discover
Key Takeaway
Thanksgiving isn’t about recreating the past—it’s about honoring who you are, what you need, and how you want to show up today, with as much gratitude and gentleness as you can muster.
Key Quote
“I invite you to be grateful that you're on this journey to become more and more you. The journey to become more and more who you're meant to be. The journey to live the life your soul intended.”
Resources / Mentions
Invitation
Wherever and however you’re spending Thanksgiving, let yourself be present to what’s real for you, gratitude and all. Try the 100 gratitudes practice—even just a handful can shift your day.
If today’s Thanksgiving episode brought you comfort or insight, send it to a friend who could use a warm note right now. Reply and share—how have your holidays changed over time, and what does gratitude look like for you this year? Subscribe and leave a quick rating to support the Love Notes community.
By Rhonda BrittenWhat do you do when Thanksgiving doesn’t feel like it used to? In this episode, Rhonda invites you into a gentle, honest conversation about family, gratitude, solo holidays, and how to create a Thanksgiving that truly honors where you are: full heart, messy feelings, and all.
Thanksgiving used to mean family, favorite foods, and leftovers until life shifted, families changed, and traditions faded. In this deeply personal episode, I share honestly about how I’ve learned to meet Thanksgiving as an adult: sometimes in a crowd, sometimes alone, sometimes grieving what once was.
We explore how to honor the bittersweet layers of this holiday, the gratitude, the loss, the pressure to pretend, and the freedom to choose something different. I talk about learning to check in with myself, finding new rituals like “100 gratitudes and 100 acknowledgements,” and discovering that your solo moments can be sacred, too.
Wherever you are this Thanksgiving: surrounded, solo, or somewhere in between, this episode is an invitation to presence, honesty, and gratitude for exactly who you’re becoming.
What You’ll Discover
Key Takeaway
Thanksgiving isn’t about recreating the past—it’s about honoring who you are, what you need, and how you want to show up today, with as much gratitude and gentleness as you can muster.
Key Quote
“I invite you to be grateful that you're on this journey to become more and more you. The journey to become more and more who you're meant to be. The journey to live the life your soul intended.”
Resources / Mentions
Invitation
Wherever and however you’re spending Thanksgiving, let yourself be present to what’s real for you, gratitude and all. Try the 100 gratitudes practice—even just a handful can shift your day.
If today’s Thanksgiving episode brought you comfort or insight, send it to a friend who could use a warm note right now. Reply and share—how have your holidays changed over time, and what does gratitude look like for you this year? Subscribe and leave a quick rating to support the Love Notes community.