Alternatively, to be more profound, it ought to be, "The Timelessness of Gratitude". For most of North America timeliness of gratitude is the highlight of the month of November, specifically on the last Thursday. That week is often one of, if not the busiest travel days of the year. It is also just about a month before another important day that is celebrated across all nations that subscribe to the Christian faith. Christmas, however, may have veered off a bit farther away from its original intended meaning when it seems to merely denote when people are thinking about whom to express their gratefulness, or to whom they will be grateful for in the aftermath of ripped wrappers, shredded ribbons and crumpled boxes heaped into a pile by late morning of the 25th. Those two months have become the highlights to outshine the rest of the year. That is when introspection can help us put everything in perspective.
Timeliness of gratitude must transcend the pages of the calendar.
"Timelessness: the quality of not appearing to be affected by the process of time passing or by changes in fashion". --- Oxford Dictionary
The expression of gratitude should therefore neither be bound by time nor changes in lifestyle or social and cultural evolutions.
Why then do we set only a particular segment of each year to be grateful?
Decades ago that now seems so far back in time, growing up in one of the central islands on a Pacific archipelago, a post war baby nurtured by shell shocked parents in 1946, barely a year after the country's liberation was a phenomenon of nature filling a vacuum - labeled later by sociologists as the "baby boom era". To have survived the conditions brought on a population of parents reeling from the ravages of war was as much a phenomenal feat as it was miraculous. For millions of children from that generation around countless parts of the world ravaged by war, the miracle was to last a lifetime of gratitude.
Seven years after that island was liberated, those post war babies, having survived against all odds, were now first graders in the public school system. It would seem strange, even incomprehensible, by today's standards, that those children who up to that point in their lives knew only one language - that of their native tongue - found their first day at school looking at their first grade books completely written in English.
Odder still was the fact that the entire archipelago was a Spanish colony for three hundred years prior to 1898 when after the Spanish-American War, it became a U.S. colony (or commonwealth, depending on who looked at it at that time) when Spain gave it up along with Puerto Rico and Cuba (where the Spanish-American conflict started). However, the U.S. granted the archipelago its independence fifty years later in 1946, immediately after the war; whence, the first Filipino baby boomers were born. That explains why the first books they were handed on their first day of school were entirely in English - a holdover from the American educational system; every postwar school teacher a product of it.
Some of those young children would often spend some of their idle time watching by the shorelines as big foreign ships come and go. Those huge tankers came to load sugar and molasses. Sugar cane was the island's main agricultural crop. They learned that their country was a huge exporter of sugar - the bulk of which headed for a "mythical" country far, far away.
And they all wondered what it was like to be in that far away land called America.
Stranger still was that in elementary school they were taught to sing "America The Beautiful" and learned about Thanksgiving. They had no realistic grasp of "amber waves of grain" or "purple mountain majesties" but they sung the song with gusto anyway. Even stranger was for those young kids to be singing "dashing through the snow", with no earthly way to imagine "what fun it is to ride and sing a sleighing song tonight", when tropical weather was all they knew, even in December.
I was one of those kids.
Growing up in a seaside town, in a poor barrio, kids my age somehow survived malnutrition and post-war living conditions. Some of us continued to dream, however fantastical the idea was of ever leaving the island for that mythical land.
At the city plaza stood a monument.
There are twenty five American cemeteries in five continents, in ten foreign countries - from Belgium to Tunisia where 130,000 U.S. servicemen lay permanently buried.