Laughter, the Best Medicine: Holidays: Ho, Ho, Ha! The Merriest Jokes, Quotes, and Cartoons
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“Thanksgiving dinners take eighteen hours to prepare. They are consumed in twelve minutes. Half-times take twelve minutes. This is not coincidence.” —Erma Bombeck
Last Christmas morning, after all the presents were opened,
it was clear that my five-year-old son wasn’t thrilled with the ratio
of toys to clothes he’d received. As he trudged slowly up the stairs,
I called out, “Hey, where are you going?”
“To my room,” he said, “to play with my new socks.”
“The one thing women don’t want to find in their stockings on Christmas morning is their husband.” —Joan Rivers
Editors of Reader's Digest
A trusted friend in a complicated world, Reader’s Digest is all about being real. Considered America's most trusted brand, Reader’s Digest simplifies and enriches lives by discovering and sharing fascinating stories, interesting ideas and exceptional experiences in addition to advice on health, home, family, food and finance. Looking for something to tickle your funny bone as well? Reader’s Digest has just what the doctor ordered. Our content is delivered in multi-platforms including print, digital, books, and home entertainment products.
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Laughter, the Best Medicine - Editors of Reader's Digest
Everyone who disappeared was plump…. I’m just sayin’.
Fowl Humor
Around noon on Thanksgiving Day, I saw our young newlywed neighbors, Pam and Chuck, emerging from their house. They were dressed up, and I assumed that they were on their way to Thanksgiving dinner with one or the other set of parents, both of whom lived in the area. Later that afternoon, I saw them again—dressed in sweat suits as they jogged by with a cheery wave. Still later I heard them exchanging hellos with my husband. They were again dressed up and going somewhere.
The next day, Pam explained: We didn’t want to offend either my parents or Chuck’s. They both have big traditional Thanksgiving dinners. So we ate one huge dinner with his family in the afternoon, came home to jog it off, then ate another huge dinner with my family in the evening.
—SONIA E. MASELLO
Last Thanksgiving morning, knowing that my sister had invited some of her husband’s relatives to dinner, I dropped in to see how she was coming along. The house was in a shambles, and her four little daughters were squabbling among themselves. When she came out of the kitchen to greet me, her hair was a mess, she had turkey dressing all over her hands, and flour on her face. Before I could say anything, she looked at me and muttered, Those damn pilgrims!
—MRS. NED C. CARLSON
While our son was in training at Fort Knox, we joined him for Thanksgiving Day dinner at the base. On leaving the mess hall, we passed the kitchen, and I asked him if they had electric dishwashers. Sure, Mom,
he replied. We just take a new recruit and plug him in.
—MRS. FRED PFEIFFER
A three-year-old’s report on Thanksgiving: I didn’t like the turkey, but I liked the bread he ate.
—ART LINKLETTER
As I was basting the beautiful turkey we were having for Thanksgiving and calculating that we might have enough left over for Sunday dinner, too, my nephew came into the kitchen to watch me.
How many stoppers are we going to have today?
he asked.
Stoppers?
I asked. What do you mean?
You know, all those courses you have first, to stop people from eating so much turkey.
—ELSIE CHASE
As the only vegetarian in my family, I often get tired of defending my food choices to other family members, especially at the large dinner gatherings we have on special occasions. I didn’t realize how often the subject is actually discussed until one day around Thanksgiving, when I picked up my six-year-old son, Jordan, from school. His class had made Thanksgiving turkey crafts using potatoes and paper feathers.
Jordan proudly presented his to me, announcing excitedly, Mom, this year we’ll finally have the kind of turkey even you can eat!
—CHARLOTTE REARDON
Many of us Kiowas have married palefaces,
but we remain proud of our Indian heritage. When my cousin invited her out-of-state in-laws for Thanksgiving dinner, a Kiowa relative asked who her guests were.
Oh,
she replied, the pilgrims came to eat with us today.
—ALLEN C. QUETONE
Setting the table for Thanksgiving dinner, our kids weren’t sure where to place some of the special dishes. After moving one dish, they noticed that juice from the cranberry sauce had spilled, leaving a large red stain on the tablecloth. Well,
quipped ten-year-old Emily, at least now we’ll know where to put the cranberry sauce next year.
—JULIE EMOND
I worked on a toll road, answering the phone, collecting money, and issuing toll tickets. One Thanksgiving Day a woman called to ask about road conditions on the turnpike. After I said everything was A-OK, she told me a friend was coming for dinner. Then came the stumper: If my friend just left from exit twelve,
she asked, what time should I put the turkey in?
—SANDRA SHIELDS
When an English business associate was visiting in our home one Thanksgiving, our young son asked him whether the English celebrated Thanksgiving.
Oh, yes, indeed,
replied our friend. But we celebrate it on the Fourth of July!
—DONALD W. DAVIS
The host was carving the turkey and taking requests.
White meat? Dark? Some of both?
One guest asked, Is that white good?
The host looked at him for a moment, then said solemnly, Nothing but the breast.
—JOHN A. CHARTERS
Thanksgiving is when one species ceases to gobble and another begins.
—R. E. MARINO
The manager of the cafeteria in a large eastern plant decided that his order of 350 turkeys for Thanksgiving dinner was more than would be needed. He called the purchasing department and asked them to tell the supplier to cut the order in half.
Four days before Thanksgiving, the order was received at the cafeteria loading platform. Sure enough: 350 turkeys, all neatly cut in half.
—ELISE TYNAN
I was amazed, when I returned home from school for Thanksgiving Day, to find a lavishly prepared dinner. You see, my mother is not what one might term a proficient cook. For a woman who, six months before, could have destroyed a can of vegetable soup, the preparation of such a handsome turkey with full trimmings seemed impossible.
Then my father said the blessing, and I understood. Our Father,
he began, we thank thee for this fine day. We thank thee for our fine son. And most of all, we thank thee for Harry’s Delicatessen, which made this dinner possible.
—MICHAEL WALKER
A teacher displayed pictures her second-graders had drawn after hearing about the pilgrims’ voyage and the first Thanksgiving. One drawing, by an army child, a veteran of many army moves, caught our attention. There, among the pilgrims, Indians, and turkeys, was a moving van with the name Mayflower
written on it.
—MRS. H. R. TODD
The pro football team had just finished practice when a turkey strutted onto the field.
I want to try out,
the turkey told the coach.
Stunned, the players stared as the bird caught pass after pass and ran right through the defensive line.
After 30 minutes the coach had seen enough. You’re excellent,
he said. Sign with us, and you’ll get a huge bonus.
Forget the bonus,
the turkey said. All I want to know is, does the season go past Thanksgiving?
—UNKNOWN
After years of cooking meals for four strapping sons, I found it hard to adjust to cooking for just myself. One Thanksgiving when the boys couldn’t make it home, I decided to have roast turkey anyway.
At the local poultry market, I took my time checking the birds, but they were all too large. Finally I asked the patient clerk if he had anything smaller.
Indeed we do, ma’am,
he said. We call them eggs.
—JOAN THOMPSON
At a family meeting to decide where to celebrate the holidays, my newest son-in-law turned to my daughter and said, Well, we have to have Thanksgiving and Christmas with either your mom or your sister.
Touched that he loved his new family so much, I started to hug him as my eyes misted over. Then he added, They have satellite dishes!
—FRANCES BRADLEY
For our first Thanksgiving, my wife’s parents came over for dinner. My bride roasted a beautiful turkey, which she brought to the table on a silver tray. With a very sharp knife, I carved it into lovely piles of thinly sliced white and dark meat. I smiled at my father-in-law, a well-known surgeon, and said, How was that for a stunning bit of surgery?
He laughed and replied, Not bad. Now let’s see you put it back together.
—CARL ROSS
My sister Donnelly is a whiz in the kitchen, while my other sister and I are culinary klutzes. So she was understandably hesitant when Maureen and I insisted on making Thanksgiving dinner on a visit to her house. After Donnelly left for work on the day of our big meal, we studied the oven manual, set the timer, and left to go skiing, feeling quite proud of our accomplishment.
The feeling lasted until six hours later, when we returned—to a nice hot oven and a raw turkey sitting on the kitchen counter.
—NANCY MARLATT
A friend’s college roommate was enjoying Thanksgiving dinner at home when he accidentally overturned his cup of tea. Forgetting that he was in the presence of his family, he released a flood of profanity. His grandmother, visibly shocked, said to him, You eat with that mouth?
—D. D.
No, I haven’t seen the cat since I put the turkey out to thaw.
After Thanksgiving dinner, the adults gathered in the living room to exchange reminiscences, while the children went into the family room to play. Suddenly our hostess noticed that an elderly relative was missing. Where’s Aunt Florence?
she asked. From across the room came a masculine drawl, Oh, she’s with the kids, bridging the generation gap.
—FLORENCE M. MORTIMER
Thanksgiving menu: roast turkey, candied yams, and pickled relatives.
—ARNOLD H. GLASOW
I was stuffing the Thanksgiving turkey when my 2½-year-old son, Joshua, zoomed into the kitchen and saw what I was doing.
With his eyes popping, he came to a quick stop and asked, Why are you stuffing sandwiches into the turkey’s pockets?
—DEIRDRE CASKENETTE
On Thanksgiving weekend, when my father was recuperating from surgery, his friendly and efficient nurse stopped by. Dad asked her if his doctor would be in to see him that day. No,
she replied, he’s home cooking turkey for his family.
Surprised, Dad asked how she knew so much about his affairs.
I’m his wife,
she said.
—CAREN SHUTTLEWORTH
For 30 years, frantic chefs have called the Butterball Turkey Talk-Line for tips on how to save their Thanksgiving dinner. Here are some of the less appetizing calls.
A disappointed woman phoned in, wondering why her turkey had no breast meat. After a conversation with a Talk-Line operator, it became apparent that the woman’s turkey was upside-down.
A gentleman called to tell the operator