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Rehumanizing Thanksgiving


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Start with Common Ground


You and Uncle Paul might disagree on literally everything politically (although I would challenge this, you probably have a few shared premises that you can build on) but you probably agree on the damage that Brian Kelly did to the LSU football program. The advice here isn’t to avoid politics altogether, but rather to start with some friendly topics that won’t trigger any immediate arguments.


If things turn political, take a stance of curiosity not interrogation


Our political ideologies don’t form in a vacuum. They’re created from our 

experiences, hopes and fears. None of us hold views that neatly match the stereotypes that the media portrays. Instead of escalating with a barbed “how could you believe THAT?” try “I’d like to understand your position, could you explain why you feel that way?”


Find the shared value underneath the disagreement


Chances are, you and your (card carrying) socialist cousin both care about helping people who are struggling, you just disagree on how to do it. Your pro-life aunt and your pro-choice sister both care about women's wellbeing, they have different ideas about what protects it. When you can name that shared concern, the conversation shifts from "you're a monster" to "we care about the same thing and see different solutions."


You don't have to have all the answers


"I don't know" is a completely valid response. You're allowed to say "That's a good question, I haven't thought about that angle" or "I'm still working through what I think about that." Admitting uncertainty keeps everyone involved from turning into mindless talking heads. You don’t HAVE to have a stance on every topic. 


Set boundaries without dehumanizing


It's completely fine to say "I'd rather not get into this right now" or "Can we table this conversation?" You don't owe anyone a debate over mashed potatoes. But there's a difference between "I don't want to talk about this" and "You're too ignorant to have this conversation with."


Remember: Your goal isn't to win Thanksgiving


You're not going to change Uncle Paul's mind between turkey and pumpkin pie. That's okay. Changing minds takes years of relationship, not one heated dinner conversation. Your goal is to plant seeds, maintain relationship, and model the dignity you want to see in the world.


This is hard work. Staying in relationship with people across deep disagreement, refusing to write people off, insisting that everyone, even the person who drives you crazy, has inherent dignity. It's the work Rehumanize does every day.


We build coalitions that shouldn't exist according to conventional politics. We bring pro-life advocates and death penalty abolitionists to the same table. We insist that human dignity doesn't stop at partisan boundaries.


Happy Thanksgiving from all of us at Rehumanize. May your turkey (or vegan alternative) be moist and your family conversations be humanizing.


 
 
 

Disclaimer: The views presented in the Rehumanize Blog do not necessarily represent the views of all members, contributors, or donors. We exist to present a forum for discussion within the Consistent Life Ethic, to promote discourse and present an opportunity for peer review and dialogue.

All content copyright Rehumanize International 2012-2025, unless otherwise noted in bylines.
Rehumanize International was formerly doing business as Life Matters Journal, Inc., 2011-2017. Rehumanize International was a registered Doing Business As name of Life Matters Journal Inc. from 2017-2021.

 

Rehumanize International 

309 Smithfield Street STE 210
Pittsburgh, PA 15222

 

info@rehumanizeintl.org

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