Hi, I’m Sara — mom of many, former detective turned advocate for a more intentional, rooted life. If you’ve been here before, you might’ve noticed it’s been a little quiet around The Simple Pursuit lately. Life has been full in all the best (and most stretching) ways — I had a sweet new baby, we packed up our life, and moved four states away. Somewhere in the middle of all that, I officially stepped away from my career to lean fully into this next chapter of slow, purposeful living.
Now that the dust has settled a bit, I’m excited to be back here with you — sharing what simplicity looks like in this new season. As the holidays approach, I want to talk about something that’s been on my heart: creating a simple Thanksgiving. Not the Pinterest-perfect kind, but the kind that’s rooted in presence, gratitude, and connection — where less really does mean more.
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The holiday season often grows louder, faster, fuller than our hearts can keep up with. I’ve lived it: juggling endless dishes, coordinating guests, feeling the pressure to make it perfect. And somewhere between the appetizer and dessert I lost the moment of giving thanks. That’s why I began exploring simpler ways.
When we step into simple Thanksgiving ideas, we’re choosing fewer dishes, less clutter, more meaningful connection. Not because less equals cheap or uninspired—but because less often opens space for more—more presence, more gratitude, more whole-food nourishment.
Before we map out how to apply these ideas, let’s clarify what “simple” means in this context:
When you accept that simplicity isn’t giving up—it’s refining—you open the door to a holiday that feels aligned with your values.
Last year I hit the holiday wall: eight side dishes, a pantry full of cans, a kitchen running non-stop. I had one fleeting thought that changed everything: “Am I cooking or am I present?”
That morning I brewed my coffee, stepped outside to look at bare trees, and asked myself: what if I only made three dishes and focused on conversations instead of cleanup? I committed to simple Thanksgiving ideas for that year—and you know what happened? It wasn’t less meaningful—it was more. Genuine laughter, intentional gratitude, fresh food without additives, and a kitchen we left while the conversation stayed alive.
Here are the areas to focus on: mindset, menu, environment. I’ll walk you through each with concrete actions.
The myth: flawless décor, flawless food, flawless guests. The truth: it drains your energy and distracts from what matters.
Invite others into the experience: your sister brings the salad, your oldest child sets the table, a friend offers to play music. Let go of the belief you must do it all. This simple shift can change your entire experience.
You know I believe in whole foods, minimal processing, and clean ingredients. Let’s bring that to Thanksgiving in a way that supports simplicity.
Choose 3-5 meaningful dishes instead of eight or more. For example:
These are simple Thanksgiving ideas that honor your body, reflect ancestral roots, and are easier to manage.
| Traditional dish | Whole-food swap | Why it works |
|---|---|---|
| Canned cream soup in green bean casserole | Cashew-mushroom sauce | No additives, richer flavour |
| Store-bought gravy mix | Homemade drippings + organic flour + herbs | Real ingredients you understand |
| Canned cranberry sauce | Fresh cranberries simmered with orange zest + maple syrup | Less sugar, more fibre |
By making fewer dishes and choosing whole-food ingredients, you’re shifting the holiday from stress to nourishment.
Clear off extraneous décor, let natural elements shine: linen napkins, simple leaves, a few beeswax candles. An uncluttered space invites your guests (and you) to relax.
These rituals are part of the simple Thanksgiving ideas toolkit—they create memory, not just menu.
When you embrace simple Thanksgiving ideas in your home, you gift yourself and your loved ones:
Here’s a week-by-week action plan to get you ready without losing your mind.
| Day | Action |
|---|---|
| Monday | Choose your menu (3-5 dishes) and delegate at least one task. |
| Tuesday | Prep non-perishable parts: spices, grains, décor concept. |
| Wednesday | Clear surfaces, pick natural elements (leaves, nuts), set your tone. |
| Thursday (morning) | Brew your coffee, sit quietly, reflect on what matters. |
| Thanksgiving Day (morning) | Set table simply; start with your gratitude circle. |
| Thanksgiving Day (meal) | Serve wholesome menu; enact the un-plug hour. |
| After dinner | Record how you feel. What felt different when you chose simplicity? |
| Traditional | Whole-Food Swap | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Processed stuffing mix | Onion + celery + apple + whole-grain bread cubes + herbs | Real ingredients, minimal processing |
| Canned biscuits | Spelt-flour biscuits with olive oil | Better grain, better fat |
| Green bean casserole with canned soup | Sautéed green beans + almond-cream sauce | Clean, whole ingredients |
| Store-bought dessert bars | Fresh fruit crisp + almond-flour topping | Less refined sugar, more fibre |
| Plastic décor | Natural elements (pine cones, leaves, linen) | Fewer waste, more authenticity |
Place at each setting:
“Will people feel disappointed if there are fewer dishes?”
You can say: “We’re doing a simpler dinner so we can spend more time together and less time running around.” Most guests will respond with relief, not judgment.
“Will it feel like I’ve cut back too much?”
Here’s the truth: choosing fewer dishes doesn’t mean fewer memories. It means deeper connection.
“Will I lose the traditions we’ve always had?”
Keep the anchor traditions you love (walk after dinner, dessert game, family prayer). Let go of extras you don’t love. That’s part of the evolution of simple Thanksgiving ideas.
This year I invite you to pick one simple Thanksgiving idea:
Notice how it feels when you choose presence over perfection. You’re aligning with The Simple Pursuit values—whole food, minimal toxins, rooted in ancestral living—and inviting your body, mind and home into a calmer, more authentic celebration.
The holiday doesn’t have to be a sprint. It can be a pause. A remembrance of what matters most. A gathering where you show up fully, not frantically. When you embrace simple Thanksgiving ideas, you’re choosing rest, intention, nourishment, and memory. Let the day be about the people, the story, the nourishment—not the cleanup anxiety.
May your Thanksgiving be simple, meaningful, and deeply rooted.
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