Culture Celebrate Your Found Family: How to Host the Perfect Queer-Friendly Friendsgiving - Two of the five tips are about not cooking

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The holiday season has officially begun. While most people jump straight to Christmas as soon as Halloween ends, some focus on Thanksgiving, a day dedicated to togetherness, gratitude, and good food. Thanksgiving originated as a three-day feast in 1621 to celebrate a successful harvest. It’s often seen as a symbol of peaceful relations between English colonizers and the Wampanoag Tribe. However, this narrative is overshadowed by the genocide of Indigenous Americans in the years that followed.

Today, Thanksgiving is celebrated for its message of gratitude and togetherness. Traditionally, it’s a family holiday, but as society has evolved, so have traditions.

In recent decades, Friendsgiving has become a popular alternative for millennials and Gen Z, who can’t spend the holiday with family due to work, distance, or personal reasons. Friendsgiving has also become a lifeline for members of the LGBTQIA+ community. Here’s how to host a queer-friendly Friendsgiving.

1. Plan Ahead and Create a Safe Space for LGBTQIA+ Friends

The first and most important step to hosting a queer-friendly Friendsgiving is planning. Send out invites early in the month so you can get a headcount. It’s also essential that all your guests pass the “vibe” check—if you know someone with views antagonistic to the LGBTQIA+ community, it may be best for them to find another gathering.

For the meal, ask about allergies and dietary restrictions. If you’re hosting a potluck, request guests share what dish they’ll bring.

2. Can’t Cook? Try a Charcuterie Potluck!

Not everyone’s a chef, and that’s OK. If cooking isn’t your thing, consider a charcuterie potluck. Thanks to our Lunchables roots, millennials and Gen Z-ers love a good charcuterie board.

Charcuterie-themed parties have surged in popularity. Ask guests to bring their own versions of charcuterie boards, from traditional meats and cheeses to dessert or drink boards. Get creative and encourage friends to do the same. If you need help with board ideas because you’re not the most creative person, Taste of Home has a helpful guide on putting together a great charcuterie board.

3. Don’t Want to Cook at All? Make a Reservation!

If no one in your friend group is up for cooking, consider a group dinner at a restaurant. Though it may be pricier, it’s also stress-free. Look for LGBTQIA+-friendly restaurants in your area, and send out invites well in advance if you’re making a reservation. Similar to Trip Advisor, GayCities.com offers reviews of LGBTQIA+ safe spaces worldwide, which is a good place to start.

4. Create Your Own Friendsgiving Tradition With Your Found Family

“Tradition” can carry negative connotations for LGBTQIA+ community members, as it often evokes terms like “traditional marriage.” It can also bring up painful memories for those shunned by their birth families.

Found families offer a sanctuary. According to GLAAD, 39% of queer adults have faced rejection from their birth families. Friendsgiving allows you to build your holiday traditions, such as watching a favorite movie, playing a specific game, or hosting friendly competitions. The more personal, the better.

5. Come Together to Give Back to the LGBTQIA+ Community

Thanksgiving marks the start of the holiday giving season, and celebrating Friendsgiving by giving back to the LGBTQIA+ community is a wonderful way to show gratitude. Volunteering at a shelter that serves LGBTQIA+ youth and adults is a meaningful way to support those who need it most. While many people focus on feeding the homeless during the holidays, there are various ways to volunteer.

With increasing challenges for LGBTQIA+ Americans, connecting, protecting rights, and giving back is crucial. Celebrating found families, creating new traditions, and volunteering are wonderful ways to honor the season of gratitude and giving.
 
I always found the concept of "found family" creepy and weird.
It doesn't help that it is mostly used by creepy weirdoes, sex-perverts and cults.
Maybe it's a man thing but I have my real family and maybe two friends who I would willingly die or kill for. The rest of my social circle are people I get on with and can have fun with but that's really the extent of it.
 
Try not to let any leather fags fuck the turkey or shove turkey drumsticks anywhere they shouldn't, it really kills the mood. And don't let the MTFs jerk off in the mashed potatoes.
 
I always found the concept of "found family" creepy and weird.
It doesn't help that it is mostly used by creepy weirdoes, sex-perverts and cults.
As much as I love the idea of non-related people pulling together and forming an unlikely coalition, referring to this phenomenal as a 'found family' is a surefire way to make me assume you're trying to form a weirdo sex cult until you can prove otherwise. It's certainly not helped by the fact that the 'found family' is being touted as a viable(if not superior) replacement to the traditional nuclear family,when it really should be seen more as a secondary option for widows, estranged adult children, or just people generally in non-standard situations that don't allow for the formation of a typical family.

Not all of us have families to sit around the table at Thanksgiving with this year. Some of you might decide to share a Thanksgiving meal with your coworkers, your friends, or maybe even the shifty guy that deals weed in front of the liquor store. And that's just fine. You don't have to be a massive fucking weirdo and tout liquor store guy as your found family to have a decent Thanksgiving with people you ain't related to.
 
referring to this phenomenal as a 'found family' is a surefire way to make me assume you're trying to form a weirdo sex cult
They are. Look at any grouping of troons we cover.

it really should be seen more as a secondary option for widows, estranged adult children, or just people generally in non-standard situations that don't allow for the formation of a typical family.
That's what troons are: they disown their parents, they divorce their spouses, and if they've undergone surgery they're biologically incapable of forming a typical family.
 
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I always found the concept of "found family" creepy and weird.
It doesn't help that it is mostly used by creepy weirdoes, sex-perverts and cults.
Meh. We only get home to family at Christmas, and are spread pretty far and wide. Thanksgiving has always involved "found family" for me. It's just a different way of saying "friends you would take in if their house suddenly burned down."
 
Meh. We only get home to family at Christmas, and are spread pretty far and wide. Thanksgiving has always involved "found family" for me. It's just a different way of saying "friends you would take in if their house suddenly burned down."

my family members are mostly dead and the surviving ones are largely alienated from each other. our family Thanksgiving dwindled down to only four people, so we started inviting friends who didn't have a Thanksgiving to go to. we don't call it "Friendsgiving", that's shit for annoying faggots who need to separate themselves from regular Thanksgiving because they're divorcing from their family due to being a troon or whatever. we also don't have this stupid shit:

1. Plan Ahead and Create a Safe Space for LGBTQIA+ Friends
5. Come Together to Give Back to the LGBTQIA+ Community

because none of us are internet-brained shitheads who separated ourselves from our family by choice because we trooned out and/or got triggered that our boomer dads wouldn't respect our genderspecial pronouns or whatever.

Found families offer a sanctuary. According to GLAAD, 39% of queer adults have faced rejection from their birth families. Friendsgiving allows you to build your holiday traditions, such as watching a favorite movie, playing a specific game, or hosting friendly competitions. The more personal, the better.

that's who this stupid article is actually for: people who have families but threw it away in favor of hanging out with other discord troons.
 
"Hey Jamie, can you pull up one of those pictures of balding Reddit trannnies at Applebee's? Yeah the ones where the longer you look, the more horrifying everything is..."
 
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