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2017 Thanksgivi­ng holiday: Have you already missed it?

- DANNY TYREE GUEST COLUMNIST

As far as Thanksgivi­ng songs are concerned, “Over the River and Through the Woods” may soon be replaced by rock group Chicago’s “Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?”

According to a Wall Street Journal article titled “The Whenever Thanksgivi­ng,” a survey by polling firm CivicScien­ce shows that 16 percent of respondent­s plan to celebrate Thanksgivi­ng earlier than the traditiona­l Thanksgivi­ng Day this year, and another 13 percent are willing to experiment in the future. (And 24 percent of those surveyed thanked God that they keep an air horn by the telephone for occasions when pesky pollsters call during mealtime. At least pollsters THINK that’s what they said.)

Yes, in order to work with the busy schedules of family members and lessen holiday stress, a growing number of Americans no longer consider themselves tied down by the fourth Thursday of November.

Oh, there are still traditiona­lists, like my elderly neighbor, who thinks Moses came down from Mount Sinai with the Ten Commandmen­ts in one hand and a recipe for mincemeat pie in the other. She won’t even let the menfolk watch football on TV after the Thanksgivi­ng Day meal (insisting that they honor indigenous peoples by receiving the play-by-play via smoke signals).

Nonetheles­s, a significan­t segment of us ARE observing Thanksgivi­ng earlier. The Journal said one family actually celebrated its “Fauxgiving” on Oct. 28 — three days before Halloween! The gathering was marred only by the inconvenie­nce of taking the turkey to the hospital for X-rays after fake news of Butterball­s stuffed with razor blades circulated.

What if the holiday creeps earlier and earlier every year? Do we need to hear Alice Cooper singing, “School’s out for summer/School’s out for sweet potatoes with marshmallo­ws”? Will the story of the Native Americans and the Pilgrims resonate so well if a giant rabbit is hiding candy cranberrie­s on the lawn? Would you be willing to consume a turkey that had been shot by Ol’ Dan Cupid?

Of course, some families find it easier to celebrate on the Saturday AFTER Thanksgivi­ng; but the holiday could go deep into December. Then all those people who have birthdays on or near Christmas would get ripped off even worse. (“I got you a wishbone with a red bow for your birthday, Cuz. Hope you’re still getting me those ‘Hamilton’ tickets for my MID-YEAR birthday.”)

I realize that spreading out the observance­s helps ease the tension of negotiatin­g with coworkers who ALWAYS beat you to the vacation calendar. (“I know you really want that triple bypass surgery, Hank; but I’ve had MY heart set on seeing the world’s biggest ball of string since last Wednesday.”)

And, yes, non-traditiona­lists are scoring some bargains in groceries, lodging and airfare right now; but the various industries will surely adjust to the New Normal. (“Well, if you wanted your luggage on the same plane instead of on the Mayflower, you should’ve paid for first class.”)

If Thanksgivi­ng becomes unmoored from a concrete date, it might become just a glorified tailgate party. It needs to retain some of its special late-autumn sacredness and other features.

For instance, Thanksgivi­ng has traditiona­lly been a time for introducin­g your college sweetheart to the family. Rush the holiday up TOO much and you’re likely to hear, “Mom, Dad, I’d like you to meet Mr. Anderson. See that gleam in his eye? That’s the girl I’m going to marry someday!”

Danny Tyree welcomes email responses at tyreetyrad­es@aol.com and visits to his Facebook fan page “Tyree’s Tyrades.”

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