DIY Thanksgiving Gratitude Journal {and free printable}
These DIY Thanksgiving Gratitude Journals are a simple craft you can give to family and friends this holiday season. They also can be used as Thanksgiving place cards. This is sponsored content.

Somehow I blinked, and now my kids are nearly grown. I don’t know how it happened. People always tell you that it “goes so fast,” but you don’t really get it until it happens to you. This year for Halloween, our kids totally ditched us to go trick or treat with their friends… my husband and I went out to dinner at a nearly empty restaurant! (We were totally pathetic if you ask me.) This getting older thing is not for the weak of heart.
This year has marked the first year that our oldest lives full-time out of state. Her room is now a “guest” room and hers when she visits. How did that happen? I mean, you send the kids off to college and assume they will be back for summers and holidays, and then they get jobs or take extra classes, and the next thing you know, you see them for a couple of weeks in the summer and winter.

With Thanksgiving around the corner, I’ve been thinking about how much our family has changed in the last five years. It seems that we had YEARS with little kids and all of the struggles associated with small children (having twins will do that to you.)
Going shopping alone seemed to be such a luxury at one time, and now it seems almost commonplace.

(Yep, those are JUST mashed potatoes on her plate.)
Setting Our Thanksgiving Table
I’ve now got a 20-year-old and two 14-year-olds, and with that growth comes the need to change and add to some of our family’s holiday celebrations and traditions. The Thanksgiving table used to be all about crayons, toys, mac n’ cheese, and plastic cups, and now we don’t even have a kid’s table anymore (oh, but there is still mac n’ cheese, there will always be mac n’ cheese).

This year for Thanksgiving (and all Holiday seasons), I’m going to try as much as I can to focus on gratitude. So instead of complaining that my kids are growing up, I will be grateful that I have 3 healthy kids who are growing up to be wonderful human beings.
This is something that I want my kids to do, too. Social media makes their world so full of comparison that sometimes I wonder how they all cope with it.
Thoughts on Gratitude
You pretty much know what everyone is doing ALL THE TIME. Your friend had a party without you? It’s on Facebook. Someone is mad at you? They tell everyone on Twitter. It’s nuts. Don’t get me wrong, I love social media, I think it can be a tremendous force for good, but like anything, it can also be misused.

All of that makes it so much more important to focus on what we have and to be grateful for all of our blessings. Focusing on gratitude can change a bad day into a good one and turn what we have into “enough.”
As a part of this gratitude challenge, I’m asking myself and my kids to write down one thing every day that they are thankful for. Just ONE thing. I’ve made myself a Gratitude Journal to go along with the challenge.
About the Gratitude Journals

I’ve been fancying up simple composition notebooks for a few years now. It’s one of my favorite DIY tricks. The notebooks are cheap, and with only a few craft supplies, you can make a great gift out of them.

How to Make a Gratitude Journal
If you are hosting Thanksgiving this year, this would also be a fun DIY for your Thanksgiving table. Set one at each person’s spot as a simple Thanksgiving gift to them. Want to make some? They are easy! You can make a bunch in a short amount of time.

Journal Supplies
- Small Composition Notebooks (mine are 5×7)
- Decorative Paper
- Glue Stick
- X-Acto Knife and Cutting Mat
- Gold Leather Cording
- Printable “Today I am Grateful For” template that you can download for free; just hop on over to our PRINTABLE LIBRARY.
How to Get the Printables. You can get a copy of the printable featured in this post in our Printable Library. Access to the library is for our Newsletter subscribers, and subscriptions are FREE. Please follow the instructions to obtain the printable. PLEASE READ the instructions on that page. Note: Printables in the library may not be sold or used for commercial purposes.

Step One: Cover the Notebook
Basically, you cover the entire front of the notebook (not the spine) with glue and then attach the decorative paper to the front. Then trim the paper to size. There is a VERY detailed tutorial on how to do this on our Summer Journal Tutorial.

Step Two: Attach the Gratitude Card
After you’ve covered the journal (front and back), simply glue the “Today” printable to the front. I added a bit of gold leather cording as a finishing touch. I actually ended up making quite a few of these and am going to pass them out to some friends this month (If you get one, act surprised.)
My oldest is coming home this weekend for a holiday, and I can’t wait. I hope that someday she (and my other kids) have warm memories of these events in their childhood and hope to share them with their kids when they are grown.
I know that our family will continue to change and grow (and hopefully add new members over the years), and I’m excited to see how our holidays and traditions will evolve over the years.


My kids are only 2 so we haven’t updated anything as of yet. I do plan on updating my open one present early tradition but they are getting christmas pj’s and I might even do elf on a shelf with them.
I still have little ones so we’re still figuring that out!
TWEETED https://twitter.com/mummytotwoboys1/status/669724297544540160
My oldest child is only six but very opinionated so we have started to include his ideas into the event. For example, he loves turkeys and has asked instead to have a vegetarian option this year. He has also asked to change our routine for when we put up the tree 🙂
As they grow older they’re helping out more.
I do not have ‘older’ kids but as they age, I plan to get them more and more involved in the process with cooking, baking, decorating…even buying and share more and more traditions and the meanings behind them.
Tweet: https://twitter.com/PrettyHotPink6/status/669195229484875776
As the kids got older, they help me with the meal preparation much more. Gifts have also gone from quantity to quality! Little kids like lots of stuff; older kids want one or two quality items, so shopping for Christmas gifts has changed a lot.
Digicats {at} Sbcglobal {dot} Net
I tweeted:
https://twitter.com/allisonrswain/status/668489599610671104
As they get older I include them in helping out with baking, cooking, and making decorations.
Thanks for the giveaway 🙂
tweet-https://twitter.com/LuLu_Brown24/status/668153395287470081
As my children grew older, they wanted to help more and more with decorating and having their say. They helped with wrapping of gifts and, of course, the baking of cookies, and couldn’t wait to deliver them to our neighbors.
I add quotes to the table and give printables to my children with thoughts on how to be better, grateful and give back more. Every year they look on the table to see what inspiration I have found. Just a small tradition….oh and don’t ever change the menu!
https://twitter.com/yarbr012/status/667887297174474752
As my daughter grows older she is helping me more in the kitchen and she is able to better understand the meaning of giving back. She is volunteering and donating now more during the holidays than when she was younger.
(….we don’t leave out the cookies for Santa anymore though….)
Tweeted
https://twitter.com/rubylorikeet/status/667863519568662528
We do a lot of the same traditions no matter how old everyone gets…trimming the tree a certain way, baking cookies, going to the Nutcracker and a big dinner.
tweeted:
https://twitter.com/uTry_it/status/667793534443917312
amy [at] utry [dot] it