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Home Local History

Poor November: The Forgotten Month

Bret Moore by Bret Moore
October 17, 2025
in Local History
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Poor November: The Forgotten Month

autumn background with November calendar and leaves.

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Every month on the calendar seems to carry its own distinct mood, reputation, or claim to cultural importance. December is wrapped in holiday cheer, lights, and festivity. January, though cold and dark, comes with the optimism of a new year. September has the crispness of beginnings at school and on the football field. October brings pumpkins, costumes, foliage, and a cultural obsession with all things autumn. Yet nestled between the orange glow of October and the twinkling lights of December is November, a month often overlooked, underappreciated, and overshadowed by the holidays that surround it. November is the calendar’s Cooper Manning. It’s part of the family, but too often forgotten in the rush from Halloween (Eli) to Christmas (Peyton).

October is a tough act to follow. With its vibrant leaves, pumpkin patches, and Halloween celebrations, it is arguably the crown jewel of the fall season. The month exudes atmosphere and traditions that delight both children and adults. By the time October ends, the cultural momentum is so strong that November often feels like a cooldown, a place where the energy dips before it ramps back up again for December. The marketing machine plays its role here as well. Almost overnight, on November 1, stores replace jack-o’-lanterns with Christmas trees. Holiday music starts to creep onto the radio, and television pushes festive specials weeks before Thanksgiving even arrives. November barely has a chance to stand on its own.

One of the clearest reasons November feels forgotten is the relentless cultural shift toward December’s holidays. For many, Christmas and the holiday season are not confined to late December. Retailers, eager to capitalize on consumer spending, start advertising holiday sales in early November, or even October. Black Friday, which technically takes place in November, has become more synonymous with Christmas shopping than with Thanksgiving. The result is that November becomes a corridor leading to December rather than a month to savor on its own. Instead of being appreciated for what it uniquely offers, it is treated as an interminably long countdown to Christmas.
Weather also plays a role in November’s reputation. Around here, November marks the transition from colorful autumn to the gray prelude of winter. Leaves fall, trees go bare, and the dazzling oranges and reds of October give way to muted browns. The early sunsets become more noticeable, plunging evenings into darkness long before dinner. The temperatures are too cold for outdoor fall festivals but not yet cold enough for fun winter activities. The dichotomy of the month’s weather can be characterized by an old phrase. According to the Old Farmer’s Almanac, the traditional dates for Indian Summer are November 11 (St. Martin’s Day) to November 20. The entire month feels like an in-between stage—dreary at times, uncertain in mood, and lacking the excitement of the months it borders.

The one major holiday that gives November distinction is Thanksgiving. On that fourth Thursday, families gather around the table and gratitude takes center stage. It is, in many ways, one of the most meaningful holidays of the year. Yet Thanksgiving itself also contributes to November’s overshadowed status. Rather than elevating the month, it often feels like a single bright spark within an otherwise subdued stretch of weeks. Moreover, Thanksgiving has increasingly been tied to shopping and the holiday season, with Black Friday beginning almost before the leftovers are packed away. Thanksgiving is beloved, but it does not define the entire month in the same way Halloween defines October or Christmas defines December.

I believe November does not deserve its reputation as forgettable. For those who pause long enough to notice, the month has its own quiet beauty and meaning. It is a time of reflection, a natural pause between the excitement of early fall and the frenzy of the holidays. The bare trees and long nights invite introspection, a slowing down before the rush of December. It should be a month of gratitude, not just on Thanksgiving but throughout.

In rural communities, November carries deep agricultural importance. It is the time when fields are cleared and the harvest is brought to completion. For many farmers, November represents both an ending and a preparation for the next cycle of work. Similarly, in the natural world, November is when wildlife prepares for winter, gathering food and conserving energy. Heck, even the full moon in November is called the Beaver Moon for that reason. In this sense, the month embodies transition, resilience, and endurance.

November has other cultural and historical moments worth remembering. Veterans Day honors those who served in the armed forces, a solemn and significant commemoration that deserves more recognition. Sports fans also find November to be a pivotal month: football season enters its high-stakes stretch, basketball and hockey seasons begin, and high school athletes transition into winter sports. In the arts, November is when studios release their best work in time for Oscar consideration.

Still, despite all these qualities, November’s image as the “forgotten month” persists. It is squeezed between two cultural giants. People often treat November as a month of waiting: waiting for the holidays, waiting for the year to end, waiting for winter to fully arrive.

Perhaps the month’s underdog status is also its strength. In being overlooked, it offers a chance for calm and authenticity in a calendar otherwise dominated by commercialism and spectacle. November invites us to be intentional. Instead of rushing through it, we might pause to appreciate the balance it offers, grounded in reflection, gratitude, and preparation.

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Bret Moore

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