60 Interesting Conversation Starters for Thanksgiving Perfect For Around the Dinner Table

Brenda Rodgers

Let’s be honest. The holidays squeeze us of patience, energy, and time, especially when it comes to carrying on conversation with family that we may or may not have seen for awhile. As much as we love binging on parades and football, casseroles and pies, often anxiety and dread lead Thanksgiving Day. We get together with family members we only see once a year. Maybe they’re extended family or maybe they’re estranged immediate family. Blended families gather with parents who are divorced. There’s the busy-body aunt who tries to get personal information out of you or the one who overshares. Maybe there’s a cousin who brags and tries to one-up you. Even in the healthiest of families, there can be tension.

What makes engaging conversation even harder is when you don’t know someone well or haven’t seen them in a long time. Below is a list of 60 conversation starters to use with your family this Thanksgiving. Some of them are lighthearted and some are serious. Some are best to use with extended family. Others are more suitable to use with immediate family or close friends. These Thanksgiving Day conversation starters are fun to use regardless of what your celebration looks like! You can look forward to having meaningful discussions with relatives of all ages and stages of life! 

Some suggestions are to write these Thanksgiving conversation starters on popsicle sticks or index cards and have each person randomly choose one. Another option is to write them on index cards and put them in a stack in the center of the table and let each person draw one. You may even want to have a question at each person’s place setting like a place card, under each person’s seat, or written on the bottom of each paper plate.

Thanksgiving Conversation Starters about the Past Year:

Conversation Starters about the New Year:

Conversation Starters about the Holidays:

Conversation Starters about Your Life:

Thanksgiving Conversation Starters for Children:

Conversation Starters about Faith:

A Thanksgiving Prayer to Pray at the Dinner Table:

Complex family dynamics make loving the members of our families hard. However, despite these challenges, God calls us to do just that - love each other. That starts with putting other people before ourselves by being engaged in conversation, talk when we don’t feel like it, and show interest in what they say. In short, make the person you’re talking to feel like they’re the most important person in the room. A perfect example of this is the Apostle Paul. In 1 Corinthians he writes, "I have made myself a servant to all, that I might win more of them" (1 Corinthians 9:19b), and "I have become all things to all people, that by all means I might save some. I do it all for the sake of the gospel, that I may share with them in its blessings" (1 Corinthians 9:22b, 23).

Brenda Rodgers considers herself a “recovering single” after years as a single woman chasing after marriage instead of chasing after Jesus. Now her passion is to mentor young women to live purposefully and grow in their relationship with God and others. Brenda has been married for five years to a heart transplant hero and is the mom of a toddler girl miracle. She is also the author of the eBook Fall for Him: 25 Challenges from a Recovering Single. You can also read more on BrendaRodgers.com and follow her on Twitter.

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