But it is a birthday.
There was a time in our lives when birthdays were big
things. The young ones are
cool.
Like getting to be 10. Double digits.
12. When you are sort of officially a
preteen.
13. When you reach the
magical teens.
Sweet 16. Driving.
18. You can vote. Enlist. Move away from home.
21. Adult.
Drinking. Official
independence.
Others are more implied than official.
25 – you are supposed to have you life
pretty much together.
29. If you are not married by now…
30. Used to be over-the-hill.
35. The old biological clock is ticking.
40. Lordy, Lordy… Oficially really old to young people. Middle age.
45. Really
middle age.
50. REALLY middle age (not!). The new 30 (whatever!).
My family had a few birthday songs when I was a kid. We started with the traditional
one. Then there was this crazy one
– I’m not sure where it came from, but it wasn’t a birthday song at all (You sister Rose is dead and so is Uncle Fred, they found them in the shed, shot right through the head…). I think one of my twin sisters made it
up. Finally there was this
birthday dirge (…grief misery and
despair, people dying everywhere, happy birthday, oh happy birthday).
Heidi is officially a year older than me – for three
months. When we were still
teenagers, that meant a lot. And
she turned 21 first. And 30. And 40. I don’t look at birthdays the same now. Now, for me it is a time set aside to
reflect. We are sort of past
giving surprise parties (for now) and giving lavish gifts. Let’s face it. We have everything. No, we are going to spend a quiet
couple of days at the beach. It
will be cold. Probably rain. It doesn’t matter.
We’ll try to get in a couple walks in between showers. Gaze out at the same ocean together. Hold hands. Hug a lot. Be
thankful for each other. I mean we
are thankful for each other most days.
But especially thankful.
There is this second chance thing that looms large since
Heidi’s brain surgery. It points
us toward gratitude and understanding that our days are necessarily
numbered. As we look out over that
ocean together on this anniversary of her birth we will be looking forward as
well as back. We have far fewer
days ahead than behind. That is
life. And it is right.
But to know that I will be spending them with this
beautiful, gentle, spirited, wise, fiery, brilliant, gracious, kind, spiritual, generous
woman – makes me the happiest guy around.
To know that I have been touched by her and that I am a better dad,
teacher, man – because of her – makes me truly blessed.
4 comments:
1. Reading and hearing about your collective (yours and Heidi's) gratitude always makes me feel lighter.
2. My family's birthday song always gets a tag-a-long spot after the traditional. We sing the traditional Happy Birthday song (generally complete with my grandmother's harmonizing) and then we sing (to the tune of the Battle Hymn of the Republic...)
"Aaaand we hope ya live to be a hundred, we hope ya live to be a hundred, we hope ya live to be a hundred, and then live a hundred years moooooore."
There have definitely been birthdays when I've wondered if a 200 year long life would be a tad much. With the gratitude the two of you embody, I can imagine that it would be just enough, though. Enjoy the weekend!
Love your sweetness together
Whenever you speak of Heidi, even when if just a passing comment, I see, hear and feel love. I believe you are both the greatest gifts to each other. And as a result, everyone's lives that you touch is impacted by it. You are both gifts to many others.
I was excited to turn 25 because it meant my auto insurance rate would go down. I guess 25 signifies some level of vehicular maturity.
I think the biggest, and best birthdays, are 16, 18, and 21. Those are the ones that allow you to DO something you've wanted for so long - drive, graduate, and then become an "adult". All birthdays since have been a bit boring. While I don't dread any of them I don't exactly get giddy over them either. Well, not until 100.
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