March 30, 2017
Zipolite, Oaxaca, Mexico
Zipolite, Oaxaca, Mexico
I
was born at 8:20 am on the morning of March 30, 1949. It was not as easy birth. My mother sacrificed her body so I could be
born Caesarian. She told me, more than
once, that I was a “blue baby.” I’ve asked my aunt what that meant but she has
no recollection of it. I assume I was
oxygen deprived.
Over
the years, I think my mother marveled that I had no long-term health damage. I know I am fortunate, blessed. My life could have been something else
entirely
because
of that deprivation.
The
earliest remembrance of a birthday is when I was six. WE had just moved back from Florida and were
living with my Uncle Francis on Broad Street.
In photos of me I am holding a clown birthday cake. I still have the recipe in my mother’s old
cookbooks. It’s quite the cake and I
seem to be very happy with it.
Those
early birthdays flow one to the next.
There is always a party with my brother and cousins. Typical 1950’s stuff—cake, ice cream,
gifts. Nothing theme related; nothing
fancy.
My
mother would ask us a few days before what we wanted to eat for our special
birthday dinner. For me, it was always
chop-suey.
Years
and years later, when she was quite elderly, I asked her if she’d make me her
Christmas applesauce cake. She did—the
last one she ever made. By then it was a tradition that had long passed.
What
was fancy, though, as was so my mother who loved holidays and birthdays and any
reason to decorated and be festive. On
the morning of our birthdays we’d awake, enter the dining room and find a
single place setting had been set of her best china and silver. Gifts would be on the plate and balloons and
garlands would be strung from the chandelier above the table.
When
I was nine, in 1958, we had a geyser. Or so we thought did as did the local
media. Hot steam emerged from the ground
in the back yard. When my Dad dug to fnd
its source he found the earth hot to touch.
It was late March and the water table was still high and the standing
water in the hole was hot enough to boil an egg.
This
went on for the few days overlapping my birthday. It wasn’t a geyser, of course, but we all
entertained the idea of the property’s value as a new geological wonder. It was, however, an overheated gas pipe that
happened to run under out property from a home nearby that had operated a
bakery many years earlier. Someone had
turned on the valve. Once it was
discovered and the valve turned off, all the drama ended.
Five
years later: birthday #14—March 30, 1963.
We are in Florida on a family vacation and my parents have set up a
three-day cruise from Miami to Nassau, the Bahamas. When we set sail it’s done
in the old-fashioned way with streamers set off by all those sailing—something
you now only see in old movies. The weather
is fine—until later that evening when a massive storm sweeps in. Everyone is forced into staterooms. Everyone by me. For some reason, I don’t get sea sick. Instead, I get lucky and win money in the
casino. No one bother to tell a
14-year-old boy that gambling was illegal.
For some reason, common sense to stop when the slot machines were in my
favor.
Like
every other teenager, I couldn’t wait to turn 18. In those days, I would be
“legal.” That night, March 30, 1967, I walked over to a Mom and Pop grocery
store, bought a quart of beer, carried it into Riverside Cemetery, sat on a
low-rise mausoleum and drank it all down.
Because
I could. Not because I enjoyed it. Fortunately, it never set up an alcohol
pattern.
In
1978, for my 29th, I was in Florida. My parents had just retired and
I think my brother was there also. I
don’t remember anything special, but I do remember the angst I had over my age.
End of the 20th. It was the
beginning of a year of dread—turning 30 in a year.
The
next year I did turn 30—March 30, 1979.
The day before I saw my cousin John Ladue who was 20 years my
senior. I dumped out my woes. “Oh, go home and kill yourself right now.
Then you’ll always be 29.”
He
was joking, of course, but those words have stuck with me since. What a waste
of energy dreading a birthday. Over the
years, I’ve shared those words with lots of others who are dreading a
particular birthday.
30
was an amazing birthday. I was still
teaching English and every one of my classes had a party. That year I
got 8 cakes—some many I had to being one home to freeze it.
Twice
Easter fell on my birthday and often the day before or after, yet never once do
I remember an Easter themed birthday. It
will never happen again as the next time Easter falls on the 30th
will be in 2059. I hardly expect to be
around at 110 years old.
One
birthday ran to the next and before I could count to ten I was forty! Sally Goddard photopied 3” copies of the
number 40 and plastered them all over the teachers’ room. I was surrounded my people who were also
turning 40 or who just turned 40, so it was just a fun way of reminding me that
it was my turn. Thanks, Sally!
Steve
gathered people together later that weekend for a turkey dinner. I still have
the silver
On
my 49th birthday my school graced us with a snow day. A flood day, actually. But Whiteface had no flooding and I was free
and I spent a glorious day skiing in shorts.
The thermometer at mid station read 80 degrees!
A
year later I was on my life’s dream trip around the world. I’d thought long and hard where I wanted to
be spend that day and chose Ayers Rock in Australia. I went out of my way to get there, but was
not disappointed. I spent the day
climbing on and around the rock. I
carried the few cards and gifts I had to the summit and opened them there. A truly memorable birthday.
At
55, the day I could retire, I called in sick and went to Whiteface to ski. It
was a glorious early spring day, cloudless, blue and reasonably warm. Conditions were spectacular. It was so spectacular, in fact, that I know I
wasn’t the only one who played hookey from work.
At
the top of a long, steep slope a massive group of people were waiting. Below us was a film crew.
“All
of you who called in sick today, ski down now.
We’re shooting an ad.”
Hah! Almost all of us scooted off that summit as
fast as we could.
In
2004 my birthday came in quietly. That night I heard what was obviously a car
crash in front of the house. Some young
drunk driver had slammed into a tree.
Luckily, no one was hurt.
I
liked to say, later, that that birthday went out with a bang.
I
would work for one more birthday. Susan
Ledges threw me a lovely party at school.
A
year later I would be in Playa del Carmen, Mexico. My first year of retirement. March 30, 2007. I turned 58 with a party thrown by the language
school I was attending. It was the first
year that anyone had sung Las Manaitas—the traditional Mexican birthday song.
When
I turned 60 I wanted to be somewhere special.
That was the winter I spent in South America. I wound my way to Iguazu Falls that lay on
the border of Argentina, Paraguay and Brazil and spent two days there. On the 30th I bought ever service
possible—boat ride, personal video, fantastic dinner. If I had to turn 60, I might as well have
done it with a splash!
A
year later I was in Plattsburgh—the last time I’ve been north for my
birthday. My mother was dying, and the
staff was as nice as they could be. They
gave me a small stuffed animal. That
evening, though, they turned off my mother’s life support. It’s not a memory that weighs heavily on me,
but I do remember it. The darker side of birthdays.
Since
then I decided to celebrate my birthday in a way that neither my father or
grandfather did.
Birthdays
in my 60’s have been phenomenal. Apart
from two of them, all have been spent in Mexico where “Happy Birthday” is far
less sung to me than Las Manaitas.
At
62 I climbed 16,000’ La Nevada outside of Toluca
A
year later I headed to the state of Tlaxcala to spend the night at an old, and
expensive, ex-hacienda. As I got out of the bus a hail storm
ensued. “One hail of a birthday,” I
later say.
Other
years I’ve gone to Acapulco. Two years
ago, at 66, the same age my grandfather was when he died, I para-glided over
Acapulco on my birthday. Cool beans!
This
year Gerardo arranged a family birthday celebration for me and his nephew,
Derek. We rented a trajinero in Xochimilco and spent a lovely afternoon cruising the
old Aztec canals.
For
my actual birthday, I went to the beach again, but this time to Zipolite. I ate shrimp salad, bought a piece of tres-leches cake and had a massage. Quiet and reflexive.
I
do not like turning 68 and dread 70. But
I must be philosophical about all this.
I have had an extraordinary life and extraordinary birthdays. I have my health, I have time and I have
enough money to enjoy these days. For that I am supremely grateful.
I
do not know what the next years will hold, but I can only hold on to each day
and give thanks for that.
Happy
Birthday, me. And thank you—all of
you—who have had a hand in making past birthdays special.
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