11/4. 45.
These are numbers with some hard and real meaning this year. Tomorrow, I'll celebrate my own Covid-time birthday and my forty-fifth trip around the sun. It's also not lost on me that this day comes at an important time for our country (and also the number 45), and perhaps marks the way forward (or perhaps back). I keep thinking about how I'll feel tomorrow, but I keep coming back to a shrug of the shoulders and a big fat question mark.
I'm hoping that I wake up, happy to have the day off from work, and with bright shiny eyes for what lies ahead in the coming year. I think the reality is that I'll open my eyes, wondering what part was a dream and what part still exists. I'm probably also only partially successful resisting the temptation to open Twitter before I've even thrown back the covers. I remember waking up that morning in 2016, in disbelief and confused about what it all meant, and wondering what was in store over the next four years of my middle-aged life. I am certain I wouldn't have imagined a close proximity of the chaotic journey we have endured since. In fact, I still wake up some mornings startled by the fact that we're living through a pandemic (which some don't acknowledge as our hard reality) and led by a President who openly questions science, the existence of racism (both in general, and his own), with a history of open misogyny, failed business dealings, taking advantage of the poor and disabled, heartless and vapid global and economic and environmental policies, and... and... and.
And yet, here we are. That week, I was 41. This week, I'm 45.
But the passage of time, and the celebrations of birthdays should be about our own growth and development, looking at how far we've come with our eyes set on what's next. Instead of leaning on time as something we've wasted, maybe I need to think about what progress has emerged in my own life.
That week, at 41, I was weeks fresh from loss of my mother and navigating the worst of grief. This week, at 45, I smile at her picture, at her voice inside my head, and remember - most of the time without wiping away tears - so many good, fun days. How lucky we were, and how fortunate I am.
That week, I was a newly minted doctoral graduate, a bit unsure of why I had spent so many days and nights writing and reading and presenting. I hated answering the question from faculty and others about my long-term career goals, or what I wanted after I was finished. And while I don't think I know exactly what the future holds for me professionally, this week I have a clearer view of what lies ahead - despite change and so many questions. Perhaps, at 45, there is the start of a new chapter for my career, as bittersweet change comes with energy and renewed excitement.
That week, I filled my calendar with plans and events, theater, restaurants, friends, and beginning the season of tradition and family celebrations (our families celebrate an inordinate amount of birthdays between November and February, in addition to the holidays). This week, I plan for Friday and Sunday FaceTimes, we meal-prep for home-cooked meals, eat in our car's tailgate when the weather is good, and avoid going to the store (or anywhere, for that matter) more than we should. We watch church and concerts on Facebook and YouTube, along with old television shows we missed 10 years ago. We forego nights out, and have swapped them for days where we walk in the woods with the birds and the deer. We miss our family and our friends, do all we can to protect ourselves and them, and - like everyone reading this - are upon that difficult moment of navigating how to celebrate a season of thanks and wonder - perhaps at a quiet table in a lonely home.
At the start of 41, I couldn't have imagined these things possible, or the ways in which I might be forever changed. I couldn't imagine a picture of my mom without a crippling ache of sadness. I couldn't imagine my work being any different from the last two decades. I certainly couldn't imagine spending so many quiet days in a daily existence that is often hard to recognize, marked with the wonder of when it'll ever end.
And yet, this week, here I am. I have grown and adapted and have learned new things, even when I didn't want to and even when I wasn't ready. I am ready for that next season of growth, having pruned back before. Here I am, prepared to open my eyes to 45, fully committed to that which is good and that which continues to teach me important lessons.
45 can help us learn and grow.
45 can remind us how to be a better citizen in our community.
45 can open our hearts to our own failings, our own gaps, and our own privilege.
45 can challenge us to pursue our dreams.
45 can show us the beauty, fragility, and preciousness of nature.
45 can remind us of the power in our voices and the bravery and confidence to use them.
45 can learn to make biscuits from scratch.
45 can learn to be still, and quiet, and focus on the breath.
45 can end a chapter and start a new book.
45 can learn how to work from home.
45 can know, and give, and practice love. Even at a distance.
When I blow out the candles this year, I have but one wish. Here's hoping wishes come true.



