Mar 17 2010

Birthday

Published by at 8:05 am under Country Life,Family,Memories,Weather

Somehow the heat got turned off last night, and it was 46 fun-filled degrees in the house when I got up at a semi-respectable 7:30 this morning. I varied my usual routine (turn off outside lights, turn on computer, turn up heat, start coffee) by turning on the heat first. Then I looked out the sliding glass doors and saw that the outside temperature was around 38.

Told you it’s like living in a tent. My thimbleful of coffee was cold before I could finish drinking it.

It’s been sunny all week, and clear, starry nights tend to be cold ones with no cloud cover to tuck us in at night and keep us warm. But temperatures have been 60 or more by early afternoon. It still surprises me that temperatures can change so much in one day.

This particular day is my father’s birthday. He would have been 79 today.

To the rest of the world, it’s a day to drink and dye things green, the weirder the better, but for me, it’s a day of sadness and memories. I feel out of step with everyone else.

At my old job, one of my co-workers had her first baby. We all dutifully trooped to the hospital to visit them, and as I held that day-old baby, I felt as if I were watching my colleagues across a divide. All of them still had their parents, and half of them were older than I was. I was the only one who had lost a parent and knew that particular pain. I both envied them for not knowing what it was like, and pitied them, knowing that one day they would, even that newborn baby.

Today the sun is shining and Dad isn’t here to see it. I can’t call him to wish him happy birthday or look forward to an email telling me what he made for his birthday dinner. Nine years after his untimely death, it can still hurt as much as when I first heard the news and my life was divided into “Before” and “After”.

In these After days, I should try and focus on the many happy memories: Dad carrying me on his shoulders; calling the birds in the woods so they answered him; coming home after work in his white lab coat when I was a kid; reading me stories, even when I was grown-up; hugging me across the barrier at Heathrow; walking his beloved dog Jesse on Wimbledon Common; singing tunelessly as he cooked. I know I’m lucky to have had a father who was also my best friend. But sometimes the loss is hard to bear.

Happy birthday, old bear. I will always love you.

pixelstats trackingpixel

5 responses so far

5 Responses to “Birthday”

  1. Mikeon 17 Mar 2010 at 9:15 am

    Just out of curiosity, was your father a fan of Guinness? I should like to think so, given his birthday and the mental picture I hold of him.

  2. suzyon 17 Mar 2010 at 10:47 am

    I think he’d drink it occasionally, but he preferred wine to beer. When we went to the pub, we usually had cider.

  3. Joyon 17 Mar 2010 at 11:42 am

    He sounds like he was a wonderful person. How lucky you were. Try not to grieve so…hold on to the good memories and it is wonderful that you have so many.

    jx

  4. Amberon 17 Mar 2010 at 7:45 pm

    And a happy birthday to your Dad! He does see the sun shining, he’s with you always and very likely looking forward to seeing what YOU made for his birthday dinner.

    **hugs**

  5. Guyon 18 Mar 2010 at 3:47 am

    It is always sad to lose our loved ones no matter how old one is when they leave, but the memories are what’s left and it looks like good ones in your case. I am blessed with the belief that they are still near us after their bodies leave and they can see our progress, so I’m doubly lucky since I still have conversations with them.