And to conclude my birthday, I received the gift of guilt. I say that semi-jokingly.
I had a really good start to my birthday. The first half was great. I woke up the kid, called up the co-parent, and we all went to McDonald's so that she could have a sausage biscuit. I avoid fast food like the plague, but ever so often (maybe once every two months) we let her have a sausage biscuit. Then we brought her back to my house where I set up Birthday Central: Balloons, presents and a banner.
One of her presents was a pair of skates, so naturally we took her skating up and down the street. Then we went to see Monster's University, and then finally off to her favorite restaurant, Red Lobster. She enjoyed the biscuits, alfredo, and a brownie a la mode. Finally, we sang happy birthday and blew out her candle before Operation: My Turn could commence. The details of this mission have been declassified and are below:
OPERATION: MY TURN
Sit in the house
Try to think of something to do
Spend an hour looking up restaurants on Yelp
Lose time playing spades on iPhone
Go down to Georgetown Harbor
Stare at Potomac River in attempt to come up with something to do
Lie in grass and stare at sky in attempt to come up with something to do
Take picture of two random people at their request
Go home
Eat peanut butter and jelly sandwich, BBQ Utz Chips, and a slice of birthday cake
Listen to podcast
Write blog post
Yeah, apparently I wasn't joking when I said that I was more concerned about it being my daughter's birthday. I tried to come up with stuff to do, but nothing came to mind. A few friends invited me to tag along with them to a bar, but I don't drink. "Come anyway!" A part of me wanted to, but the other part felt like I was just stowing away on someone else's fun. It's my birthday. I wanted to do something I enjoyed...I just couldn't figure out what the hell that was.
I sat there for a while debating whether or not I was just being antisocial. The committee in my head decided that I had a legitimate argument. On your birthday I think you're entitled to be comfortable in your surroundings. Bars, lounges, and clubs...that's their thing. Sitting by the water and watching scantily clad women walk by...that's mine.
I then moved on to figuring out why my birthday was taking a turn towards boring. I couldn't even figure out what I wanted for dinner. I didn't have a taste for anything. It's my birthday. I'm supposed to treat myself, but all I really wanted was a peanut butter and jelly sandwich and some barbecue chips. I didn't want to go to the movies, and I didn't want to stay out past 9. I was tired after getting up at 6 this morning with just 4 hours of sleep.
Then it finally hit me. When I was little my birthday was the day that I finally had a chance (and only a chance) of getting some of the stuff I'd wanted all year long. I didn't get an allowance, and getting straight A's on my report card was what I was "supposed to do." There was no payoff for never getting suspended, being a good student, or staying out of trouble. I had to milk Christmas and my birthday for all that I could get. And that mentality continued up to adulthood.
Money was tight in college and after I dropped out, so I always looked forward to my birthday. But around the time that I turned 25 something happened. My income started to be larger than the sum of my expenses and desires. When there's nothing stopping you from getting what you want year-long, then you no longer save everything for your birthday. I'm not exactly swimming in a money bin right now, but I have a lot of free time and I budget what little money I do have so that I don't have to wait for one or two days of the year to do the things I want.
Dinner-wise, I celebrated my birthday for the past week when Giant had steaks on sale. Experience-wise, I was in Niagara Falls last weekend, and NYC a month before that...and Philly a month before that. My birthday (at least, my half of it) really was just a day for me to chill and reflect on my life. So I lie back on the grass, stared at the sky and watched the sunset.
Then my friends called again and invited me to come over and puff cigars. "You don't drink, so you can at least get down with this." That's where the guilt that I mentioned earlier came in. I most certainly came across as antisocial that time. A few posts ago I wrote about NOT having cancer (or an abundance of white blood cells). After sitting terrified in the cancer research center waiting on my results, I can't go out and puff cigars or sit there and inhale second hand smoke.
I told my friend, "I really, really want to hang out with you guys. I don't mean to sound antisocial, but I'm a fish apparently trying to hang out with birds. We gotta find an environment that we're all comfortable in."