I’m forty-one years old today. Forty-one.
As milestones go, it’s a neglected year. You’ve seen dozens of homemade “Lordy, Lordy, look who’s forty!” signs over the years. Have you ever seen even one sign announcing someone was forty-one?
Thirty years ago today, I was eleven years old. My big birthday present was a General Electric monophonic cassette recorder — my first to use cassettes instead of those awkward spools of exposed brown tape. I have a photograph of myself — bright red hair, big glasses, white shirt, plaid pants — singing a song into the tiny black microphone.
Twenty years ago today, I became a legal adult. Strangely, that summer was the worst of my entire life. After having attended a local university for three years, I’d just completed my senior year at an out-of-state school. I’d spent the previous nine months living on my own, becoming happier, more confident, and more independent than ever.
The idea of getting a summer job and staying at school didn’t occur to me; instead, out of habit, I suppose, I came home for the summer. Big mistake.
Ten years ago today, I was thirty-one. I’d been with Clyde for three years. I’d left the confines of the fundamentalist church that had defined my social and professional life for the last two decades. I was starting a new career with SkyTel, an aggressive telecom company on the cutting edge of its industry. I was more myself, and more true to myself, than I had ever been in my life.
Today, I’m forty-one. Yesterday, I finished my sixth book; today, I start a seventh. I’ve recently signed the most lucrative book contract of my writing career. An idea for a novel worth finishing is slowly coming together in my head. I’m discovering a new, more spiritual side of myself: meditating, praying, becoming more interested in an inner life.
Best of all, I’m head-over-heels in love with the most wonderful man on earth, who makes this incredible life of mine possible. Clyde, I hope you’re with me at fifty-one, sixty-one, seventy-one, eighty-one, ninety-one, a hundred-and-one … and for whatever lies beyond.
I’m forty-one … and glad to be here.
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