the online magazine about life as a creative process

 

Birthday Musings

 

by Ray Rasmussen

 

 

     
 

Sunday, my birthday, arrives, stays awhile, and passes on through without celebration or special attention. Well ... okay ... a few cards and emails have arrived.

Birthdays can't be helped. People bring them to you whether or not you bring them to yourself. They're like the baby you find on your doorstep ... "What do I do with it? Gad! It has dirty diapers."

Strange in this older man's body to feel boyish. I wouldn't want to be a boy again for all the reasons everyone knows. Fortunately, this body still works pretty well.

First autumn morning:
the mirror I stare into
shows my father's face

~ Murakami, Kijo (1865-1938)

In one email message, a high school friend asks: "Where did it go?"

I had always heard that time would accelerate, but I didn't know it would be like this-a roller coaster ride, the coaster taking forever to go up, up, up, then teetering for a second, suddenly a mad plunge for the bottom taking you with it.

This quick rush to the bottom is reinforced by the passing seasons. Earlier today, I walked on Whitemud Creek with my black and white border collie. Barren trees swaying in the breeze, leaves rustling as they flow across the trail. And, now, standing in one of my favorite places, on a small bridge crossing the half-frozen creek, I realize that only moments ago I was standing in this same place, but it was springtime-the time when I heard the soft hoots of the resident great horned owl calling its mate.

barren now the trees
where just yesterday
I heard the owl's mating call

The owl is gone, but luckily I'm not.

Back home, I sip a rich Ceylon tea, skim the newspaper, munch toast with loaded with jam made from the sweet dark purple plum called 'Damson.'

I don't read the obituaries, but I do notice death announcements in the main part of the newspaper. They bring on the roller coaster feeling. The notices are never about about THEM, they're about ME. I almost always look for the person's age.

This year, among the more well known names, Victor Borge, age 91, and Steve Allen, age 78, died. Remember them? How about Nat Adderly, age 68, jazz cornetist and composer for the Adderley Quintet. Nat helped popularize soul jazz in the 1960s. His compositions include the standards "The Work Song," "Jive Samba," and "Hummin'." And then there's Svyatoslav Fyodorov, age 72. Svyatoslav was the pioneering Russian eye surgeon who developed radial keratotomy, an operation on the cornea that improves the vision of the nearsighted. He was also one of the country's leading capitalists and took advantage of Gorbachev's perestroika, opening and running the Fyodorov Eye Microsurgery Center in the mid-1980s. He ran unsuccessfully for president in 1996 and was a member of the Duma from 1996 to 1999.

The winds that blow -
ask them, which leaf on the tree
will be next to go.

~ Kyoshi Takahama

But I don't let all this ruin the sweet taste of the Damson, the warmth of the tea. Perhaps it's even valuable to occasionally focus on age and aging and that's what birthdays are for.

So much for the melancholy of birthdays, aging, dying, death ... I prefer dwelling in other places, with other matters.

Like doing what I'm doing right now.

waning moon-
a dark wind presses in
from the west

 
     
 

 

     
 

Ray Rasmussen is a photographer who lives in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. He spends a good deal of his outdoor time in Canyonlands National Park, Utah and in one of Canada's most remote and untouched provincial parks, Willmore Wilderness just North of Jasper National Park. He writes haiku poetry and its related forms haibun [prose plus haiku]. He is also active in creating haiga [haiku plus images]. In a previous life he was a University Professor. See website.

 
     

 

     
   
     

 

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