Jun 29, 2021 20:29
69 today. That's a good number, as it's the same upside-down as
rightside-up. The last one of those I passed through was 11, so
it's been awhile. (Ok, sure 1 and maybe 8, depending on the font.)
Quick aside: 1961 also looked the same both ways, at least on
pennies.
69 is the last year before one of what I call horizons
rises to meet me: As a younger man, I thought of 70 as the horizon
between ordinary people and...old people. So next year I'll be a
genuine, card-carrying Old Guy. Does this bother me?
Not on your life. Or mine.
Life is all about horizons. When I was in kindergarten, first
grade was a horizon. When I was in grade school, high school and
college were horizons. Marriage was a horizon, understanding it
poorly as I did when I was six or seven. I remember wondering if
you had to have a job before you could get married. I imagined
living with a girl, and it was a...peculiar imagining, at
9 or 10. In truth, I could more easily imagine going to the Moon. I
considered that a horizon as well; in fact, when I was a senior in
high school, my lunch table vowed to meet on the Moon on New Year's
Eve 1999. It seemed so far away, in time as in space. We'd come so
far so fast--how could it not happen?
Not every horizon comes when it's called.
College, mon dieu. That horizon that hit me in the face
and damned near broke my nose. I got past it. I graduated, and got
a job. That was a horizon. Leaving home was a horizon, one I
avoided for far too long. I proposed to my best friend--one
horizon--followed all too quickly by our wedding--another
horizon.
Ordinary life can be deceptive. If you squint a little, you can
avoid seeing any horizons. You get up, go to work, come home, have
dinner, write/tinker/work 20 meters, then go to bed, confident that
the same thing will happen tomorrow. Nonetheless, the horizons are
there. My father's death was a horizon, one I could see coming a
long way off, and it shook me to the core. Scarcely a year later,
one of my friends died. He was a fireman, and a wall fell on him
while he was making sure everyone had gotten out alive. Seeing
friends die is a horizon that few of us see coming, especially when
we're still in our twenties. It was scant comfort to remind myself
that Bill Nixon was a hero. He was only the first. There have been
many since then.
Starting my own company was a old dream of mine, and in 1989 it
jumped up and said "Hi!" Horizons can be like that. Losing that
company 12 years later was another horizon, one that almost ate me
alive. Having my first book published was an even older horizon. I
remember a dream in which I was holding my first book, without
knowing what book it was. Sometimes horizons don't tell you much
about themselves until they're already in your rear-view
mirror.
Retirement was a very old horizon; I remember thinking
as a teen that 2017--when I would turn 65--was an eternity away.
Flying cars! Mars base! Heh. Today, well, 2017 seems almost
quaint.
Horizons are firsts and onlies. You do them once and they change
you, and then, sooner or later another one comes around the corner
at a gallop.
Be ready.
memoir,
daybook