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life

Happy Birthday to the B

Yesterday was my mother-in-law’s birthday. As I type this, her husband is preparing a pandemic-style, blow-out, surprise birthday party for her at their home in suburban Chicago, to take place later this evening.

My mother-in-law has three daughters. One (my wife) lives here in Vermont. Another (the youngest) lives high in the Adirondacks with her partner. The other (the oldest) lives with her husband, daughters, and stepchildren about 400 yards (as the crow flies) from my mother-in-law’s house.

This pandemic surprise party will involve a three-plus-hour Zoom call that will bring in guests from the northeastern and southwestern United States. The daughter who lives nearby, plus her family, plus my mother-in-law’s two stepchildren and their partners, plus some old friends who live in the area — all will attend the party in person.

My stepfather-in-law has been working hard to pull the party together. He’s hired a DJ to set up in their home. He’s coordinated to get my mother-in-law out of the house. He’s attempted to get President Barack Obama to make a cameo appearance (his aunt is a member of the Illinois delegation to United States House of Representatives), and while I doubt he’ll be successful, I wouldn’t put it past him to hire a look-a-like or someone just as surprising and as interesting. He’s been texting with his stepdaughters and their partners, plus his son and daughter for weeks now, trying to make sure everyone understands how important this party is to his wife.

Three days ago, my sister-in-law who lives in the Adirondacks informed all of us via text that something had come up at her work and she wouldn’t be able to attend the surprise party. She asked if my stepfather-in-law could change the date.

He agreed: “Plug in next Friday at 7 and wait for us. The rest of us will be partying this Saturday.”

She replied, “Ok well sorry I can’t be there / Yup really really sorry…”

Meanwhile, my sister-in-law texted her two sisters that she was just fucking with him; she would, in fact, be on the Zoom call. After keeping up the charade for two days, she received this suggestion from my stepfather-in-law: “how about getting dizzy and collapsing at work or cutting off a finger and having to go home around 7:30ish?” 

Instead of doing either of those, she admitted to the prank.

He responded with, “I wasn’t kidding about cuttIng off a finger. Looove ya.”

Yesterday, my daughter received an early birthday present from my mother-in-law and her husband: a 24-volt Razor Pocket Mod Electric Scooter, an adorable, electric-powered moped that reaches a top speed of 15 miles per hour and is perfectly sized for an eight-year-old girl.

I unboxed it while she was at a friend’s house, installed the front wheel and handlebars on it, plugged it into a charger on the front porch, then called her home. My wife called my mother-in-law on FaceTime so she could watch my daughter discover the present.

My daughter came onto the porch, saw the electric scooter, and fell to her knees with tears in her eyes, crying to herself, “I’m so happy. I’m so happy. I’m so happy.”

My mother-in-law made that happen, and my stepfather-in-law busts his ass at work to help her make that happen.

Tonight, my beloved Celtics will be playing in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Finals, the most important game this team has faced all year, and yet instead of cheering them on, I will gladly sit in front of our laptop for a three-hour Zoom call that celebrates the love we hold for my mother-in-law.

I love her and her husband with all my heart, and I respect the hell out of both of them. I make fun of them (only to their face), call them “Boomers” (only to their face), and bitch about being their tech support (only to their face), but I don’t want to imagine calling a different mother- and stepfather-in-law family.

Categories
life

To Travel or Not to Travel

My grandfather bought a camp in Maine back in 1960. He passed away last Fall at the age of 100, and now the camp belongs to my father and his sister. With my grandfather’s house sold to a developer, the camp became, in a real way, the central hub of my extended family on my father’s side.

Except for my wife, my daughter, and me (who live in Vermont), every living member on my father’s side of my family lives within six miles of each other on the north shore of Boston: my parents, my brothers and their families, my aunt and uncle, my cousins and their families.

As of this past Monday (July 17th), their county in Massachusetts had a COVID-19 infection rate of 778 Active Cases Per Million. According to Vermont’s interstate travel guidelines, we can travel to see our extended family members in that county, but we have to quarantine for fourteen days when we return. If the Active Cases Per Million were 400 or lower, it would be safe for us to travel and return without having to quarantine.

The county in Maine where our camp is located has a current infection rate of 348 per Million, but I’m not dumb enough to think that because I visit my Massachusetts family in Maine, I won’t have to quarantine; the virus won’t magically disappear when they drive through the New Hampshire tolls.

But then I found out that my parents, my oldest brother, and his family were vacationing at the camp for over a week, partially quarantining their hypothetical Massachusetts germs. Eight days isn’t the science-recommended fourteen days, but I figured it was better than nothing. If they all still felt healthy at the end of the week, then maybe we could drive over to see them.

The camp has enough beds for about 15 snoring and farting people, but us Vermonters would stay in a tent in the yard. We’d venture inside to use the bathroom (wearing a mask the whole time), but that would be it. We’d play, eat, and sleep outside.

We’d also practice social distancing, paying special attention to my seven-year old, and do our best to help her maintain that distance even when playing with her cousins in the lake.

We’d wash our own dishes, cook our own food, etc.

It’d be a pain in the ass for two nights, but it’d be worth it to see my family again.

The problem, really, was what could happen on the other side of our visit, despite our absolute best intentions.

The pandemic of COVID-19 does not help people, such as myself, who have been diagnosed with a general anxiety disorder. Coping strategies work, but having a general anxiety disorder can mean that sometimes, just sometimes, you overthink it.

But when the scientific community sounds an alarm as loudly as they’re still sounding this one, a wise person takes notice.

Like all of us, I have people I worry about in this pandemic: my parents in their seventies, friends and family members who are immunocompromised, students who are unable to take care of themselves, friends who live on the edges of poverty and homelessness, my wife and daughter who are…my wife and daughter.

I cannot imagine the guilt I would feel if my inability to follow my state’s guidelines caused one of them harm.

The chances of doing so by visiting the camp are low, especially given that our Vermont county has an infection rate of 132 per Million and my town has had less than six infections since the pandemic began, but there’s a reason why Vermont set the number of Active Cases Per Million to 400.

The state admits that the number isn’t based on any “scientific evidence or scientific literature that we could rely on” because Vermont was “really the first state in the country…pretty much the first jurisdiction in the world that contemplated this, and it’s the first time we’ve had a pandemic of this level in 100 years.”

According to Vermont’s state epidemiologist, “The 400 threshold was determined based on a comparison of Vermont’s active case count compared to that of counties in the Northeast.” The Department of Financial Regulation Commissioner who announced the number added, “400 was a relatively safe number in terms of the low transmissibility. It looked similar to Vermont’s disease prevalence.”

In other words, if it was relatively safe to travel from one county to another in Vermont, then it had to be relatively safe to travel to other counties in the Northeast, provided their prevalance looked like Vermont’s.

Any honest estimate must acknowledge that the science backing the 400 threshold is less than stellar.

Any honest estimate must acknowledge that the science backing the 400 threshold is less than stellar (even before you take into account the weaknesses of the underlying data, which is mostly related to how margins of error in the raw data get exacerbated when converted to Active Cases Per Million), but 400 is the number the people I’m trusting to look out for my community say is optimum, so that’s the number I’m going with.

If I trust scientists when they talk about climate change, I need to trust scientists when they talk about the pandemic.

In the end, the main reason my wife and I decided not to visit our Massachusetts family at the camp in Maine was because of the quarantine we’d have to do when we returned. While there’s no state enforcement of that quaratine, I (again) can’t imagine the guilt I would feel if we brought COVID from the camp to one of my friends, neighbors, colleagues, students, or students’ family members.

Like so many of us (but not enough), my wife, daughter, and I work hard to do our part in putting an end to this pandemic. We wear and wash our masks, and we limit our social circles to what seems our emotional minimum.

Even here in Vermont, where the infection rate is among the lowest in the country and where, according to data for my county, cases are actively decreasing and we’re on track to contain COVID-19…even here, we’re still wearing and washing our masks, still limiting our social circles, and still following our state’s guidelines.

Even when it sucks.

Fourteen days with just the three of us, stuck on our quarter-acre property, unable to visit with neighbors or play with friends, unable to restock at the grocery store (without depending on someone else), with a seven year old whose energy levels cause her to dance and cartwheel whenever she talks, and the anxieties and pressures of two still-working teachers and parents…fourteen days locked in quarantine…

That shit just sounds bad…like, lasting-damage bad.

Especially when you consider that, almost immediately following those fourteen days of quarantine, all of three of our schools would be back in session, adding to our already considerable stresses.

I love my Massachusetts family with all my heart, and I hate that I cannot yet visit them in Maine without going into quarantine, but according to everything that seems to be true, that has to be the decision for us.

Fuck Trump and fuck his useless administration.

Categories
life

For Thomas Reed, With Love

My 100-year-old grandfather, Thomas Reed Callahan, passed away last month. His body ran out of fuel, and he died in his sleep, in his bed, in his home, in the town where he lived for at least 82 years of his life (minus the years of World War II).

I knew my grandfather about as well as he would allow me to. During my childhood, I was generally scared of him — he was an authoritative force who didn’t “play” with his grandchildren. I felt much the same way about his wife, my grandmother, Helen Blaney, whom he married in 1943 and who died seven years ago last Spring at the age of 92. I remember them both as stern.

(Thankfully, in some ways, my grandmother’s personality changed when I got older due to the onset of dementia, and she lightened up considerably. I treasure the memories I have of her laughing to the point of tears as we played games with our family around the table at our cabin in Maine. The battle-axe I knew as a child became a nostalgic and loving woman who, the last time I saw her, held my hand and looked up at me with nothing but love, not really remembering who I was, but knowing that she loved me.)

My grandfather, on the other hand, remained a complicated man right up until his death, and there’s a lot I don’t understand about the life he chose to lead. His relationship with my father and my aunt was burdened in ways I’ve never been able to get my mind around — I know they loved him, but they didn’t seem to like him very much.

In a lot of ways, I have my grandfather to thank for my close relationship with my dad, who for my entire adult life has seemed determined not to relive the same conflicts with his sons. My dad has some of my grandfather’s tendencies, as do my brothers and cousins, as do I, but all of us witnessed enough of Tom’s negative behaviors — his stubbornness, his selfishness, and his disregard — to recognize them as a warning.

With that being said, I loved grandfather, and my daughter loved her great-grandfather, and he will be missed.

Just the “Facts”

One of the ways I tried to understand my grandfather was by researching his family tree. I put in years of effort (not to mention hundreds and hundreds of dollars) into building the tree, and here’s what it taught me.

He was born, Thomas Reed Callahan, on September 4, 1919 in Abington, Massachusetts, to Thomas Edward Callahan (more on him in a moment) and Dorothy Lincoln Reed. During the census of 1920, they lived in Abington with Dorothy’s mother and stepfather. Both his father and step-grandfather worked in a shoe factory, the former as a “cutter” and the latter as a “welter” (which from what I can gather, means his step-grandfather was responsible for the strip of leather that connected the sole to the upper part of the shoe). His mother, Dorothy, and his grandmother, Jane, did not work outside of the home.

Sometime after the 1920 census but before 1922 (when they show up in the city’s directory), my grandfather and his parents moved out of my great-great grandmother’s house in Abington and into a place at 63 Court Street in Whitman, Massachusetts, which is the town just south of Abington. Thomas Edward’s mother, Christina (“Lena”), and his brother, Charles, lived just down the road at 68 Court Street. In other words, around the age of two or three, my grandfather moved out of his mother’s family’s house in Abington and into his father’s family’s neighborhood in Whitman.

But then, in 1924, when he was roughly four years old, my grandfather’s parents divorced, and by the 1930 census, he and his mother are back living with her mother and step-father in Abington (her own father having passed away from pneumonia in 1901, when she was four years old).

I have to imagine that having divorced parents in the 1920s was not an easy thing. According to one source I found, “Although divorce was more attainable in the 1920s than it had been in previous decades, it still carried a heavy stigma. There were few legal resources or options for women who were stuck in abusive relationships. Divorce was only allowed in situations where there was adultery, although exceptions were made in cases of bigamy or impotence.” Another source adds, “a divorced woman was often referred to as a moral fire alarm because of the danger she represented to society.”

At this point, my grandfather was 10 years old, and the Great Depression was in full swing. His mother — moral fire alarm or not — was now working as a public school teacher, and what happens next is a bit confusing.

My Grandfather’s Stepfather

According to the 1940 census, by 1935, my divorced great-grandmother has met and settled down with a divorced man named Frank V. Thompson, and they’re living in a house at 192 Central Street in Abington. I have no idea how or when she met and married Frank, but I do know Frank’s ex-wife was originally from Abington, and in 1930, they were still married. But then in 1931, they filed for a divorce down in Virginia for some reason, and by ’35, he’s married to my great-grandmother.

Frank had four sons prior — the first was born in 1909 (making him ten years older than my grandfather) and the last was born in 1925 — but his wife must have been awarded custody because my grandfather, now fifteen years old, is the only child in the house.

Sometime in the late 1930s, the three of them moved to 12 Rose Ave in Marblehead, Massachusetts. They’re listed in the 1937 City Directory for Marblehead, and my grandfather graduated from Marblehead High School in 1938, but the 1940 census still has them listed as living at 192 Central Street in Abington for some reason, and it also says they’ve been living in the same house for the last five years.

Regardless of where they’re officially living, in the 1940 census, my great-grandmother is no longer teaching and my grandfather’s stepfather is listed as a traffic manager in the wholesale coat industry in Boston, where he makes roughly $5,000 a year. My grandfather, now age 20, works as a mechanic in the same industry, making roughly $1,000 a year.

My Grandfather’s Father & Half Brother

Meanwhile, in 1935, my grandfather’s father (i.e., my great-grandfather), Thomas Edward Callahan, is remarried to a woman named Catherine Devine (my father remembers her being called “Kitty” and having a thick Irish brogue). In December of ’35, Thomas Edward and his new wife have a baby boy named Paul. In a ’37 city directory, the family is listed as living on Belmont Street in Worcester, Massachusetts.

According to my father, Thomas Edward owned a bar in Worcester, though in 1940 and in 1941, he was still working as a shoe-cutter. In 1949, he shows up in the city directory as the manager of Madigan’s Cafe; in 1957 and again in ’61, he shows up as the President & Treasurer of Colony Restaurant Inc. I tried finding more information on either them, but to no avail.

Whatever bar my great-grandfather owned, my dad remembers visiting it once as a child. It was sometime early in the day and Thomas Edward was already drunk. Kitty was there too, and according to my dad, she was very friendly. Apparently, my grandfather and great-grandfather got in an argument, and my grandfather took my father out in a huff.

My aunt remembers visiting the place too. She remembers it being very dark inside.

When Thomas Edward died in 1963, at the age of 64, he left the bar to both my grandfather and my grandfather’s half-brother, Paul. My grandfather sold his half-brother his share and used the proceeds to buy his family a new boat.

I know next to nothing about Paul Callahan. He enlisted in the military in September ’54, served for four years, and was released in ’58. Besides taking over the bar in ’63, the only other thing I know is that he passed away in October ’77, just a few months after I was born.

All The Way Back to Ireland

Here’s what I know about the Callahans who came before my grandfather.

The farthest I can trace that side of my family is to a man named Daniel Callahan and a woman whose maiden name was Margaret Haggerty. Margaret was born in 1807. In 1858, she would get on a boat in Donegal, Ireland, with her children Daniel (13) and Eugene (12); her husband would not join them. I don’t know if he died or if he left his wife and children, but I can find nothing more about him. As you might imagine, there are a ridiculous number of people named Daniel Callahan in Ireland, and besides his name, I have nothing else to go on.

Of the two brothers, my family is directly descended from Daniel. He arrived with his family in Plymouth, Massachusetts, like the good pilgrims they were, and by 1860, at the age of about 15, he’s working as a mariner. His mom will pass away about eight years later, just two years shy of missing the birth of her grandson, and my great-great grandfather, Thomas S Callahan.

I’m not 100% sure, but Thomas S. was born on January 4, 1870, and his parents didn’t get married until that same year, so I think it’s safe to assume he was born out of wedlock. Daniel and his new wife, Catherine, would go on to have three more sons.

Sometime between 1870 and the census in 1880, Daniel stopped working as a mariner and took a job in a shoe factory. His wife, known as Katie, is listed as “keeping house.” By the census of 1900, he’s listed as a “common laborer,” as is his son, Thomas S.

Daniel would live long enough to see two of his children, including Thomas S., my direct ancestor, and his wife, pass away. Eugene will pass away from tuberculosis at the age of 24; Thomas will die from pneumonia at the age of 45; and his wife will die from malaria in 1907. Daniel would follow his family members to the grave in 1929, living to the age of 83.

My Grandfather’s Grandfather & Grandmother

All I know about Thomas S. Callahan is that he was born in Plymouth in 1870, got married to a woman named Christina Flood in July of 1895. and had five children who lived, including Thomas Edward, my grandfather’s father; they also had one child who died, with the cause of death being listed as “premature birth.”

At some point between 1900 and 1910, Thomas S. moved his family from Plymouth to Whitman, Massachusetts. According to a variety of censuses, he worked in the shoe industry his entire life before passing away of pneumonia at 45 years old.

Christina, my grandfather’s grandmother, was born in Cape Breton in New Brunswick, Canada in 1874. She immigrated in either 1886, ’89, or ’90, depending on what she felt like telling the census takers that year. After her mother died in 1891, her father moved the family back to New Brunswick, but in 1895, she’s in Plymouth, marrying my grandfather’s grandfather. By 1910, she’s working alongside her husband in the shoe factories, but after pneumonia took Thomas S., she returned to the home and two of her sons took jobs in the shoe factory, both working as “cutters.”

Catherine will live, incredibly, to the age of 103, which means my great-great grandmother passed away the same year I was born! She and Thomas S. are buried at St. Joseph’s Cemetery in Plymouth.

Back to My Grandfather

So now it’s the 1940s, and my grandfather, Thomas Reed Callahan, is living in Marblehead with his stepfather and mother and working as a mechanic in the wholesale coat industry. In Dec. 1941, the Japanese attack Pearl Harbor. Three months later, on March 19, 1942, my grandfather signs up as a Private in the Air Corps. He enlists “for the duration of the War or other emergency, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherwise according to law.” He’s listed as one of the “semiskilled mechanics and repairmen” with two years of education, single, and no dependents.

A year later, while still serving, he married my grandmother, Helen Blaney.

My brother knows a lot more than I do about what my grandfather did during the war, but I do know he was stationed stateside for the entirety of it, working as a flight instructor. I know he spent some time in upstate New York and Texas, and that he would receive his discharge while stationed in California.

One of the stories he liked to tell had to do with driving back to Marblehead from California with my grandmother. This was before President Eisenhower installed the interstate highway system, so a cross-country trip back then required finding the right paths through a mishmash of state roads. He often told me about losing his breaks while driving on ice somewhere in the midwest — he told this whenever I had to drive through Vermont’s winter weather to make it home for Christmas.

My father would be born in ’47; my aunt in ’51. They lived in a small house my grandfather had built near the top of a dead-end hill in Marblehead on a lot of roughly 15,000 sq. feet — a huge lot for Marblehead.

By this point, my grandfather was working for the Metropolitan Coal Company, which owned waterfront coal terminals in Boston, including access to the rail yards. During his time there, he returned to college, earning his B.B.A. from Northeastern in 1952.

At some point after 1952, he went to work for the First National Bank of Boston, and after that, he became the comptroller for Michaud Bus Lines. He retired from there in 1983, but in his “retirement,” he took a part time job at the National Grand Bank in Marblehead, where he would work for another 35 years before finally retiring at the young old age of 99.

During the ’60s, my grandfather also worked as an adjunct at Harvard University, teaching classes in business finance. He didn’t do it for too long, but after I became an adjunct at Green Mountain College in the 2010s, he would mention the job to me pretty much every time we saw each other. It was difficult because he taught night classes, which meant he didn’t get to see his wife and children on the days he taught, and ultimately, that’s why he stopped, but 50 years later, he looked back on the experience fondly.

He was also a dedicated member of his community, serving in public office for Marblehead and as an officer for the local chapter of the Freemasons.

His Real Legacy

In 1960, my grandfather and grandmother purchased a camp on Bunganut Pond in Lyman, Maine. While it’s officially a pond, we always called it the lake. The lake covers about 300 acres in southern Maine. It’s deep enough for speedboats and long enough for jet skis. There’s a public beach on one end, a campground in a different cove, and an old Girl Scout camp that is now owned by some Christian organization.

I call our camp my grandfather’s real legacy because it was here that his family congregated the most. My father and aunt grew up going to the camp, and when they got older and each had three sons of their own, that’s where they took us every summer, and now that we have kids, that’s where my grandfather’s great-grandchildren meet to play and swim.

The camp is why my dad’s family and my aunt’s family remain so close. I grew up fighting with my cousins like they were my brothers. We saw each other virtually every weekend in the summers, and we made fun of each other for doing belly flops off the dock or for getting tossed this way and that from the tube. We sat around countless campfires, whispered to each other in the loft, crept to the edge to watch TV when we should have been sleeping. We “mined” for mica up the road, collected firewood from the forest floor, rode our bikes to the frog pond. We battled each other in badminton, outdid each other in fishing competitions, accused each other of cheating at tether ball. We yelled at each other while putting away our toys, insulted each other while closing down the camp on Labor Day weekends, and giggled in the darkness while my grandfather yelled at my dad and uncle about being too loud at 8pm.

In short, it was at the camp in Maine where our family became a family, and because of the relationships we forged on that lake, my grandfather’s family, three generations later, remains close and strong.

If that’s not the sign of a successful life, then I don’t what is.

So thank you, Gramps, and give Gram a big kiss for me!

Categories
featured life

A Story

Today was my forty-first birthday. When I woke up, my daughter was incredibly excited to give me the presents she and her mother had purchased for me just the night before. I was in the shower, and she ran into the bathroom to tell me that she was going into the guest room to wrap the present. Several minutes later, she came in to tell me that her mother was going to help her because she (my daughter) isn’t very good at wrapping presents.

I toweled off, put in my contacts, brushed my teeth, combed my hair, put on deoderant, opened the bathroom the door, and walked down the hallway to my bedroom. She followed on my heels, the bag of presents in her hand. I put on a pair of boxer briefs and sat on the bed. She climbed up next to me. Her mother leaned against the doorway.

I opened the bag. They’d placed a card on top of the presents. My daughter’s eyes opened wide in anticipation as my fingers picked at the folds of the envelope. I don’t remember exactly what the card said, but it played a noise when you opened it, and that’s what she was waiting for; she burst out laughing at the sound.

I laid the card aside, and my daughter said something about it not being Christmas. It took me a moment to figure it out, but the wrapping paper they’d used on the topmost present was Christmas-themed and my daughter didn’t want me to think she didn’t know it was Christmas. I opened the present. It was a desk-sized fan that came with a banana clip —— so you can, you know, clip it onto the side of something. My daughter was so excited about the banana clip. I looked up at my wife confusingly, looked back at my daughter, smiled, said thank you, told her how much I loved it, and gave her a great big hug and kiss.

At the bottom of the giftbag were two Halloween-sized bags of Kit-Kats. I smiled at her again, said thank you, and gave both her and my wife a kiss.

It wasn’t until about 12 hours later that I was able to appreciate their gifts for what they were.

Say what you want, but it’s true: I love fans. I’d have a fan blowing on me all night and day if I could make it happen. It’s not a temperature thing (per se); I just love the feel of air moving across my body.

My wife does not love fans. She puts up with them because she loves me, but if she had it her way, we’d live where the heat presses down on your body like a heavy-weighted blanket. I only mention this to demonstrate that there are, in fact, people who do not love fans.

But I am not one of them, and both my daughter and my wife know this about me.

I also love Kit Kat bars. This is a love I don’t very much advertise. Anyone who knows me knows of my love of Sour Patch Kids, chocolate ice cream, and Doritos, but my Kit Kat love — that one’s just for me. I only buy them in the checkout line of the grocery store, and they are usually devoured before I leave the parking lot, their little wrappers shoved back into the far corner of the hard plastic pocket on the inside of my driver’s side door, far from the prying eyes of anyone but me.

My wife and daughter don’t often go food shopping with me. We go as a family maybe once or twice a month, but the rest of the time, I go alone. I don’t specifically not buy Kit Kat bars when they are with me, but I do specifically try to prevent my daughter from asking me to buy her candy, and so whenever we grocery shop as a family, I try to rebuff my own Kit-Kat-desiring urges so as not to inspire her own. While I know my wife and daughter have definitely seen me purchase a number of Kit Kat bars over the years, I did not know they had seen me purchase them enough times to realize my secret love for them.

So, for my forty-first birthday, my wife and daughter gave me two things I most unquestionably love: a desk-sized fan with a banana clip, which means I can bring it with my anywhere, allowing me virtually nonstop access to the feeling of air moving across my skin; and two whopping bags of what has quietly become my truly favorite candy.

If that isn’t a demonstration of their intimate knowledge of who I am and what I love, then I don’t know what is.

Which means, for my forty-first birthday, my wife and daughter gave me the only gift that matters: a reminder of how thankful I am to be in their lives.

I told my daughter tonight that of all the years I’ve been alive, this past one has been my favorite. I hope she knows I meant it.