The first time that I awoke to February 21st I was a few days short of my first birthday. I was living in Vancouver, Canada with my parents and two sisters.
World War II had ended just five years before and the moon was a place to look at, not land on.

The seventh time I woke up on February 21st the cell phone had not been invented. In fact our phone was attached to the wall and an operator said hello when someone picked up the hand piece.
“Who would you like to call,” she would ask.
The 14th time I woke up to February 21st I was a teenager living in West Covina, California.
The Beatles had appeared on Ed Sullivan for the first time two weeks before. John F Kennedy had been assassinated three months before and five months before our family had immigrated to the United States.
Bruce and I married less than a year later. We both felt quite mature and old. I chuckle now when I look at this picture of us. We were so young!
That February 21st we had just found out Bruce was being sent to Vietnam. Our world changed. Nothing seemed safe any more. Life seemed precarious and yet more precious.
I cooked on a wood stove and bathed in a large tin tub by a fire.
AND I was a widow. What a weird term. It cannot describe the titling of the world and the creation of a new life that occurs after a loved one dies.
The pictures of that year show a tired woman surrounded by family.
I was Shaun without Bruce, but by my 57th February 21st I had also been just Shaun for almost 10 months. I was beginning to be Shaun in the land of a new “after.”
I painted flowers and planted flowers and learned to live fully after loss.
By that day I had ridden on the back of a Harley through Yellowstone and South Dakota. I had taken my own solo rode trip through the Rockies. I had even put a profile up on Match.com, though it turned out my best friend Ray was to be my new love.
In the past few years I have held seven new grandchildren and three new daughter-in-laws. I have retired from working in child welfare and traveled to Malaysia, Alaska, the southwest US and Minnesota.
I have faced a forest fire, landslide, flood and frozen water pipes.
I have grieved the death of my son Robin and found joy in marrying my buddy Ray.
Yet for all the years and experiences, losses and loves it is this day that is truly important.
Ray and I celebrated this day following the setting sun through the canyons of Moab, Utah. I truly mean we celebrated this day. It was not a birthday or an anniversary. It was simply a day of being alive.
Maybe that is the lesson of this day. Life is now and here and precious. I am glad to have had this day.
Wishing all of you the present moment, the present day.
To Be continued
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