Turning thirty
One son said, "I remember when I was seventeen, and a guy at work turned thirty. It seemed so old." In 1978, my thirtieth was similarly regarded as the definitive departure of youth.
Women friends approached the day either deliberately distracted by some kind of hijinks, or wrapped in a granny-square afghan, weeping into poetry. Joanna stocked her kitchen with beer and pizza, invited forty friends, and then was so distraught she never left her bedroom. One by one, we entered to comfort her.
My birthday party in July, 1978 was here; I lived on the upper floor of this mansion, built in 1875. It was a romantic apartment that had retained its heritage features, with odd little quarter-levels off a centre hall wide as a street. The former tenant had entered a convent, so I'll bet the place had not seen a bash like that for some years.
See that balcony? John dangled from the railing by one hand (probably on a bet), while his wife pleaded with his pals to haul him back up. Fortunately the owner, who occupied the ground floor, was at her cottage.
At thirty |
Our friends brought raccoon-themed gifts, because I was fond of the bushy, bandit-eyed coons who lived in the garage, and my then-husband liked theme parties. So I received ears of sweet corn, a silver raccoon stickpin, and of course a vintage Davy Crockett hat.
Robert ignored the theme, gave me a bottle of liqueur—and then drank it himself:
An immoderate amount of Bailey's |
Thirty is a gusty age, full of energy but sometimes rudderless. In my circle, it was a time of movement, from job to job, partner to partner. There was no consensus about how take on adult roles; we were divided between the conventional models supplied by parents or mentors and New-Age experimentation.
Everyone turns thirty within a larger historical frame, the warp to your weft. The late '70s were a period of relative economic stability; no one at that party had yet faced chronic unemployment. Pension plans were robust, even if we barely thought of ever needing them. Women were now free to bear children or not, but if one were desired, thirty was considered "time to get on with it".
Though we had been vividly influenced by the '60s, few dressed for that party in "beads and feathers from Salvation Army counters" as Leonard Cohen wrote, except for Lisa, who was a dancer. I wore a brown Danskin leotard and matching wrap skirt. We were building our "work wardrobes", and were a good fifteen years away from anyone even thinking of wearing jeans to the office except on the occasional Casual Friday. Some of us worried about looking old enough!
As I look back on the guests, I realize how much instability roiled below the surface. The majority of those in relationships broke up, partly because of the relatively recent option for no-fault divorce. In less than three years I had moved to another city, taken a new job, and was about to divorce too. Only then, responsible for every aspect of my life, did I feel wholly adult.
The birthday boys |
My sons are turning thirty in a different world; in '78, the population was 4.4 billion; today, it's 7.5 billion. Every day, they learn what is happening, anywhere, in real time; receiving and transmitting instantaneous information. (We didn't even have an answering machine in our apartment.)
Before we part for the summer, please tell us about your thirtieth birthday; I'll bet you remember, and I would love to hear that story before we part for two months.
The Passage will reopen on Tuesday, September 5. Thank you for reading and have a glorious, golden summer!
Comments
Have a wonderful summer. I enjoy your blog so much - you write so well.
I had been well and truly fooled as I'd already received flowers and had been treated to lunch - I wasn't expecting anything else. I couldn't stop laughing through the whole performance. Needless to say - I've never forgotten i!
As others have noted - we should celebrate birthdays and the fact that we are still here - life can be a challenge and it's seldom smooth sailing - but it doesn't mean we can't appreciate it and our friends and family.
Happy birthday to your boys and have a wonderful summer. See you in September.
Happy Birthday to your sons!
and Happy Summer to all of you
Enjoy your family celebration and have a wonderful summer.
Margie: I think you get the Wild Award! You just could not do that in any office these days, let alone a bank.
Abagail: Some birthdays are low points, and to have it be a decade one is extra-low. I hope those good friends rallied round you. You definitely would have had a different life and given the small behavioural description, I'm willing to bet you are far better off.
gigi01: A double celebration! You were definitely too busy that day to philosophize about "what it means to be 30"!
materfamilias: 7, 4 and - 1! You were probably too tired to party much. (40 was like that to me, I had 1 year olds and stuck my feet in a Mr Froggy wading pool, had a beer and called it a party.) Your 40th sounds magical and your children old enough to join in and remember it too.
LauraH: 30 is still a drifty time, you see so many levels of stability (or not). Some of my contemporaries then were middle-aged by then, with kids, mortgages and big jobs, others were still bumming around in Guatemala and trying to find either god or a job they could stand. I remind myself of that now, with my sons: Thirty is adult, but not the same adult one will be at 40.
Our children are a few years away from their 40th...where does time go?
My 30th birthday stands out because we took our two children to Palm Springs to visit my husbands' parents who were Snowbirds and spent their winters in warmth...March 1985 was a hot sunny day and we swam in the pool and later went out for dinner at a fancy restaurant ate lobster and I rode in a limo!
Hope you have a lovely holiday.
Leslie
Beth: I always threatened Robert that his piracy would haunt him. Would love to see a photo, I too am sure there was a party.
I will never forget my 30th...the year we almost burned the house down....
Ali
Have a great summer Duchesse! I'll be missing your post, so what i'll do is to revisit the old ones! Looking forward to September, when you're back. And happy 30th to your sons!
Pseu: If I had to guess, that is exactly the setting I would have predicted: dancing merrily with friends.
Susan: You are not the only commenter who can't vividly recall a decade birthday. But sometimes the date does not coincide with the time when more significant changes happened. And fogginess is natural in the midst of pregnancy.
Unknown: Was one of your friends in the Talking Heads? I will never look at a Spanish Coffee the same way.
Dulce: As you will note, others can't remember either, and not for embarrassing reasons! Thank you- there are some good posts back in the archives; sometimes I read them myself.
I was at Jean-Talon market VERY early this morning; fun as they are setting up but had to dodge some trucks while walking around, as I wasn't entirely awake yet, despite an espresso at San-Siméon. I'm making this very simple recipe: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2017/jun/21/sausages-and-greens-recipe-napoli-style-from-rachel-roddy-kitchen-in-rome
Actually just with spinach and spring onions as those are in season - chard or broccoli later on. Using the small chicken sausages from Milano...
Buon estate a tutti!
Marina: Menopause is definitely a new chapter, and some women celebrate with a special party- though I have never been to one.
I spent a lot of time with my prosecco-drinking partner that summer, cementing a friendship and regard that lasts to this day, though we're in very different life places now. The traveling friend, I have never crossed paths with again in person again after that night.
I turn 40 this month. Thank you for the opportunity to do a little pre-reflection on my 30th and the decade since then.
My own birthday is three days after my son's and will not be a decade one quite yet. But I am already thinking of that. I veer between spending it in my neighbourhood, which is filled with the kinds of convivial places where you spent your 30th and somewhere distant- maybe Capri.