Anonymous wrote:We had brunch at a restaurant for my birthday (today!) DH got me the lotion and bath oil I specifically asked for. I am feeling very.....introspective today.
I posted this yesterday:
http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/637074.page
My birthday is NOT public on facebook
Anonymous wrote:On my thirty-fourth birthday, I was recovering from a serious illness after weeks of being touch and go in the hospital. I celebrate lots of little things all the time now. My friends and family remember that time and are happy I'm here to celebrate with them. Anyone who wants to rain on my parade probably wouldn't be invited in the first place.
I also celebrate things like when I re-learned to ride a bike. I called a friend, told her about my achievement, and we went out for dessert and a drink. I throw parties for minor holidays and events, like derby day, or Girl Scouts anniversary with my kids' Girl Scout troop. Basically, I like to have fun and have get togethers with friends.
If it's ok to go out to dinner and drinks on some random day in August, months away from my birthday, why isn't it ok to get together with them the weekend of my birthday? I don't demand gifts, I don't post birthday craziness all over Facebook, and I'm not inviting the same people to multiple events. But I have a little celebration with my family the day of my birthday. I have a traditional outing that started in high school with an old friend and we try to do that during my birthday week. I see a different friend for dinner sometime that month. I usually try to be the one to host my book club that month and if it falls within a day or two of my birthday, I'll serve cupcakes. And if I go somewhere that has a free birthday dessert, I'm damn well gonna enjoy my free cake. I don't see the big deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it's casual, like "come over if you can on Saturday...we're using my birthday as an excuse to have a BBQ" or "we've been dying to try the new sushi place, so we'd love you to join us Saturday for Ted's birthday," that's fun, and fine.
If it involves complex logisitics, hints about gifts, drawn-out celebrations, or command performances? Eff that.
Exactly this. The simpler, the better.
Anonymous wrote:If it's casual, like "come over if you can on Saturday...we're using my birthday as an excuse to have a BBQ" or "we've been dying to try the new sushi place, so we'd love you to join us Saturday for Ted's birthday," that's fun, and fine.
If it involves complex logisitics, hints about gifts, drawn-out celebrations, or command performances? Eff that.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know. Most of my friends either only celebrate quietly at home with their families, or occasionally invite a group to dinner or to their house. If it's out to dinner, it's a modest place we'd go anyway just for fun, and it's understood you pay your own way (though almost always everyone splits the birthday girl's tab among the others, which is nominal and fine with me).
I almost always just celebrate at home, but about every 3 years I'll get a group together, or let a friend send a casual invite for me. To be clear, these invites are akin to "Hey, does anyone want to get together for dinner on January 1?" It just happens to be a birthday. No decorations, gifts, etc...
Anonymous wrote:Whatever, lots of folks didn't make it see another year and I will celebrate every year that I am able to mark living in this world. You can just live and die if that's your thing. No birthday cake for you.