The Birthday That Finally Felt Like Enough
There’s a very specific flavor of disappointment that can sneak into birthdays in your 30s. Not because anything goes wrong, exactly, but because the day rarely lives up to the cinematic version in your head. You’ve accumulated a whole life by now — kids, losses, career pivots, years of inside jokes in the group chat — and somehow you expect one dinner reservation and a slice of cake to capture all of it.
For the last few years, my birthday has landed in the middle of something: infertility, then pregnant and terrified after a loss, counting weeks instead of candles, then newly postpartum, which is less “birthday glow” and more “have I brushed my teeth today?” Every celebration felt slightly hijacked by whatever chapter I was white-knuckling through, like the day couldn’t just be a day; it had to carry the emotional weight of everything I was hoping would change.
This year was different. For the first time in a long time, I wasn’t pursuing anything. No monitoring appointments, no two-week waits, no bracing for news. Just a regular Friday that happened to be mine.
My husband gave me the most beautiful earrings (the kind that make you feel more pulled together than you actually are), and two of my closest friends took me out for drinks where we laughed about nothing and everything. My kids presented homemade cards and a dessert that was 90% sprinkles and 10% structure, which felt deeply on brand for our household.
Nothing was extravagant, and for once, I didn’t want it to be.
After years of wanting something so badly it tinted every single day, ordinary felt luxurious: healthy kids singing off-key, a stiff drink, jewelry I’ll wear on our next night out.
Thirty-seven wasn’t flashy or transformative; it was steady — and after everything, steady feels like winning.