I turned 40 this past week. Bob knows better than to abrade my spirit with the social stress of a birthday party. My perfect jubilee is one spent cloistered away from the world, allowed to celebrate with the forest, my family, my dogs and my thoughts.
Turning 40 has absorbed a lot of my attention in recent months. I have a history of being rather maudlin at birthdays, rueing the passage of my life (a pattern that began when I turned 10). I decided last summer that if I didn’t want to hit a landmark year and spend the day wallowing in sorrow, then I needed to make a gift to myself.
I had to choose something that would buoy my spirits, engage my mind, fuel my creative fire. It needed to frighten me with a challenge that earlier on my path, may have seemed insurmountable.
It needed to be something I had secretly wanted my whole life.
Thus, to celebrate turning 40, I chose to take the whole winter off to write my first novel.
But a mother of two on a family farm doesn’t take a winter off to write a novel. I take an hour or two each day. Then I referee over bicker matches, arrange schedules, help with breakfast preparations, walk the dogs, teach my children, fix lunch. And in this particular year, confronted with labor and age-induced injuries on our family farm, as the strongest adult (for the moment), I find myself spending more time splitting wood, throwing hay, chipping ice out of frozen buckets, carrying meat boxes.
On the morning of my birthday, Dad had an appointment at the hospital, so I knew I needed to be at the farm before I could even have a celebratory cup of coffee with Bob and the girls. But I woke in the pre-dawn hours, long before the cattle stirred and the sheep began their morning chorus. And I gave myself the gift of sitting down to work at my novel.
Then I drove to the farm and greeted the cows, the chickens and the sheep. I laid down fresh bedding for the hens, poured water slowly from a bucket so the red Devon steer could stick his tongue in the falling stream (he really enjoys that), stopped and gazed at the sun streaming through the cracks in the barn as it lighted the floating hay chaff, spotlighting its dance in the winter air. I puttered about the barnyard until my parents came home from the hospital, waiting to make sure Dad was all right. Seeing him smile with temporary relief from his pain, I took my leave and headed home.
I removed my barn boots and coveralls, pulled off my hat and gloves, then found my way to my little rocking chair that sits in a sunlit corner of the house. And there, the girls flocked around me, little chicks, their bodies in a confused tizzy with an eagerness to nuzzle under their mother hen, but equally eager to chirp, dance and make a celebration. My lap was soon piled with colored drawings, hand made birthday cards, and baked clay jewelry and coiled pots. Bob sat quietly in the chair opposite, his kind brown eyes taking in the entire scene. Then he brought out a box and set it on my lap.
In it was a sculpture of an Iroquois woman, a burden strap around her head, a bundle of sticks on her back. And beside it, a poem that he had written:
Carrying Home
The sleet whispers to the husks of beech leaves
as she passes before the unblinking eyes
of somnolent aspens
who have relented their bones to her use,
kept dry above the coveting snow.
Each footfall chosen and deliberate,
she leans from her load
dwelling where its weight, dragging backward
is poised against her own, drawing ahead
on the path she has cleaved with her wanderings.
Her heart sings its song with quiet certainty,
her brow bears its burden, resolute and knowing
that the sentient thicket and woodland always intended
that she carry home the blaze of their autumn fires
to be reawakened as the light and warmth of her hearth.
I looked up at him, my eyes growing watery. “To celebrate your burdens,” he whispered, then brushed my lips with his own.
And with his help, I see the significance of turning 40. One part is about being grown up enough, confident enough, fearless enough — to face my deepest, most secret dreams, and to bring them out into the world. And the other part is to embrace all those forces that seemingly work against those dreams, those burdens I have chosen by the act of living and surrendering myself to those that I love. Celebrate the dreams. Celebrate the burdens, too. For it is in that delicious tension point – where dreams pull forward against the backward draw of one’s burdens, where life becomes a beautiful work of art.
This post was written by Shannon Hayes, whose blog, RadicalHomemakers.com and GrassfedCooking.com, is supported by the sale of her books, farm products and handcrafts. If you like the writing and want to support this creative work, please consider visiting the blog’s farm and book store.
To view Ula’s Greeting Cards and support Saoirse and Ula’s (Shannon and Bob’s kids) entrepreneurial ventures, click here.
Feel free to click on any of the links below to learn about Shannon’s other book titles:
Bernice Fischels
Happy 40th Birthday, Shannon! I enjoy your writing and blog posts so very much!
Nancy
Amen, my dear friend
Jan S.
As always, beautifully written…. happy 40th Shannon! You have much to celebrate.
Jana
I will be turning 40 this year…thank you for this post! And Happy Birthday.
Heather
Perfection. Thank you for sharing your beautiful life with us. And best wishes for a wonderful 40th year.
Jenn B
Beautiful, all of it. Thank you for sharing Shannon and Happiest Birthday!
Laura Grace Weldon
To celebrate by letting free your heart’s yearning is powerful, beautiful, and oh so brave. I can’t wait to read your novel.
Also, a man who not only loves you each day but also writes you poetry—-now that is a mighty blessing.
Ann Parziale
Beautiful and poignant thoughts, once again, so beautifully expressed. I, too, eagerly await your novel. And Happy Happy Birthday!!
Anna Alkin
I needed to read this more than you can know, Shannon and Bob. Thank you.
Jane Osorne
First, it goes without saying, Happy Birthday. Each decade brings with it new joy! I know because I turned 80 this past April and am looking forward to whatever is ahead for me and mine.
Second, without a doubt, you and Bob were meant to be a part of my life because you provide me with such hope for all our future. The fact that our life styles are so different, Me a city person, you a country person and yet what you give so resonates with my soul. And I can only believe, with everyone you touch along your path. May all be well with you and your family. Fondly, Jane
Tanya Pulver
Very beautiful, Shannon. Thank you for sharing and Happy 40th Birthday!
Kathey
Happy Birthday Shannon. Thanks for sharing that. Wishing you many blessings.
Lisa M
Shannon, this is beautiful as always, and tell Bob the poem is lovely too. Happy Birthday. I hope you enjoy your 40s as much as I have enjoyed mine. It has been by far my favorite decade yet. Also, did you happen to catch the NY Times article that ran this past weekend entitled, ‘What You Learn in your 40’s’? Very poignant and funny but in no way as well written as yours.
Mary Ann
Happy Birthday, Shannon! Most things improve with age!
Inner Pickle
A work of art indeed. What a fellow. Happy birthday amazing lady xx
Jacqueline welles
Just…beautiful…
margaret kent
Shannon,Joining with all your other readers,every Good wish on this special Birthday-yes each decade conveys a new wisdom-to add to our collective store.Best wishes,Margaret xPS Delighted to learn of your new writing project,will look forward to it’s fruition -a wonderful way to celebrate a new decade,even if it requires much dedication & hardwork,which you give to all your projects.
Jeanne sheehan
Happy Birthday. Mindful thoughts for each and every day.
Britton
What a lovely gift from Bob- how fortunate to have him there to help with the burdens. And write poetry! My husband does the same; in dark moments I sometimes wish for something more tangible- but then I’m blown away by the heart and soul bared in a birthday poem. Irreplaceable. Happy birthday!
Lisa
Happy birthday, Shannon! What a lovely gift you have given us by sharing this. Tears in my eyes too. I too am living the pull between obligations and dreams; we are HERE!