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I’m 60 Years Old and About to Turn 61. It’s Not a Milestone Birthday Like 70 or 80, But It’s Importa…
I am sixty years old, and in a couple of months I shall turn sixty-one. It’s not a grand milestone, not seventy or eighty, but to me it carries weight. I long to mark it with a celebrationnot just a hasty cake or a lets squeeze in a pub lunch affair, but a thoughtful, proper gathering: an evening meal, lovely tables, chairs adorned with ribbon, waiters gliding about, soft music drifting through the air. Something to make me feel awake, cherished, grateful for all Ive traversed.
But the trouble is, my children disagree.
I have two grown sons. Both still reside with me, along with their partners and children. The house never rests: noise, television blaring, little ones hurtling down the hall, conversations floating from every room, small squabbles flaring like matches. Naturally, I love them but the quiet moments have vanished. I am never alone. Never.
They both work, but the reality is, I cover most of the expenses. My pension, what my late husband left me, and a little business I still managethese keep the lights on. I pay the bills, the food shops, fix whatevers broken, and much too often whats meant as just a spot of temporary help turns permanent.
I have never begrudged helping.
But what rattles me now is how decisions are made for me. Its as though Ive become invisible, my desires dismissed.
When I said I wanted to throw a party, they told me it was a waste of money. That at my age, why bother with tables, meals, servers? Better, they argued, that I fork the money over to themfor investments, for their needs, for something sensible. They spoke as if I were reckless with my own money.
I explained I was not planning to borrow a penny, and that Id been dreaming of this for months. They didnt listen. They went on: nonsense to spend it on a party.
Then one of them said to me, quite simply,
Mum, thats not for you anymore.
That line cut deeper than Id imagined.
Suddenly, in that fuzzy dream logic, unspoken truths swirled upthings Ive never dared voice. That sometimes I wish it were just me in the house. That I miss waking to gentle silence. That Id like to come home and find the sitting room empty, the air still. That I crave to make decisions without having to explain myself.
Ive even thought to tell them to find their own placesnot from malice, but because, perhaps, Ive done my part.
Yet then the guilt chews at me.
I fear sounding selfish.
I dont want an argument. I dont want to expel anyone, as if banishing intruders from my castle in the night. I simply wish to know if its wrong to want a celebration. To yearn for a little quiet, sometimes. To wish my own money might be spent on me, too.
Im writing because I am lost unsure whether to stand firm, or yield yet again. Shall I host the party, even though they frown upon it?
What do you thinkis it selfish of me to want to celebrate my birthday the way I dream it, and to hope that, just once, my home and my purse strings are mine alone to command?
