Happy birthday!

“You’re gonna love your thirties – it’s the BEST,” a particular brand of female acquaintance would chirp at parties, with the kind of cheer that made me instantly suspicious of anything she found joy in. The implication, of course, was that this elusive new decade would finally release me from the reckless, self-destructive behaviors of my twenties and usher in the long-awaited era of True Adulthood™. I was reasonably terrified. Where I come from, your thirties are for child-rearing, career peaks, and perhaps buying some property. But I happened to live in Berlin, where fifty is really the new thirty, and it’s considered perfectly regular for a 34-year-old to be in a k-hole on a Tuesday with their two ENM partners – so clearly my priorities were a little “off”. As my therapist had put it: “I don’t think you’re nearly as traditional as you think you are” – a rather aggravating observation I had naturally refuted on the spot and then stewed over for weeks.

Three days before my big 3-0 getaway to my father’s house in the south of France, which he’d kindly lent to me and 15 of my closest friends, I met a couple of girlfriends for drinks. I sat outside with a glass of wine, unwinding from the day, until they both arrived.

“You are GLOWING,” one of them said as she hugged me. To be fair, my skin had been great lately.

“Maybe you’re pregnant,” the other blurted out in that nonchalant hot-girl-way that made her both intimidating and extremely charming. We laughed and riffed on it for a few minutes before moving on to more pressing matters, like celebrity birthdays and whose zodiac sign got the best ones. The next morning, I bought a pregnancy test on my way to work, despite being late as always. I walked in and greeted my team, busy setting up for the day ahead, and bee-lined for the bathroom.

It was a small, red-painted toilet stall, with some music awards hung up on the wall, which without fail forced me to wonder what the fuck I was doing scanning people’s eyeballs for a crypto company instead of literally anything remotely fulfilling. I think I already knew before I even bought the test, but of course I was desperately attempting to convince myself it was just stress. It came back positive immediately – within seconds, as if to mock me. You were that pregnant and you didn’t even realize it? Are you even a real woman?

I did not cry. I did not panic. I went straight into problem-solving mode, as any good control-freak first-born daughter of a jew would. There was only a two-day window during which my best friend and I would have the house to ourselves before everyone else arrived, so I sat on a much-too-sunny bench outside of work for two hours, calling every clinic and hospital in and around Marseille in order to schedule all necessary steps of this major stint in my birthday plans. It was supposed to be my year – and the party of the summer – and this wasn’t going to stop me.

On the day of my birthday, it was peak summer in Cassis – a postcard: blue skies, poolside tans, card games at the table, everyone drunk and glowing and a little sunburned. I had been bleeding profusely for two days straight, and 48 hours earlier had endured the most excruciating physical pain of my life – not without the appropriate levels of unavoidable psychological trauma and gutwrenching sobs. I couldn’t swim because of the bleeding, and by that point had told every single one of my 15 friends what was happening. The reactions ranged from awkward silence to vague pity to a kind of half-concerned “oh wow” energy. A couple of close girlfriends checked in quietly. The rest kept their distance, which I didn’t totally blame them for. Honestly, it hadn’t fully sunk in for me either.

And really, it should take a person a moment to grasp something so world-shatteringly real as the possibility of human life in your hands. And this sinking-in certainly wasn’t going to happen while I was consistently slightly buzzed and hosting a large group of adult children. The deed was done and behind me, and all that was left was for me to endure the lingering inconveniences of its aftereffects.As the morning faded into afternoon and I started to think about the lunch menu, my phone vibrated.

It was my boss. The text read: “Dear Alice, as you know we have been doing a lot of restructuring over the past couple of weeks…” I let out a loud nervous laugh that resembled the one I’d let out when I once got mugged while on a Bumble date – a story for another time. These motherfuckers were getting rid of me on my birthday.

If this was my entrance into this new decade, it had already started fraying at the edges. I made a joke of the whole thing, of course – kept it light, stayed on-brand. The chaos didn’t scare me as much as the silence afterwards. I wandered back toward the pool, where one friend was battling the wind to roll a cigarette and another had just spilled some pastis onto a towel no one would clean. I watched them float and burn and laugh and shout about nothing. The music changed. I didn’trecognize the song. Thirty felt like something I hadn’t arrived in yet. But I was there – I was still there.

Sense on a Sunday

“Girl” he says, lying across the edge of my bed in his boxer shorts, “you will never be normal, just accept it already!” A condescending chuckle escapes his mouth and mocks the dread that lies atop me like a tired, fat ghoul. “This is all just so pathetic,” I respond, despondently. I bring to my mouth the black usb-stick-looking instrument and take a long hit of “mango ice” battery acid. As the vapor leaves my body in an opaque cloud, a voice within echoes: “All of this beauty and chaos is absurd and nonsensical, and so are you. Move the fuck on.”

He’s gone quiet now, probably off in his thoughts about what kind of snack he feels like having or what porn he may or may not jerk it to later. Beads of sweat are starting to form on his forehead and shaven chest. How can someone so grotesque be so right about so many things? I bring my hands above my head, a position which even horizontally slows down my heart rate, priming my mind for any significant reflection. “What time is it?” I ask, without looking at him. It’s 3:38. Ungodly hour for these thoughts. We had just spent a whole hour making a playlist called Sunday Scaries. He had smirked: “It’s not like the scaries are reserved for Sunday nights specifically. You’ve been like this for what, four days now?” 

 I am aware it’s a school-girl concept, but I know many Actual Adult sufferers. Maybe real adults with real jobs only have the necessary time and distance from the underpinnings of their existence on Sunday nights. On Thursday they are already practically checked out and planning what stupid drunken outing will occupy their weekend, and by Friday it’s all reckless abandon into anything that makes them feel like they are actually a person. But Sundays — Sundays are different.

On Sundays people do things like clean their apartment and sort through old clothes. Sundays are for staying in bed and researching useless questions like the origins of the term “tycoon”. Only once all that is done and they’ve completed their skincare or called their mothers — here comes the dread. It must feel so surprising to them, every time! And as soon as their eyelids give into the sweet relief of slumber, they’ve forgotten it all, like a mother who forgets the pain of childbirth as soon as she holds her baby. 

 “It’s certainly not like that for me,” I let out. I’m not trying to be special — and in fact the only reasonable explanation is I have far too much time on my hands. This dread is not a weekly occurrence, but a longtime companion. A song ends and morphs into the next item on the playlist. “I fucking hate this song.” He shrugs and marches out of the room. I sigh. The light is still on at the neighbor’s across the street, and shadows of cars passing by wash over my ceiling. Maybe this never goes away. It probably doesn’t.

 Do the Actual Adults feel okay every day but Sunday because they spend the majority of their time accomplishing things and doing what is expected of them, or is it just a necessary pass-time to avoid facing the realities of existence? I know — you definitely need to make money to feed yourself. That aside though, we invented the workforce for a reason and it certainly wasn’t to fulfill individual potential. We just needed to find ways to cope with our increasingly counterproductive consciousness.

“Yo, let’s smoke another,” he says, stepping back into the room whilst brandishing a popsicle stolen from my freezer. “I’m too high already. Go to bed.” I roll over to lay on my side. My tank top sticks to my sweaty skin. Maybe next Sunday I’ll figure this out.

Funeral Song

“First you’ve got a wedding song and no guy, and now this?” my father scoffs, with the kind of amused judgment only a parent can get away with. It’s our usual choreography – affection through provocation. Mockery as a form of care. I wait.

He softens. “Fine,” he says, grinning like he’s about to show me a magic trick. “I’ll show you what my funeral song is.”

We’ve been in Cassis for a week now—just him and I. It’s the first time in over a decade we’ve done this: coexisted without buffers, without other people to absorb our static. And somehow it’s working. We have a rhythm: lazy breakfasts at the marina, drunken dinner with family friends, and our daily late afternoon joint, which feels both medicinal and ceremonial.

We’re on the deck, sitting on the comfortable outdoor furniture that blends in perfectly with the sun-faded wooden planks and currently grey Southern skies – all carefully designed by him, save for the weather (though he’d be capable of claiming that too). He passes me the joint, then hunches over his phone to find the track. I scratch at my leg furiously—we’re both covered in rashes from toxic processionary caterpillars that crawl around this time of year like nature’s little curses. It’s disgusting and kind of bonding. He puts the phone down proudly as the first notes of the song bounce from the speakers to the walls inside, blasting what I immediately recognize as a Bob Marley song.

 “Unsurprising,” I say smiling, taking the phone from him to read the lyrics just as he starts singing—off-key and undeterred, as he always does: 

 Propaganda spreading over my name
Say you want to bring another life to shame
Oh man, you just a-playing a game
And then you draw a bad card

 He seems happy with himself, and I can’t help but be touched by how fitting this song is for him, and the way he leads his life. A man who both believes and radically accepts that everyone’s misunderstood—including himself—but still takes up space, because he can’t help himself.

 He spent the morning power-washing the deck (an act of war against the caterpillars), which always makes the kind of noise you can feel in your teeth, and inevitably provokes the old lady next door. He never truly rests when he comes down here. It’s like he always needs something to do, a purpose. From morning to night he runs around, occupied with something or other to do with the house – if he’s not cleaning something, he’s fixing something, or giving us updates on the things he’s cleaned or fixed while the rest of us—god forbid—relax.

 He sings on, louder now, smiling from ear to ear and motioning an energetic “fuck you” towards the neighbor’s house: 

 I want to disturb my neighbor
Because I’m feeling so right!
I want to turn up my disco 
Blow them to full watts tonight, eh!

 I’m smiling ear to ear too, without realizing. He couldn’t have picked a better song, I think to myself. As it edges towards its end, he says, without looking at me: 

 “Hey – incinerated, right?” I nod. “Of course”. 

And that’s it. No talk of money, no legacies of any kind. Barely any talk at all. But we’ve said what we needed to. That’s how we do it. 

 The next song starts. I get up and start dancing.