Looking for more in Scotland's Stories?
A Musician Turns 50 in the Age of Covid
No fanfare, no party, no dancing
no new black dress to zip me in
like a second skin,
no rehearsal, no concert, no singing
no chasing down last minute music,
no waving my arms in the Square
to a posse of nine to twelve year olds
distracted by tinsel and real life reindeer,
no hearing Jingle Bells sung
with more gusto than accuracy
for the umpteenth time.
For the first time
since primary school
since picking up an instrument
at the age of six, my birthday
is mine alone for silence or song
as I choose
and I choose hill and sky.
I choose to fill my lungs
with champagne air, replenishing
until my cup runs over, letting my voice
spill out, caught
on a winter wind, carolling
the air. This year
I sing in solitude
casting my melody out
onto an empty sky, a lark
riding the swell, an oasis
in a desert of silence, a gathering place
for when we sing together again.