Today,
I completed my seventy-seventh year
upon this generous earth.
How quietly
joy entered the house.
Before I awoke,
my wife had already arranged
a birthday card
written with the handwriting
that has accompanied my life for decades,
beside roses
she gathered from our own backyard.
The table became an altar.
My youngest son
came early,
leaving a box
of my favorite doughnuts
without asking
for anything in return.
Love,
I have learned,
often arrives
before the one who receives it
has opened the door.
At noon
my wife and I
shared a simple meal
at a nearby restaurant.
Nothing extravagant.
Only another chapter
of the long conversation
called marriage.
Returning home,
we were welcomed
by another miracle of our century.
My second daughter,
holding my grandson,
appeared upon the small glowing window.
Across hundreds of miles
they sang,
“Happy Birthday.”
For a few moments
distance forgot itself.
Soon afterward,
another gift arrived—
from my eldest daughter
and my son-in-law—
nuts gathered
from many places,
a thoughtful charger
for the telephone
through which our voices
continue finding one another.
Even technology,
when touched by love,
becomes sacramental.
Then my elder brother
called from Texas.
His laughter
still carried
our childhood.
He reminded me,
with the affection
only an older brother possesses,
what foods
old men should now eat.
So the day continued.
Greeting after greeting.
Friends.
Church members.
Relatives.
Companions
who have walked beside me
through years
too numerous to count.
Each blessing received
called forth another blessing returned.
The hours
flowed quietly,
like water
finding its own way
toward the sea.
Yet joy
never belongs
to only one household.
While I celebrated,
somewhere
near Vladivostok,
an elderly Korean family
walked into open fields,
gathering wild dandelions,
not for beauty,
but for tomorrow’s meal.
Seventy years
after being driven away
to Uzbekistan,
they have returned
to the land
their ancestors once called home.
Yet home
has become another foreign country.
How does one celebrate
a birthday
when memory itself
has no permanent address?
Others remain
in Uzbekistan,
keeping Korea alive
only through lullabies,
old recipes,
family names,
and tears
their grandchildren
may never fully understand.
And across another ocean,
the descendants
of those who departed
for the sugarcane plantations
of Mexico
and Cuba
still carry,
deep beneath successful lives,
a homeland
that continues flowering
inside the heart.
Diaspora
is not merely migration.
It is the soul’s
ancient instinct
to return.
Perhaps
that is why
the dandelion
has become
one of God’s quiet teachers.
Its root
travels downward
without complaint,
searching
for hidden water.
Its countless seeds
trust invisible winds
more faithfully
than certainty.
Its leaves
heal wounds
without announcing
their medicine.
It asks
for no applause.
It competes
with no flower.
Still,
every spring,
it returns.
Perhaps
this is greatness.
Not success.
Not recognition.
Not monuments.
Only
the quiet courage
to keep living,
to keep giving,
to keep blooming
where God
has scattered us.
Today,
I was happy.
That happiness
needed no explanation.
Water
always chooses
the lowest place,
and there
becomes
an ocean.
The forest
never envies
the mountain.
The stars
never compete
with dawn.
Creation
is complete
simply
by being itself.
Perhaps
the deepest beauty
is never extraordinary.
It is found
in the unnoticed moment,
the ordinary meal,
the familiar voice,
the backyard rose,
the child’s song,
the brother’s laughter,
the friend’s blessing,
the faithful hand
that still reaches
across the table.
Today
is the most beautiful day
I have yet been given.
Not because
it is my birthday,
but because
I discovered again
that every birthday
belongs
to all humanity.
To every child
just beginning.
To every elder
still remembering.
To every exile
still longing.
To every pilgrim
still walking.
To every dandelion
whose seeds
the Creator
continues sending
into the winds of history.
O Creator,
thank You
for allowing me
to live
as one small dandelion—
rooted deeply,
scattered widely,
healing quietly,
and always
turning my face
toward Your everlasting Light.
— TaeHun Yoon, July 7, 2026
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