This posting is inspired from my recent memorable 2-day celebration of my 91st birthday here at THD. On December 19, the eve of my birthday, I hosted the Cocktail Hour. We have lumpia and rice cake as appetizer/snack and the music was provided by my favorite Russian singer, Alex. I sang Sinatra's "All theWay" along with Alex. For Photos visit:
https://chateaudumer.blogspot.com/2025/12/reflections-and-poem-on-my-91st.html
The next day, December 20, my actual birthday, my family went out to lunch at the FOB Kitchen in Oakland. FOB Kitchen is Gourmand Rated Filipino restaurant. For Photos visit:
https://chateaudumer.blogspot.com/2025/12/the-70th-anniversary-of-up-chapel-my.html
Then in the evening, I shared a group dinner ( 20 of my fellow residents) at Newton's Comet Room. For Photos Visit:
https://chateaudumer.blogspot.com/2025/12/winners-of-thd-christmas-door-decor.html
Reflection #3: Born on December 20: Sharing a Day with History
December 20 has always felt like a liminal date to me. Close enough to the Winter Solstice that the light is already scarce, but not quite at the turning point yet. A birthday that arrives during the year’s longest shadows, when the world seems to slow down and look inward.
Over the years, I’ve occasionally looked up who else was born on this day, not out of vanity, but curiosity. It turns out December 20 has produced a surprisingly thoughtful group of people: industrialists who reshaped economies, artists who questioned power, scientists who challenged how we understand reality, and cultural figures who stood just slightly apart from the mainstream. None of them perfect. None of them simple. Most remembered not just for what they built, but for how they disrupted the status quo.
I don’t claim kinship with greatness. But I do find comfort in sharing a birthday with people who asked questions, crossed boundaries, and left behind complicated legacies.
As I get older, birthdays feel less like milestones and more like markers. They invite accounting rather than applause. What have I learned? What have I let go of? What still matters enough to write about?
I’ve spent much of my life in public service, in rooms where decisions carried weight long after the meeting ended. I’ve lived through moments, national and personal that reshaped how I understand responsibility, fragility, and time. And in recent years, blogging has become my quiet companion. A daily act of attention. A way to say: I was here. I noticed this. I felt this.
Sharing a birthday with history doesn’t make one historic. But it does remind me that every life, even an ordinary one, intersects with larger currents. That reflection itself can be a form of contribution. That telling the truth as you see it, especially as the years narrow ahead is its own kind of legacy. December 20 sits just before the light returns.
I like that. It feels honest. It feels earned. And it feels like the right place to pause, look back, and keep writing forward, one day at a time.
Meanwhile, here are well-known world figures, past and present, born on December 20, spanning history, culture, science, sports, and entertainment:
🌍 History, Leadership & Thought
Harvey Firestone (1868–1938) – American industrialist, founder of Firestone Tire and Rubber Company
Branch Rickey (1881–1965) – Baseball executive who broke MLB’s color barrier by signing Jackie Robinson
David Bohm (1917–1992) – Influential theoretical physicist and philosopher, known for work on quantum theory
🎭 Arts, Music & Literature
Billy Bragg (b. 1957) – English singer-songwriter and political activist
Uri Geller (b. 1946) – Israeli-British performer and self-described psychic, famous worldwide in the 1970s
Edwin Arlington Robinson (often misdated, but worth noting as a winter-born poet) – Major American poet (not Dec 20, but frequently associated with year-end literary lists)
🎬 Film & Television
Jonah Hill (b. 1983) – Academy Award–nominated actor and filmmaker (Superbad, Moneyball)
JoJo (Joanna Levesque) (b. 1990) – Singer and actress, known for early chart-topping hits and later artistic independence
⚽ Sports
Ashley Cole (b. 1980) – English footballer, widely regarded as one of the best left-backs in the sport’s history
✨ A quiet common thread
December 20 birthdays often fall under Sagittarius, a sign associated with reflection, truth-seeking, independence, and storytelling, traits that resonate strongly with thinkers, artists, reformers, and voices that stand slightly apart from the crowd.
Lastly, the top Five News of the Day
📰 1. Russian General Killed by Car Bomb in Moscow
A senior Russian general was killed in a car bombing in Moscow — the latest in a series of targeted attacks on high-ranking military officers. Investigators are examining possible links to Ukrainian intelligence amid the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, heightening tensions. AP News+1
🇺🇸 2. Political Pressure on U.S. VP Over Israel Debate
U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance is facing intense scrutiny within the MAGA movement over his stance on Israel and controversial figures, highlighting deepening rifts in GOP foreign policy politics. The Washington Post
📈 3. Wall Street Stocks Climb
U.S. stock markets opened the holiday-shortened week with gains, led by technology stocks, reflecting a rebound in investor confidence. Reuters
🇩🇰 4. Denmark Summons U.S. Ambassador Over Greenland Envoy Appointment
Denmark has formally called in the U.S. ambassador in protest after President Trump named a special envoy to Greenland — a move that has strained U.S.–Denmark relations over Arctic strategy. CBS News
⚡ 5. San Francisco Power Outage Highlights Robotaxi Limits
A major power outage in San Francisco exposed practical challenges for autonomous Waymo robotaxis, as the vehicles struggled with gridlock and safety issues in real-world conditions without traffic signals. Car Dealership Guy News



































