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Leapeans, born Feb. 29, know that their
birth date is unique. They know that a birthday
occurring once every four years
can be confusing. They know that.
They would like us, the Leapless (born on the other
days), to know a few other things:
-- Most computers don't recognize their birth date.
That's a huge hassle, especially when renewing a
driver's license.
-- Hearing, "Hey, you're just 5 years old!"
when you're 20 is vaguely amusing only the first few
times.
-- Some parents hid their birthday from them for years,
or conspired with hospital record keepers to change
their birth certificates.
It's the other side of their Leapness -- the myths and
misunderstandings.
Having a Feb. 29 birthday has its perks: Many of the
4,200-member Honor Society of Leap Year Day Babies gazed
out from
TV newscasts or the front page of local newspapers when
they were born.
But Raenell
Dawn, co-founder of the society and founder of the Leap
Year Day Project, said confusion over those birthdays
can be annoying, if not traumatizing.
Dawn, of Keizer, Ore., was born Feb. 29, 1960. When she
was in second grade, she had a teacher who explained
Leap Year to
the class: A day is added every four years to
synchronize the calendar with the seasons, because the
Earth's cycle around the sun
is not exactly 365 days.
The teacher asked if the students knew of anyone born on
a Leap Year Day. One little hand went up -- Dawn's.
"`Oh, you poor child,' my teacher said, in front of
the entire class," Dawn recalled. "During
recess, all the kids started teasing me:
`You don't get a birthday!' `You're only 2!' `You don't
know how to play this game, you're a baby!'
"A lot of us experienced that," Dawn said.
So the mission
of the project (www.leapyearday.com) is to raise
awareness and foster pride. There's a Leaptionary
("Leaptastic:
An amazing Leap Year related thing"), suggestions
for celebrations (like a sLEAPover), LeapAnne and Leap
Erickson dolls, and
memorabilia from the numerous grand Leap Year balls in
the 1800s.
But the one move that would get Feb. 29 real
recognition, Dawn said, would be to have "Leap Year
Day" printed on every
calendar's Feb. 29.
She's has been trying to do that since 1988.
"I've contacted calendar companies," she said.
"I either don't get a response, or I'm told it's
not a holiday."
Geoff Chester can sympathize. He's public affairs
officer at the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington,
D.C., an official timekeeper
for the nation. And his own great-grandfather, Rear Adm.
Colby Chester, was born Feb. 29, 1844.
The problem with recognizing Leap Year Day, he said, is
that no agency oversees such things.
"Federal holidays go by rules formulated by
Congress," Chester said. "Other days observed,
like Groundhog Day, actually have
astronomical origins, as do Halloween and May Day."
Those are cross-quarter days, marking midpoints of the
seasons, he explained.
Although Leap Year Day has been around since before
Christ -- Julius Caesar is credited with the concept --
few if any calendars
acknowledge the day's purpose.
So some Leapers, like Lynn Bell, do it themselves.
Bell, born in 1980, is a marine-engineering student at
Massachusetts Maritime Academy in Buzzards Bay.
"When I was 5 I started screaming and crying
because my birthday wasn't on the calendar," said
Bell, of North Kingstown, R.I. So
now, on non-Leap Years, "I always write it on the
calendar. And my family knows they're not supposed to
change the calendar
until March 2."
Bell runs into other problems, most recently when she
registered for an e-mail account.
"The computer wouldn't let me put my birthday in,
it said it didn't exist," she said. "So I
e-mailed the provider, they apologized and
fixed it for me."
Other Leapers, and their parents, encounter outright
discrimination.
When Myrtle Boozer arrived at St. Francis Hospital in
Hamtramck, Mich., on Feb. 29, 1952, to give birth, nuns
actually attempted
to dissuade her.
"The nuns told her, `You can't have this baby
today' because it was Feb. 29," said Cynthia
Russell of Detroit, who insisted on being
born anyway. "I guess it's some superstition."
Her mother, now deceased, offered no further
explanation, Russell added, "but that has always
been part of my history."
Often older Leapers reveal that their parents either hid
their true birth date, or had it changed to Feb. 28 or
March 1 at the suggestion
of hospital staff.
Nowadays, Dawn goes to hospitals on March 1 of Leap
Years to "visit the Leaplings born the day
before," she said. She presents
new parents with a "Welcome to the World Little
Leapling" information packet.
"Parents are freaking out!" Dawn said.
"They say weird things like, `I don't want my baby
to be part of your club!' `When are we going
to celebrate his birthday?'
"I very calmly let them know, it's not as serious
as you're making it out to be," she said.
Regardless of the controversy, Leapers are born: Singer
Dinah Shore, in 1916; motivational speaker Anthony
Robbins, 1960; rap
artist Ja Rule, 1976.
There's also a Leap Year Day musical, Gilbert and
Sullivan's "Pirates of Penzance." The main
character is apprenticed to pirates until
his 21st birthday -- which falls on Feb. 29,
complicating his attempts to leave.
And there's the Worldwide Leap Year Festival in Anthony,
Texas and N.M., dubbed Leap Year Capital of the World.
Mary Ann Brown, born Feb. 29, 1932, came up with the
idea in 1988 to promote the Chamber of Commerce for the
town, which
leaps across state borders. "I live in Anthony,
Texas; three blocks down is Anthony, New Mexico,"
she explained.
This year's festivities Feb. 26-29 include pony rides
and hayrides, a hot-air balloon liftoff, parade and
fireworks.
In the past, celebrants have come from as far away as
Germany, Brown said. And the celebration gets Anthony
into the press each
Leap Year.
"But there are still people in the town who think
I'm crazy," Brown admitted.
Feb. 6, 2004
(Dru Sefton can be contacted at dru.sefton@newhouse.com) |