Feb 29, 2008 3:00 AM (6
days ago) by
Leslie Katz, The Examiner
SAN FRANCISCO
(Map,
News) - The
Oakland resident, who grew up in Burlingame,
is a member of the elite club of leap day
babies.
According to the Honor Society of Leap Year
Day Babies Web site, the chance of
being born on leap year day is about 1 in
1,461. Leapers make up only 0.0684 percent
of the world’s population.
If you count the
number of birthdays you've celebrated on
Feb. 29, how old does that make you this
year? I'm 13.
I was born in 1956 at Mills Hospital in San
Mateo.
Do you feel
special or slighted because of your
birthday?
Probably a little of both. On one level, you
get used to the fact that you don’t get a
“real” birthday every year — I call it a
“real” birthday. But when I don't have one,
it sort of extends the celebration.
Are real birthdays
different from the others?
Yes. On those days, I want to do something
good, something that really acknowledges the
day. But there’s more pressure and higher
expectations, too. You kind of feel like you
don’t want to blow it.
On most years,
what day do you celebrate?
Well, the day I think of is Feb. 28; I feel
like I was born in February. But really, it
ends up being different days.
What are you doing
to observe the day this year?
I’m going to the hot springs. I could do
that in a non-real birthday year, though. It
has more to do with me feeling like I want
to pamper myself this year.
Anything else you
notice about your rare status?
Yes. It sticks in other people’s minds. When
I have a real birthday, I hear from people I
haven’t heard from in a long time. Also, a
way to remember when leap years fall is that
they’re the same as election years, and used
to be the same as Olympics years.