I met
my husband on June 24, 2000. It
was the night of our very first fundraising gala for Joy’s House. We didn’t even have a Joy’s House house yet,
which means that we weren’t providing any actual adult day services. Yet there we were in a room at the Colts
complex with 200+ people, raising thousands of dollars for a concept. That alone was pretty electrifying.
But it was also the night I met Jeff.
The silent auction had closed. The emcee had introduced the night. I had spoken with the mic in hand and my
emotions on my sleeve. The band was
beginning to play.
People were generously coming up to share
their names and companies and possible connections. And
then Jeff appeared. He extended his
hand, introduced himself and told me that he was in the construction materials
world and offered to help.
I very casually asked him to write down his
name and number and leave it at the registration table so that I could follow
up. Instead, he wrote it on a bingo card and placed it in my hand, reiterating
that he would like to help and would love to take me to lunch or dinner to talk
about it.
I played coy, thanking him with a
smile. When he walked away, I turned to
my mom and said, “The cutest guy just gave me his number and I hope he doesn’t
really want to talk business.”
The room is pretty square. And even with 200+ people in it, you run into
each other like mice in a cage. I ran
into this new guy many times throughout the night and we kept talking
business. I finally turned to him and
said, “I’m tired of talking business. I want to dance. Do you like to dance?” He
nodded yes.
Off we went to the dance floor.
It’s a quick story from there. Went out on a date that week. Spent time together nearly every day. Met the families almost instantly. Declared our love. Got engaged six months to the day we met. Married nine months after that. Had three kids. And here
we are.
Pretty simple, really.
But about seven years into this marriage, we were sitting with a dear friend of Jeff’s. We’ll call him Randall. (Because that sounds nothing like Randy, which may or may not be his real name.) Anyway, Randall was at the house and mind you, two of our three kids had already been born, we are blessed with the world’s best dog, we have a house together and again, we have been married at this point for about seven years. Randall says something like, “I’ll never forget that night you two met. I remember Mac (Jeff’s college nickname) turning to me after you had spoken.” Randall goes on to explain the conversation like this –
Jeff:
“I’m going to marry that girl.”
Randall:
“Dude, you’re not even going to talk to that girl.”Jeff: “Mark my word. I’m going to marry her.”
My husband…trying once again to prove that
he is always right. And he was.
This led us into two deeper conversations. They went like this –
Conversation
1
Tina: “Seriously?! You didn’t think this was something to share
with me?!”
Jeff:
“I don’t know. It didn’t seem
right in the beginning and then I kind of forgot about it.” (Okay, in all honesty, I don’t know if those
were his exact words, but they were something like that.)
Tina: “Who wouldn’t share something like
that? Weirdo.”
Conversation 2
I really can't remember the details, but it led us to talk about what we thought about each other the night we had met. He thought I was confident and charismatic. I thought he was cute and strong and magnetic.
In all fairness, I did send out a dozen or
so emails yesterday asking some of the questions suggested in today is the dayto see yourself through someone else’s eyes.
But I just sent them yesterday and don’t have them all back yet. This action kept making me think about meeting my
husband for the first time and I was flooded with memories of these last twelve
years.
I think that is part of what this action is
about…reconnecting with the people who are closest in our lives. We remember why we are in those
relationships, why we adore these people and why we are adored.
I don’t know about you, but I am excited
and nervous and ready to see what responses I get and what I can learn about
and from these people that I love.
My stomach actually did a flip or two when
I pushed SEND. But I made myself do it
because I may never know if I don’t ask.
And now I am interested. What was my dad’s first thought when he saw
my face? When has my mom felt closest to
me? How do some of my closest friends
describe our relationship to others? And
what one word would all of them use when describing themselves? To describe me?
As for Jeff, it took seven years to learn
that he had spoken those words, but every
time I think about it, I smile. I
always thought I would marry one of my best guy friends. I thought we would go to social gatherings
together, but live separate lives. I
imagined I would be happy, but not fulfilled.
Jeff came along and changed all of
that. He is my best guy friend and
we do go to social gatherings together, but our relationship goes way beyond
that. I. Am. Fulfilled.
Hopefully he will respond to my email
questions but even if he doesn’t, Randall spilled the beans. I
know he loved me before he even met me.
Oh, Tina. This is beautiful. I've heard the story and I can't hear it enough. Why am I sitting here crying in front of my computer screen crying? Ok, now I need to go send my emails. Yikes. XXO Ali
ReplyDeleteWhy did this call me Quinn Paisley
DeleteI read your first post and was so touched...and then I tried to figure out who in the world you are because I don't know Quinn Paisley! I have no idea why it called you that and I would love to know who you are. LOL Once you reveal yourself I will look into what might have happened. Seriously, can't stop laughing and I kind of like the mystery!
DeleteAli, now I see that it is you! Let's talk to try to figure out why in the world you came up as Quinn Paisley Still laughing, by the way.
DeleteI love, love, love this. So well written and so amazingly precious. That is just the way it should be. I feel similar about Chris. Best friends, separate spiritual lives, but building a life together, where we challenge each other, and push each other to be the best. I miss you and wish we didn't live so far apart! xoxo
ReplyDelete-tami
Thanks, Tami! I love "hearing" your voice and I cherish your words. Love reading your stuff as well. I never had a doubt of how talented and wonderful you would be...you always have been! Love you and I too wish we didn't live so far apart. Hugs right back at you!
ReplyDelete