Posts Tagged ‘marriage’

A Happy Ending For A Friend

Friday, March 25th, 2011

I was invited to a wedding reception today. It’s not my place to announce the name of the bride on this blog, but suffice it to say she’s a bestselling novelist who’s about to have the sort of happy ending reserved for, well, bestselling novels.

She had been married to a fellow writer and theirs was a partnership in every way. She felt lost after he died a few years ago and didn’t expect to find love again. Never mind that she’s smart and lively and turns heads when she walks in a room. She figured a Baby Boomer like her wasn’t going to connect with anyone new, and that was that.

Along came Facebook.

Facebook has started revolutions, helped to overthrow dictators, become the basis for an Oscar-winning movie. But a romance? My friend wasn’t looking for one on Facebook.

But she was asked to write something on the site as part of her book promotion and a certain man happened to read what she’d written and to write an intelligent comment of his own, and before either of them realized it they had fallen in love with each other’s words.

They took it to the next level and emailed, then phoned, then planned a face-to-face meeting. Soon they were spending all their time together, acting as goofy as teenagers, totally smitten.

And now they’re moving forward and becoming husband and wife.

On the invitation it says not to buy them a gift. I can understand the sentiment, since the real gift is the fact that they found each other, but I’m not going empty handed. I’m thinking about making a donation to their favorite charity in their name – and then posting the charity on….where else…..Facebook.

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Happy Endings Do Happen

Monday, February 28th, 2011

I interviewed a really terrific woman today for my caregivers book. Actually, “terrific” doesn’t begin to describe her. “Heroic” would be a much more appropriate word.

She’d been married for many years to an extremely active, outgoing guy when one day he had a stroke. A severe stroke. He could no longer speak or walk or do much of anything for himself. Undaunted, she devised a way of communicating with him, stepped up to run their household and attended to his every need (while commuting to and from her full time job, mind you). And then, when the snowy winters in CT made it too difficult for her to take him out for their regular jaunts, she retired from her job and moved the two of them across the country to CA – plus their two cats. Think about that. It’s hard enough to travel alone these days.

They lived in a motel for a month while she scouted rental apartments in the area, hoping to find one that would be on the ground floor, be wheelchair accessible, allow pets. Once she finally found them a place and got them settled, she taught him how to take the bus downtown by himself. Think about that! She also arranged for him to work at the local hospital as a volunteer, doing minimal clerical tasks.

He was thriving in his new environment – until he fell out of his wheelchair and broke his hip. Most of us would have thrown up our hands and said, “Enough!” Not our gal. She put him in rehab for six weeks, brought him home and picked up their routine as if nothing had happened.

Fast forward to the following January. They were coming back from a New Year’s eve party the next morning (yes, she made sure he had a social life too) when she noticed how tired he was. A few days later, he started coughing. Before long, he was diagnosed with lung cancer and given six months. Her first reaction was: “Did we really need this on top of everything else?” Her second reaction was: “But we’re lucky. So many people have worse things.”

Clearly, our gal is a glass-half-full type.

Her husband passed away pretty much on schedule, about a year-and-a-half ago. I asked her how she was doing.

“I’m doing fine now,” she said, going on to explain that after so many years of caregiving she was lost at first and felt the need to fill her time any way she could, with volunteering, support groups, etc.

“You sound good,” I commented. “Not at all lost.”

“I have a boyfriend!”

She said this with the squeal of a teenager. I couldn’t help laughing.

“It’s been two months, and he’s a wonderful, wonderful man,” she said. “You should see the Valentine card he made for me.”

She said this man had taken care of his wife, who had died a year ago after a long battle with MS, and that it was his caring nature that had appealed to her.

“I’m sure your caring nature appealed to him too,” I said.

It was her turn to laugh. “I guess, but he says he loves that I’m fun.”

She’s fun. Think about that! How many of us would be fun after going through hell and back? A truly remarkable lady.

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My Dinner With Jenna

Saturday, February 19th, 2011

That would be Jenna McCarthy.

Photo: Renee Vernon

Take a look at the links list under “My California Writing Buddies” and you can check out her web site. In the meantime, I’ll just say that Jenna is a flat-out funny writer. She’s been a mainstay of women’s magazines for years – from Shape and Prevention to Glamour and Ladies Home Journal – coming up with articles on every conceivable subject. She continues to write for mags but is now the author of books on motherhood and parenting too. And, coming this fall, she’s tackling marriage. I cannot wait for the book to come out because she is hilarious and her husband Joe is a great sport about being “material.”

Tonight they joined Michael and me at a restaurant in downtown Santa Barbara called Jane’s. (No, I don’t own it. It was my first time there, in fact. Cute place.) Their kids were at a sleepover, so we had plenty of time to trade stories and get to know each other better. It’s always a treat for writers to escape the computer and meet up with other writers, and tonight was no exception. We laughed. A lot. And we said over and over how lucky we are to be doing what we do, despite the occasional aggravations.

Tomorrow we’ll be back at our computers, buried in our writing caves, but tonight we were like civilians, enjoying a night out on the town with our husbands.

Here we are, outside the restaurant, vogueing. (My spell check isn’t letting me write VOGUE-ING. Oh well. What we’re doing is striking a pose.)

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