I met my wife 40 years ago.
Or roughly 40 years ago. I can tell you our first date was March 1, 1986, which is almost 40 years ago. But we knew each other before that.
Sort of.
We were in the same second-period study hall at Wickliffe High School, and we spent those study halls hanging out in the band room. This was a nice privilege for band members, as it beat the heck out of sitting quietly in Room 111 doing homework or reading.
At that point, Terry's time in the band and my time had overlapped for three semesters, but we hadn't really talked much. I wasn't in marching band (just concert and jazz bands) and she was. So our paths didn't cross with any regularity until those study halls.
The details are fuzzy, but I know I started looking forward to those second-period sessions because I knew I would get a chance to talk to her.
One time another girl in the band with whom I had been somewhat involved (I'm not even sure that's the right word) sat down on my lap while a group of us were talking. Terry looked over at us with a raised eyebrow, and I made a face to communicate that I wasn't happy with girl #2 doing this.
I remember Terry smiling back so only I could see.
I have documented here the process by which we actually became a couple, so no need to go into that. You can click the link if, for whatever reason, it interests you.
What I will say is that I so enjoy our life together. It's four decades' worth of shared experiences, from marriage and kids to buying houses, building a nest egg, and mourning the deaths of our parents.
And now we're learning to be grandparents. I'm almost embarrassed to tell you how often Cal is our main topic of conversation (It's a lot...a whole lot.)
We live day to day as 50-somethings who are blessed to have four of our kids living close, family members and neighbors we love, and sufficient resources to travel and do other things we enjoy.
I rate it 5 stars, no complaints.
Being together for 40 years or more creates a sort of rapport and routine you can't just make up. It evolves organically over time.
At night, after I shower, I come into the living room and sit on the opposite end of our sectional couch from her. It's not that I'm trying to distance myself, it's just that that's...well, it's my spot, you know? She has her place and I have mine, and together we'll watch TV and laugh at most of the same things.
She often makes fun of me, and the way she does it is always funny. She knows me, including the less-than-flattering parts, and that's OK.
I wouldn't have it any other way.
I don't know how much longer we'll be blessed to have this life together. It could go on for another 40 years, or it could end tomorrow. You just never know.
And again, that's OK.
It has already been far more than I could ever have imagined, and certainly more than I deserve.
Even I know something like that doesn't come along every day.






