Our 25th Anniversary
He picked me up on a Wednesday night in late August of 1987. He was older than he sounded on the phone;
even now his voice has a youthful quality.
He came in and met my two daughters, my wheelchair-bound sister, and her
second-shift nurse. He gets big marks
for not taking one look and leaving immediately. He was sixteen years older than me, 48 years
to my 32. We were both taken aback by
the age difference, but the wheels of the date were set in motion, so off we
went. When I got into his car, an old faded
purple Monte Carlo with a mile-long
hood and huge bench seat, I slammed my purse down in between us, just in case
he got any ideas.
He took me to an upscale waterfront restaurant, where we sat
at the bar and had a drink, and talked. He
had a purse -- OK, it was really a camera bag that had aspirins and Kleenex and
other important man things. His camera
of course. Packages and packages of
printed photos to show me.
He was the most fascinating man. He was a working man, a blue collar guy with
a high school education who worked for the telephone company. He had to travel a lot for his job,
installing electrical equipment in telephone offices all around the northeast,
and he made the best of it by becoming a tourist. He was out of town for long periods of time
which probably contributed to the breakdown of his marriage. He had two college age children that he loved
and talked about. He was separated from
his family in the most uncomfortable way and I could see he felt bereft and
alone and I wasn't sure he was ready to date anyone.
For dinner he took me to a little dive bar near the Chevy
plant called Randazzo's. They were known
for their ninety-nine cent spaghetti dinner (with one meatball and plenty of
sauce) and their five cent chicken wings.
The waitresses wore the menu on their T-shirts. In my pencil skirt and silk blouse I was
definitely the most dressed-up person there.
And we had so much fun. When the
waitress asked if we wanted dessert, I said "yes" and Patrick says now
with a twinkle in his eye that he should have known I wasn't going to be a
cheap date. The whole bill with drinks
and wings and spaghetti and the biggest plate of strawberry shortcake you've
ever seen was $11.95.
He had the greatest stories.
He was a gentleman, and as a child of the seventies I wasn't used to
that. He opened my door and he walked on
the street side of the sidewalk. He was
funny, and nice, and charming. He
thought about things. He told atrocious
jokes. He could talk to anyone. And I was completely captivated.
We didn't want the evening to end, so when he heard I hadn't
been on the new subway, he bought us each a one-way ticket and off we went
downtown. We walked around and he
pointed out historical buildings and different types of architecture and told
me stories about it all.
The last train went back to the UB station at 11:45 PM, and it was sitting at the stop,
waiting, so we went to get on. It was
eighty-five cents for a ticket, but Pat didn't have the correct change for two
tickets so he bought one ticket and put me on the train. While I sat there and watched Pat through the
window buttonholing everyone who came along for change for a dollar I wished I
hadn't left my purse in the trunk of his car, and the train driver rang his
bell impatiently. Someone finally gave
him the change and he threw the money into the ticket machine, jumped on the
train, the driver slammed the door, and we took off with a lurch. We laughed with relief and cuddled and had
our first kiss on an almost deserted train car.
Three years later, we were married.
Pat proposed by saying, "If you and the kids were on my
insurance, the medical bills wouldn't be crippling you."
"Yes, I know," he said.
"So is this a proposal?" I slammed the bureau drawer and rolled my eyes.
"Yes, I guess it is," he said, smiling.
I was smiling too, six months later, on September 29, 1990, at two o'clock in the afternoon, when we were married. It was wonderful, with our family and friends
surrounding us, an unforgettable day. I
sewed my wedding dress and one of the bridesmaid's dresses. Both my daughters, eleven and thirteen years
old, stood up with me along with my best girlfriend, Patti. We even wrote our own vows. (Well Pat did; I found what I wanted to say in
a greeting card. Three snips of the scissors,
a little tape, and I rolled it up, stuck it in my bouquet, and when the time
came, read it.) My sister was able to
come to the wedding and the reception in her 200 pound power wheelchair;
friends picked her up, chair and all, and carried her up the steps. My brother catered it with fabulous food, and the 125 year old
building's ballroom had just been completely restored. It was
the most perfect day.
For our honeymoon we drove to Florida,
straight through, with no stopping.
Well, we stopped when we broke down, three times on the way down. We camped at Disney World
in a thirty-year-old smelly canvas tent, left over from the Korean war. We flattened our air mattress three times and
had to patch it. We had more car
troubles as we drove around Florida,
and if you want to hear about that, email me and I'll send you the story. But we had fun. We've always had fun. The motto we've adopted is "we're going
to have a good time whether we want to or not." And with my Patrick, good times abound.
We don't do a lot of special stuff on our anniver- sary, but
we always give each other cards. Love notes. So this is my love note to you, Patrick. I love you.
I remember everything. I've had
more than 25 years of fun. I hope you have too. Can't wait to see what the future brings. Big smiles.
Your Janice

