Ian and I met on Halloween in 1989. I can’t believe that was twenty
years ago. I have now known him half my life. Halloween is one of the
harder days to be without Ian. The only other time we’ve been apart on
Halloween was his last deployment in 2006.
We met at a party where everyone was asked to wear black and bring
something grotesque sounding to eat. String musicians own a lot of
black clothes, so that part was easy for me, and I brought a box of
vanilla pudding I figured we could call phlegm.
The party was loud, and I ended up wedged between my stand partner
from orchestra and what looked like a young republican in a suit. My
stand partner was annoying and I really didn’t want to have to chat with
her outside of orchestra, so I was stuck turning to suit guy. On
closer inspection I realized the suit was an ROTC uniform. I come from a
family of artists. I thought ‘Hair’ was a very patriotic movie when I
saw it at age nine. I didn’t think I’d have anything in common with an
Army guy. I remember having the very conscious thought, “Well, not fair
to judge a book by its cover….” and I said hello.
I find it impossible to picture my life today if I hadn’t gone to that party.
No Ian in his ROTC uniform means no Aden, no Mona, no Quinn. I might
not even be in violin making because Ian supported me and gave me
encouragement all through my apprenticeship. I don’t know who I would
be right now. I don’t know where I would be living or what I would be
doing. I’m sure I would have picked a different path that would appeal
to me and I would be happy and fine, but the mere idea of a world where
my kids never existed is unsettling. They are supposed to be here
somehow, I just know it. Which brings me back to Ian in his ROTC
uniform.
He told me later he specifically wore it just to be
counter-counter-cultural. He wanted to see if anyone in the all black
wearing dancer/musician crowd would talk to him. We had one of the best
conversations of my life. I had just finished reading “Surely You’re
Joking, Mr. Feynman” and really wanted to discuss it with someone, but
no one else had even heard of it–except Ian. We laughed together over
the safe cracking chapter, and talked on and on as if we’d known each
other a long time. As if he weren’t in a uniform. As if I didn’t come
from a family that would be baffled about what to do with an engineering
major when I brought him home.
Eventually, I had to go. I had a paper to write and it was getting
late. I said goodbye and walked home alone, rerunning parts of the
enjoyable conversation over and over in my head. I’d sworn off dating
for a bit because I was having a rough time at that point in college,
but after a few days I realized I wanted to talk to the guy in the Army
suit again. I told the person who had invited him to the Halloween
party to give him my number. I thought that was very clever because he
could call me, but he knew ahead of time I wanted him to. A fabulous
plan, except that at the time Ian was not good at calling people. I
ended up calling him myself, and left messages twice. I should have
figured it was a sign he wasn’t interested, but that conversation on
Halloween had been so nice…. It just couldn’t have been my
imagination. The person I talked to would want me to try again, I just
knew it, despite whatever signals I seemed to be getting.
When I tried the third (and in my mind, final) time, I actually
caught Ian on the phone. I asked him to a movie that night, and he
said, “No, I can’t. But don’t hang up!” I hadn’t imagined it. We had
another great conversation. We met the next night for a movie. We’ve
now had twenty years of great conversations, and mundane conversations,
laughter and comfortable silence, and the occasional movie. I still
have the box of unopened phlegm pudding in the cupboard. One day it
will be a fun anniversary treat to make. (Or at least an interesting
experiment about the shelf life of instant pudding.)
I never imagined I’d fall in love with an Army guy. It’s not always
easy, but the proof that it’s right is in the form of three remarkable
people who I get to tuck into bed each night. I miss my husband. There
is no one else I’d rather talk to right now.
(Happy Anniversary, Ian, if you can read this. I hope next Halloween we’re together.)
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