On this date in 2000, in our backyard with 200 friends and family in attendance, Ken and I were married.
My sister sang, we cried, a letter from Mama Goode (my high school biology teacher) was read, we laughed, we kissed, we cried some more, John toasted (and almost cried), a glass was broken, children played, friends talked, motorcycles were admired - it was a wonderful day!
It seems like just an instant, and it seems like forever. So much has happened, not just in the eight years we've been married, but in the 16 (or 18, depending on when you start counting) years we've known each other.
Ken and I initially "met" electronically in 1990. He was a customer of NetFRAME (a defunct company that created superservers, was sold to Micron, and ceased to exist in Silicon Valley), I was the technical support specialist for OS/2 and LanManager. We'd talk while he waited for a Novell specialist. Two years later, NetFRAME hired him and he moved from New York to Silicon Valley.
We were part of the older folks at work, the not-fresh-out-of-college-and-first-job group, that went to lunch occasionally. I was married; Mr. Ken was dating a former friend of mine. In 1994 I left NetFRAME (because I was making a lot of changes in my life - not all of them smart), my ex-husband and I divorced, I moved to our rental house and mostly lost touch with Ken. Our friend John used my back storage shed for his Lotus, and occasionally I'd be home when he and Ken came over to work on it, but usually not.
Fast forward to 1997, and the impending sale of NetFRAME to Micron. John had moved to Houston, and he called to remind me of a party to commemorate the closing of a division of NetFRAME. I'd decided to pass, but John insisted that I had to take a message to Ken for him so I reluctantly agreed to go for a while.
Ken was late to the party. Really late. Late enough that I'd spent almost 3 hours there, had seen and talked to everyone I cared about and a few people I didn't. I heard a murmur of "hi Ken" and turned to see him smiling. I went over and he hugged me. I gave him John's message (it wasn't earthshaking, Ken asked why John didn't just email him, and neither of us remembers the message) and he hugged me again. We hugged until people started teasing us. We parted, made polite conversation, and I went on my way.
A week later, Ken emailed me: "You wouldn't want to go out with me sometime, would you?" I did indeed, we did on the next Friday (dinner and a book store visit), and we've been together ever since.
It's wonderful that we get to celebrate over and over! Happy anniversary, my dear. Happy anniversary to us!