Green Paper and Binder Clips
It didn’t start out as a Great Love. I think that may be the case for many late life loves. Dennie and I began as colleagues, teaching at the satellite center of a small community college. Instructors were expected to publicize their own classes, so the week before classes began, we both printed flyers and distributed them around town. Supplies were, well, in short supply. Day after day Dennie and I squabbled over colored copier paper, office supplies and whose turn it was to replace the toner cartridge. He accused me of using the entire year’s supply of large binder clips. I complained that he had used all the green paper for flyers before I had a chance to print my syllabi, which were traditionally known as green sheets because they were printed on green paper.
Dennie was the first one to blink. He suggested we have lunch at a deli across the street, and while we waited for our sandwiches he brought out a ream of green paper from the cloth grocery bag he always carried. I smiled and handed him a box of large binder clips. Seems we had both been to Staples that morning.
That was pretty much our courtship.
Travel Companions
I liked to say that our first date was a month in Australia. It was actually a week in Palm Springs at an Educational Technology conference. That’s where we learned that we could participate in workshops, visit three museums, eat at five different restaurants, and still write a five-year million dollar grant proposal if we worked together. That partnership lasted through the 15 years that Dennie taught Computer Science at Gavilan College following his retirement from UC Santa Cruz, and enhanced both of our lives in countless ways. The trip to Australia that followed the conference was purely for pleasure.
We started each day with the New York Times and very strong coffee. Unless we were traveling. Then Dennie liked to read a local paper: The Guardian when we were in the UK, the Times of India when we were in Delhi or Haridwar, the Vancouver Sun when we visited my parents in British Columbia, and the Courier-Mail when we visited his son in Australia. The coffee never changed. Strong. Black. An introvert by nature, Dennie used the coffee and newspaper to fend off my tendency to chatter in the morning. Once he had finished his coffee, he would put down the paper, smile broadly, and our day together would begin.
Two Households
In a lifestyle choice that I think may also be common for late-life loves, we maintained two households throughout our relationship. My condo was close to the satellite center where Dennie taught most of his classes. His house, much larger than mine and with a gorgeous view, was an hour away on the coast in Santa Cruz. During the years that my daughter was in high school, we spent the week in my condo, and he went home on weekends. When my daughter was with her father on a weekend, I would join Dennie in Santa Cruz. After she left for college we began to split our time between the two houses, and as I neared retirement and began to teach half my Child Development classes online, I spent most of my time in Santa Cruz. Dennie continued to sleep at the condo on the nights that he taught. When my four children came for Thanksgiving or Christmas, they began to specify Dennie’s house as their venue of choice. All our family gatherings were in Santa Cruz from then on.
Grandparents
Dennie and I shared our respective families with one another, and became grandparents together. When his first grandchild was born we flew to meet her. When his daughter was married, all four of my adult children attended, and when her first child was born, two of them drive to Seattle to meet him. Dennie attended the weddings of all of my children, and when my first grandchild was born he immediately began prowling the neighborhood for yard sales to provide her with a toy kitchen, a wagon filled with blocks, a rocking horse. Gently used and given with love. The joy of grandparenting seems to be universal, and with two families producing grandchildren, all the more precious..
Goodbye to Santa Cruz
Dennie loved Santa Cruz. He had lived here since the 70s, and seemed to know someone wherever we went. He gradually introduced me to his favorite haunts and eateries: Pogonip, Nicene Redwoods, West Cliff Drive, Lighthouse Field, Steamer Lane, Zachary’s, the Bagelry, Aldo’s. When his health began to fade and he moved to Seattle to be closer to his daughter, I found solace in visiting those places with Kismet, our border collie, and taking pictures to share with Dennie during my bi-monthly visits. I have come to love Santa Cruz too, thanks to Dennie, and in my heart he will always be here.
I visited Dennie in Seattle many times. As he began to fail I experienced that terrible grief that comes from losing someone before they have actually passed. It’s called anticipatory grief and for me it lasted three years. Three years of holding hands and reading to a man I had loved for so long, and who sometimes couldn’t remember my name, or the names of his beloved grandchildren. Dennie left this life on September 8, 2018. Our families and friends, along with his many colleagues and students, celebrated his life on October 7 at Peace United Church in Santa Cruz. It seems fitting that the New York Times printed his obituary. Dennie would have loved that.
I took this photo of Dennie during our last visit to India. . . . he was perfectly in his element walking along the Ganges River. I miss him beyond belief.
Marlene
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By email: “I was touched by your wonderful love story of 15 years with Dennie. It reminded me of a Ceremony of Life Service that I attended last month. I spoke to jane, the widow of our friend who had passed. Jane married John at age 87
and lost John at age 95. But she felt blessed to have eight wonderful years with John.
I enjoy your articles /blogs because you write about life and how you deal with life’s challenges in such a positive manner. ..and also to appreciate what we have.
Blessings,
Sharon”
So sorry to read of your loss. What a lovely tribute. The description of your morning coffee and paper routine, so easy to envision, was particularly touching. Wishing you comfort from your beautiful memories.
Thank you, Laura. I shared my story because I suspect many others have had a similar loss and might have benefited from my words. You are quite right – the memories bring me great comfort.
I can still see Dennie with his canvas bag waiting for you to gather up your teaching materials etc in the TFT office days. Once I learned your routine I always tried to get your stuff together when you were in class, so you could head home sooner. You two were supportive in helping me finish my degree. And fun to watch the cooperative loving relationship you two shared before my eyes.
Gone but never forgotten…
Love to you Marlene.
Dena
Dena,
You may be the only one in the world, besides me, who remembers that bag! Thanks so much for taking me back to a happier time. And for your kind words. Marlene
I don’t know you or Dennie but I was deeply moved by this tribute. How wonderful that you two had the time together and shared the joys of being grandparents. Thank you for sharing your experience.
Thank you, Jane.
How beautiful to read and hear of your wonderful life together. We were priviledged to meet Dennie when you both came to Australia. You must miss him immensely but have such a lot of fantastic memories to cherish. We send our best wishes and empathy to you and your family and all the extended family. Thinking of you. Pete and Anita
Yes, I do miss him immensely, Anita. Thank you for your kind words. Marlene
Your snapshot descriptions of your life with Dennie caused me to visualize you in the moments and hear your cheery voice. Knowing you I imagined the loving way you looked at him and enjoyed his ultra dry sense of humor and love of travel. I’m so glad that you and Dennie had those years together.
Thank you, Jo. And you would know the slow warmth of late life love as well as anyone.
Oh, Marlene, this post had me crying. I’m so glad to have learned even more about your late life love. Thank you for sharing so openly.
An especially enjoyable line from his obituary: “He was never one for bureaucracy and would frequently skip meetings, to the occasional frustration of the administration.”
I never knew Dennie, but I do feel his absence now.
Thank you, Helen. I feel his absence too. Marlene