Young Love (#30)

Nate’s and my letters picked up in number, coming and going 2-3 a day. It seemed that each time we had an idea to share, we wrote it down and mailed it out. Our correspondence was full of excitement about our future together, especially the tantalizing prospect of living near each other, at long last.

more-goodbyesWhenever possible, we traveled across the 156 miles between us for face-time the old fashioned way, sometimes driving, sometimes riding the train. In one letter Nate detailed a variety of activities we might participate in as newlyweds, his way of suggesting a secular/religious balance.

May 11, 1969 – Dearest Meg. We can attend the secular social events of the Junior Bar Association, Phi Delta Phi (my law fraternity), and church and Sunday school for the necessary religious involvement. We can teach Sunday school to share in Christ’s work on earth. We can make new friends together, friends who never knew us as single people.

May 11, 1969 – Dear Nate. I can’t write a long letter right now. I’ve yet to have my devotions and prayer time, and it’s nearly 1:00 AM. A big thunderstorm has suddenly hit, and I wish you were here so we could snuggle together with our eyes closed, listening to the storm. Some day…

sun-sch-classMay 12, 1969 – Dear Nate. The Sunday school superintendent where I’ve been teaching 10-year-old girls for 2 years [left] is pressuring me about my inconsistent attendance, even though I provide a qualified sub when I’m gone (visiting you). I’ve started asking around for someone who’s willing to take over my class permanently. With our rapidly changing future, I want to be severed from my Chicago responsibilities when events start popping!

May 12, 1969 – Dearest Meg. If we marry in January, we wouldn’t be in financial hardship, but it wouldn’t be plush. But this financial closeness would give us tremendous unity of spirit. Monetary austerity forces people to stop thinking about the non-essentials (cars, clothes, etc.) to concentrate on more important commitments.

May 12, 1969 – Dear Nate. Thank you for a wonderful phone conversation this afternoon. I could talk to you forever, if only it weren’t so expensive. We are made for each other. I’m just thrilled that you’re coming to Chicago this weekend! I’ve already told lots of people at the church College and Career Class about “my guy” coming to the picnic, so don’t be surprised when they stare at you, ooogle-eyed over handsome you, as they get to know how wonderful you are! I want all my friends to grow to love you… and my family, too.

p-sMay 12, 1969 – Dearest Meg. This summer, after Army camp (6 weeks), I want to line up a part-time job for the coming year. I’ll look into claims adjusting for an auto insurance company or bill collecting for a bank. You get the idea. After that, we’d have one semester and the bar exam to go, then the Army, 2-4 years depending on the type of commission I get. Also I can start looking into apartment rents. And most importantly I can be with Meg in the hot sun of the tennis courts and at the municipal pool in Urbana. I love you very, very much.

May 13, 1969 – Dear Nate. One day next week I’m having my folks to the apartment for dinner, and I plan to present an organized outline of the things you and I have decided. They tell me they are anxious to know. Thank you for being the great consistent person you are and will always be. Good night…. Love, Meg

“Let each person lead the life that the Lord has assigned to him, and to which God has called him.” (1 Corinthians 7:17)

Young Love (#29)

hard-at-workAlthough Nate’s schedule in law school was set in stone for the next couple of years, mine was in limbo. The teacher shortage in Chicago (allowing me to teach without certification) was ending, and my job was in jeopardy. Both Nate and I were frustrated by the long distance between us, and we decided to explore a possible teaching job for me in Champaign.

One problem looming was that our 4 parents were unaware of how fast we were moving. Most of my friends hadn’t even met Nate, and vice versa for him. We hoped none of this would slow us down, but I got an inkling it would when I told Mom. One evening I drove to Wilmette, and in a quiet moment I said, “I’ve decided to marry Nate Nyman.”

She balked… and I knew I should have led up to it more gently. But the cat was out of the bag, so I kept going. “We’re thinking about getting engaged this Christmas and married next summer.”

Mom’s face showed she was scrambling for a reason why that shouldn’t happen. I knew she considered it to be too soon. But I had no intention of bending to anything she would say and simply thought, “She’ll come around.”

May 10, 1969 – Dearest Meg. I want to earn all the money for your ring in tough, sweaty jobs (the Army’s summer camp and the factory!). How’s that for being romantic? If the 8 months before Christmas present no blocks (and I know they won’t), we’ll be formally engaged. We will declare to the public what we know in our hearts and believe to be true.

May 10, 1969 – Dear Nate. Yesterday I went to the Chicago Board of Education and discovered I need one more course before I can be certified to teach again in Chicago. I’m sure I have enough courses to get certified in the state, though, and to teach in Champaign or Urbana. Our principal met with us (the uncertified teachers) and said we should start looking for other jobs. I’m glad you and I talked about this. Thanks for helping me by sending the addresses for the 2 Boards of Ed there. I’ve written them both for info and employment possibilities.

phoneMay 10, 1969 – Dearest Meg. Thank you so much for your wonderful call. I love to hear you talk, and especially sweet is your giggle when I tell you how beautiful and sexy you are. I love you very, very much! After your call I was asleep when one of my men woke me out of my dreams of you, needing me to let him in his room.

 

mary-and-bervinMay 11, 1969 – Dear Nate. I spent all of last evening with Mary and Bervin, the most fantastic of relatives, asking them questions about decisions they made before they got engaged. But their circumstances and ours are quite different. They got to see each other every day for 2 years. They do support us, though, as long as we’re sure, and said they are positively impressed with you. They mentioned how important it was to get family approval all around, and we both already want that… though I know we don’t have it yet. And here’s what I’m wondering. Do you think we could get married in January?

May 11, 1969 – Dearest Meg. I want to tell you how pleased I am with your idea about a January marriage! If you started the year here as a teacher and I got an extra job (and maybe a loan), I’m certain we could afford it. If you come down here to work, we should get engaged before you come. July or August of this summer? From July to January is a 5 or 6 month engagement (enough to prove to the world you’re not pregnant).

“God is not a God of confusion but of peace.” (1 Corinthians 14:33)

Young Love (#28)

Letters continued to fly back and forth between Champaign and Chicago, and the joy of making together-plans dominated our written conversations and my journal entries.

From the journal:

I have gained all kinds of new respect for Nate and want to be with him more and more. I’m sure of my love for him and secure in his love for me. He is the finest boy I’ve ever dated. He’s a leader, is organized, is a go-getter, a Christian, an intellectual, a good communicator, and he touches tenderly. He thrives under pressure and is completely responsible. I love all of it!

We’ve begun talking in specifics about rings, dates, jobs, where to live. Boy, is it fun! We’re praying about everything. We know that if we ever forget the Lord, we’ll mess the whole thing up.

May 7, 1969 – Dearest Meg. I received your wonderful letter of Sunday. Good girl to write, but not in church. [My last letter had been written in church.] Thank you very much! You want to be my wife, and that’s exactly who I want to fill the position. I love you very much; writing is a poor surrogate for seeing, but writing you daily gives me some release of the tension of not being with you. This week I’m thinking back to last week, remembering what we were doing at the same time, and almost get sick that you’re not with me. I could hug and squeeze you!

position-filledMay 7, 1969 – Dear Nate. One of my roommates told me that while I was gone last week someone tried to break into our apartment via that rear door in our bedroom. It sounded like they had a key. And it happened twice! We’re trying to think up some logical, harmless explanation.

May 9, 1969 – Dearest Meg. What about that break-in? Watch out if it really was an attempted break-in. Most burglars are drug addicts (80%). Look for pry marks near the lock. Tell your landlord. Tell the police. Get a chain and bolt for the door. As for me, I’ll finish that nasty old Corporations paper by Friday night and then it’ll be the final drive for finals study. I love you very much and would love if we were formally engaged at Christmas and married by next August. We should look into you teaching here after we’re married… and where to take the honeymoon!

May 9, 1969 – Dear Nate. I love you so very much, and today especially have been thinking constantly about being married to you, being your wife, and how I want to wait on you, and to begin finding out all the depths and heights of you, my husband. I’m so lucky!

May 9, 1969 – Dearest Meg. I hope to finish writing my paper today and then check it over tomorrow. I’m not such a hot “would-be lawyer” (i.e. law student) but I have faith the Lord will get me through school and the bar exam. Actually I don’t mind law school or law exams, but I really dislike papers. Anyhow, this one will soon be done.

sooo-muchMay 9, 1969 – Dear Nate. My heart is beating fast, and my stomach has butterflies. The idea of marriage to you is hitting home, and it’s the most pleasant of thoughts! I’m going to love and love and love you, day after day after day. I love Nate. Oh to be with you now. Soooo much to talk of!        Love, love, Meg

May 10, 1969 – Dearest Meg. I love you so much and want to be with you and marry you. You are my beautiful one, the only woman in my life. I will work hard to take good care of you. I love you completely and hope that faith in Christ will help me keep all the vows of marriage and keep us in unity with Jesus.

“Seek the Kingdom of God above all else and live righteously, and he will give you everything you need.” (Proverbs 3:5)