Tell me about the proposal.
R: That is a good story. There was a lot of conversation with my family about how this was actually going to go down. I kept trying to figure out a good time when we could do it, with family in town. My family’s down in North Carolina. Julia’s brother is in Colorado. My family was coming up for Thanksgiving, and I said that’d be perfect. That way, we could all celebrate together. I went through a hundred different scenarios. I wondered about maybe going on a walk together, with the dog or something, and then I’d propose on the steps when we got back. You know, with everyone inside, knowing what was going on. But I hadn’t made any final choice about how it was all going to happen. I got the ring, and then had beers with her father, who I think kinda knew it was coming. We were actually going climbing, and I suggested getting a beer beforehand. I said there was something I wanted to ask him. I explained a bunch of the scenarios I’d come up with for how I might propose. I came home that night and was super anxious about it. I had the ring on me and ended up hiding it in a backpack in the basement.
J: His mom told him to put it in his underwear drawer. And he was like “She does my laundry!”
R: So, I came home from work the next day, the day before Thanksgiving, and I just thought “This is it. It’s gonna happen.”
J: And my brother unexpectedly came in. He was sick, so he wasn’t supposed to, but he decided to at the last minute.
R: So, I was going to wait for her to walk downstairs, and I was going to propose in our living room, together with the dog. I don’t want to go with the cliché of a woman taking too long to get ready, but she actually took a long time, with the guy being incredibly anxious, waiting. I pretty much wore out our hardwood floors, pacing. I finally couldn’t wait any longer, and I just went upstairs. She was in the bedroom getting ready, I had the dog with me. So, I got down, the dog sat next to me, and I took Julia by the arms – I said something I don’t remember; it wasn’t what I’d rehearsed.
J: I don’t remember, either. I think I literally blacked out. Even though I knew it was coming.
R: But I did get down on one knee.
J: And I did say yes. Right away. And then we went and spend the entire weekend celebrating with our family. It was a lot.
J: I think he knew I wasn’t going to say no.
R: But I waited five and a half years, just to make sure.