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David's storyI have been a Vicar in the Church of England for 25 years. I was married in 1981 and divorced in 2000; our four children remained with me. A year later, I 'went out' with a woman I had known in the 1970s (I also knew her ex-husband), but the relationship ended and I got on with being a lone parent. I felt confident about myself but didn't know how to meet potential Christian 'dates', and after another year I was feeling very down about 'meeting someone'. I thought that if I could walk into a room with a hundred single, Christian women, then there would be a good chance of hitting it off with a few of them. After all, in everyday life I meet lots of people, and I reckon that there's a 'bit of a spark' every now and then – maybe with one in fifty? But then, they are usually married, or without a faith, or... and so on and so forth. I mentioned this to a friend and he suggested friendsfirst. It seemed to me that FF was just a modern way of walking into that room and meeting those single Christian women. I made contact with friendsfirst, filled in the forms and waited. I thought that, as a middle- aged father of four Children, and a vicar to boot, my profile wouldn't generate much interest. I expected to do most of the contacting. To my surprise, a large number of women contacted me during the first six months of my membership, and I contacted fifteen or twenty people myself. I always replied to contacts, even if it was to say, 'Hello… er… I don't think so'. Gill contacted me early on. I was aware of how deceptive e-mail and phone calls can be so I suggested that we meet sooner rather than later. She wasn't what I expected, and, as she explained, neither was I what she expected! But we got on famously and I thought 'Well, this is nice… a friend'. I kept replying to new contacts (and making contacts myself), and I met six of them, two of them twice. After the summer, though, it was clear that Gill wanted to be more than friends, so we started 'going out' on a 'let's see where this goes' basis. As the year progressed, I still wasn't sure how I felt or what I wanted. I knew that Gill was ahead of me which put me under pressure; I wanted to be fair to her, I didn't want the relationship to stop, and yet I wasn't ready to propose. I was also aware that Gill was being ear-bashed by certain people who thought that I was just stringing her along. The friendship, though, kept deepening, and we never seemed to run out of new things to say. Then it dawned on me that there were aspects of my past experience muddying the water. I needed to sort a few things out before I was ready to move on. After 'going out' for twelve months I realised that I wanted Gill, (the friend who I loved), to be the woman I loved and lived my life with. I asked her to marry me, and she said yes! Looking back, I expected, when I joined FF, to be swept off my feet. In reality I think that when we are swept off our feet all we end up with is a very bruised backside! I think that, for Gill and I, it was absolutely right that we were friends first. My book, (Marriage - Restoring our Vision published by BRF £7.99) was an early result of the friendship with Gill. She wanted to know what I thought, and taught, about relationships and asked if I had anything written down. I had a couple of talks about marriage which were on my computer, so I e-mailed them to her. She thought that they were very good, so with her encouragement (and critical eye) I wrote the book. For the past fifteen years members of my congregations had said 'David, you should write some of this down'; it was Gill's interest which got me writing. Gill's story
I was very tense beforehand. I thought "How can this person not be someone I could like in lots of other ways too?" So I was very nervous when we met – and decided straight away that I didn't fancy him. (Hah!) He decided he didn't fancy me either. (Double hah!) Once we'd admitted that, we both relaxed and started to talk properly, which we did for the rest of the afternoon, and on parting, and I was regretful that there hadn't been a spark of attraction. However, I liked him a lot, so I thought, 'Here's someone I'd like to be really good friends with'. We kept on emailing fairly long letters, several times a week, and chatting on the phone at length about every 10 days or so; we talked about all sorts of spiritual, relationship, FF, and everyday things. Even though we thought we'd just stay friends, I didn't ever contact anyone else on the lists because I was finding our depth of communication very satisfying.
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