Hello there
It started with art and music.
Mindy and Craig don't remember what got them talking in recreational therapy class. Craig, now 39, was definitely drawn to her smile and her eyes.
"They are mysterious, and she looks right into you," he said.
Mindy didn't think about dating Craig at first. She liked him - especially his sense of humor and his smarts. But she hadn't considered dating a possibility in a very long time.
"I got into a car accident when I was 22," said Mindy, now 41. "I'm a C6 quadriplegic."
Mindy had lived with her sister Wendy in Hamilton, N.J., since their mother passed away when Mindy was 9. Mindy was studying hospitality management when the accident occurred. She tried taking classes again afterward, but they proved difficult.
Four years ago, Mindy and Wendy put Mindy on the waiting list at Inglis House - a residence for people with disabilities who can't live on their own, but are not retirement age - so Mindy could have a more independent life.
Mindy moved to Inglis in April 2011, and two weeks later, Craig did.
Craig also uses a wheelchair - always has. "I have spina bifida," he said. "I'm a level 3, paralyzed from the waist down."
For most of his life, Craig lived with his parents in South Philadelphia. His father died in 1990. About three years ago, his mother was diagnosed with cancer. As she weakened, she and Craig moved into a nursing home. Living there was fine when he could be with his mother, but after she died, he wanted to be with people his own age.
Craig had also given up on love. In his late 30s, he reasoned that if he hadn't found someone by then, it wasn't going to happen.
Mindy's beautiful eyes made him want to try.
Too shy to say anything in person, Craig e-mailed Mindy through Facebook that May. He was glad to have a friend like her, he said.
Despite the word friend, Mindy knew what the e-mail meant. She saw Craig, and their relationship, in a new way. The two began spending more time together - and then way more time. "From 9:30 a.m. until quarter-till-9 at night," Mindy said.
Besides the art and music classes, the couple enjoy dates at Olive Garden and other places they can zip to in their chairs. But they are frequently found talking beneath the large trees on the Inglis grounds, or by the courtyard fountain.
How does forever sound?
In the summer of 2011, Craig kept telling Mindy he wanted to get married, and she kept asking if he was sure.
The next February, on Mindy's birthday, he asked her sister Wendy for her blessing.
Inglis took a group of residents to Atlantic City in August 2012, and Mindy wheeled into a jewelry store. "I thought I was just looking," she said. But when she spotted a ring she loved, Craig bought it.
September brought Inglis' King Games. It's the community's version of the Olympics, with events including bowling, wheelchair soccer, the home run derby, and Mindy's favorite, the wheelchair slalom.
After the games, "Chariots of Fire" played and the awards ceremony began.
At the end of the ceremony, activities director Janet - with whom Craig was in cahoots - asked the more than 200 Inglis residents, friends, and family members to face the back of the room.
"What?" Mindy said. "There isn't anything happening."
"Look at Craig," Wendy whispered.
Craig had the engagement ring in his hand. "Will you marry me?" he asked.
"Yes!" Mindy said, and everyone cheered.
"It was the best day ever," she says.
It was so them
Mindy's sisters Wendy and Julie, and Craig's ex-sister-in-law Erin - with whom he remains very close - decorated Inglis' Founders Hall in lavender, green, and ivory.
"I wore [Wendy's] wedding dress," Mindy said. "I wish I could wear that dress every day - I'd sleep in that dress."
"The support we got was great," Craig said.
Mindy entered the ceremony to Pachelbel's Canon in D.
Craig waited with the Inglis chaplain under a flowered trellis. At first, the couple were on either side of Chaplain Nancy. But "we both wheeled down a bit - about half a yard - and came together," Craig said.
He reached over and placed his hand on Mindy's, and she beamed.
The couple didn't have a first dance - Craig doesn't like the spotlight so much - but they had a wedding song: Savage Garden's "Truly, Madly, Deeply."
Craig, Mindy and their 55 guests celebrated with dinner and a DJ.
Awestruck
It's hard to explain the "blur" of emotions Mindy felt coming down the aisle. "It was 'Wow!' It was pretty cool," she said. "It was just happiness."
Craig said until he saw Mindy, he was calm and relaxed, talking to his best man, Lamont - an Inglis staffer. When he saw her, the excitement of the day took hold. "Seeing her coming down the aisle in her dress . . . she made a beautiful bride. And I thought, 'Pretty soon, I'll be married.' "
Discretionary spending
A bargain: The couples' champagne flutes were a gift from Gigi, the administrative assistant to Inglis' co-executive directors.
The splurge: Their families hired Inglis House to cater a full dinner.
The future
The couple hopes to someday move into one of Inglis House's few double rooms. None are available yet. StartText
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BEHIND THE SCENES
Officiant
Inglis House Chaplain Nancy Selinger, Philadelphia
Venue
Founders Hall at Inglis House
Catering
Inglis House
Music
DJ Frank, a friend of the family who does music on the side
Dress
Borrowed from the bride's sister Wendy
Flowers
Mindy's sisters Wendy andv Julie purchased and arranged silks from Michaels.
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'LOVE' RETROSPECTIVE
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Maybe you survived a layoff or health crises together. Perhaps you never wanted children, but now have them. Or you always wanted children, and found the journey difficult.
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