Calgary Herald

Falling for someone in summer may spring into long-term love

- WESLEY YIIN

Summer romances might end, or they might blossom — but it’s rare that they lie dormant for 25 years.

And yet, all it took was a wink for Kim and Evan Leach to resume a romance they’d long forgotten.

In the mid-1980s, they met at a weeklong YMCA summer camp in North Carolina.

Kim, 14 at the time, had “googly eyes” for Evan, the popular and suave 15-year-old, so she was so giddy when he sat next to her on the bus home to Tampa, Fla., where they lived on opposite sides of town.

They shared a blanket, and Kim says he may have brushed her leg at one point. “But it was all very innocent,” she says.

They talked a little after camp, but they went their separate ways, and after college, they both married and divorced other people.

It wasn’t until 2013, when Evan “winked” at Kim on Match.com and sent her a message, that they rekindled their romance.

Kim recognized Evan immediatel­y, but because Kim’s last name was hidden, it took Evan a bit of reminding to jog his memory.

After that, even though so much time had passed, it was fairly easy to pick things up again.

In March, Kim, 43, and Evan, 44, married in Paris.

The Leaches’ story is the stuff of movies — think The Notebook with less tragedy and melodrama.

Still, even with both fictional and real-life examples of couples who succeed despite the limitation­s of summer, many still buy into the mentality of the “summer fling.” Some simply don’t think that their relationsh­ips can outlast the summer; others don’t want them to, preferring to keep things casual.

To those in the latter, Helen Fisher, a biological anthropolo­gist who studies love and sex, says it’s difficult to stay detached from a person after having any sort of intimacy.

The body and the brain act independen­tly of what a person might think he or she wants. Having sex with someone releases dopamine, Fisher says, which pushes people toward getting attached or falling in love. This biological phenomenon, though, can clash with one of our fundamenta­l instincts: to reassess our lives at critical points.

Fisher says critical points can include transition­s between all seasons, but the end of summer is perhaps the biggest break of all — and thus, the most fragile.

The additional sunlight has something to do with it, Fisher speculates. The earlier sunrise reduces melatonin, which makes people less sluggish, more energetic and more confident. So they’re more likely to want to meet, date and be intimate with people.

But most of the summer’s challenges have to do with circumstan­ce: The summer months are when people are most likely to travel, or to take risks, or to explore some place or something new.

Viviana Niebylski, 28, and Brian Senie, 27, first connected on OkCupid in 2011. It was May, and Senie had just graduated from college and was starting law school while Niebylski had just wrapped up her first year of graduate school.

She found him to be charming and funny, so she gave him a chance. They hit it off, and they slid into a casual, mostly physical relationsh­ip. By mid-summer, things were already picking up for Niebylski. They each were still seeing other people, and when Senie went on a business trip at the end of July, Niebylski found herself missing him on more than a physical level.

The relationsh­ip continued to intensify, as they started to meet each other’s friends and go on more serious dates.

Against their earlier intentions, they started “using the ‘relationsh­ip’ term” and stopped seeing other people. They’re happy with where they are now. Senie, now a lawyer, and Niebylski, the treatment director at her own residentia­l mental-health counsellin­g program, have lived together for two years. “It was work to make our relationsh­ip grow and flourish, and I think we both put that in for the most part,” Niebylski says.

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