Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Not ready to marry, they reconnecte­d years later

- KIMBERLY DISHONGH If you have an interestin­g howwe-met story or if you know someone who does, please call (501) 425-7228 or email: kimdishong­h@gmail.com

Steve Morgan and Shan Wilson dated for two or three years, on and off, when they were young.

“I tell him all the time that he broke my heart,” she says. “He did. But there were never hard feelings. We just always had that friendship and respect for each other,” Shan says.

Shan was 19 when she first met Steve, who was 25, in church in 1980. Shan was born in Magnolia but her family had moved away before she was in high school and when she graduated she moved back.

Shan’s cousin introduced her to Steve, and their first date was to the Columbia County Fair.

“It was just kind of one of those walk around dates,” she says. “We didn’t really go out on a lot of dates after that. I mean, we didn’t go to the movies or go out to dinner. Most of what we did revolved around our church and friends.”

They both loved music would gather around a piano and sing or cook meals together or play board games. They went to a Kenny Rogers concert in Shreveport once, and sometimes they went to his family’s cabin near De Queen to play tennis, swim or gaze at the stars.

“I guess that was kind of boring, but we were easily entertaine­d by each other,” she says. “Our dates back then were about conversati­on, really.”

But they were young and the time wasn’t right for them to settle down.

“You know, you date someone for so long and then it’s that you either break up or you get married,” Steve says. “I think I was probably more hesitant to get married. I just worried — I tended to overanalyz­e things, I think.” Steve and Shan broke up. Shan went on to marry someone else, and a few years later Steve married, too.

They saw each other around their small town now and then.

“But our lives were totally different,” she says.

Both divorced years later — and years apart. After Steve’s divorce, he was reeling from all the changes in his life. He was raising two step-grandchild­ren then, and trying to adjust to living on his own.

Shan had bought Magnolia Insurance Agency where she had worked for years, and she was busy helping it grow. He was running Warnock Furniture, which had been in his family for five generation­s.

Steve called Shan once, just to catch up. He remembers when they went to dinner at a restaurant on the Magnolia Square.

“It had windows on both sides. We both said, ‘You could just feel people watching you,’” he says. “It’s that awkwardnes­s because people are afraid to say anything like, ‘Oh, are y’all dating?’”

Their first priorities were to their children and grandchild­ren then, so their busy lives moved on.

Shan lived near Steve then, and they would go to each other’s houses and watch movies or eat dinner occasional­ly.

“Once I got more comfortabl­e with my life, I was like, ‘OK, I’m ready to date.’ You know, ‘I can I can handle this,’” he says. “I remember bumping into her at church. She’s just beautiful, and she’s one of the sweetest, kindest, nicest people and we were standing there talking before church. I sat down and I thought, wow, this lady is beautiful, sweet, kind, and she likes me. I’d never planned on being divorced, you know, so that was new territory for me.”

Shan was in Indiana for her sister’s wedding when Steve called to ask her to go on a date with him, about a year after they had reconnecte­d. Before long they were entwined in each other’s family lives.

They had dated for more than five years when, after a family birthday dinner, Steve proposed.

“When you’ve got six kids between you and they’re all hanging out together and the grandkids are there, you just don’t have a lot of alone time,” she says. “He somehow finagled it so just he and I came to his house after we went to eat.”

Steve pulled out a watch box.

“I opened it up and there was a ring on the watch band,” she says. “He got on his knee and just old-fashioned proposed and said he wanted to spend the rest of his life with me and asked me if I would marry him.”

They exchanged their vows on June 17, 2013, on the beach in Perdido Key, Fla., with their families looking on.

“We honeymoone­d with 25 people,” Steve jokes. “We went back to Florida a month later, just the two of us for an actual honeymoon.”

Shan says she hadn’t thought much about getting married.

“I thought, ‘It doesn’t matter what happens. I’m just going to be with this man for the rest of my life anyway,’” she says. “So it was kind of surreal that we were getting married. I never, ever thought that was coming. But that was fine — life was so good anyway.”

Steve says he’s living his best life as her husband.

“I’m just blessed that she loves me,” he says. “I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that she loves me.”

 ?? Special to the Democrat-Gazette ?? Steve Morgan and Shan Wilson married on June 17, 2013. They dated when they were younger, but they broke up and married other people. They reconnecte­d 30 years later when they were both single again and found that they fit naturally in each other’s lives. “He makes it easy,” she says. “We have that engraved in our wedding bands: ‘You make it easy.’”
Special to the Democrat-Gazette Steve Morgan and Shan Wilson married on June 17, 2013. They dated when they were younger, but they broke up and married other people. They reconnecte­d 30 years later when they were both single again and found that they fit naturally in each other’s lives. “He makes it easy,” she says. “We have that engraved in our wedding bands: ‘You make it easy.’”
 ?? Special to the Democrat-Gazette ?? Shan and Steve Morgan just celebrated their sixth wedding anniversar­y, but their history goes back more than 30 years. She has two children and he raised four stepchildr­en. “We like to say we just have this big, weird, wonderful family,” Steve says.
Special to the Democrat-Gazette Shan and Steve Morgan just celebrated their sixth wedding anniversar­y, but their history goes back more than 30 years. She has two children and he raised four stepchildr­en. “We like to say we just have this big, weird, wonderful family,” Steve says.

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