Matthew May and Alexandra Westcob met in the summer of 1990, when both were coun- selors at Tamarack. For a year after they met, they sent letters back and forth across the At- lantic. The next summer, romance kicked in. \__, May bummed around the ,-) U.K. for a while; then Westcob met him in Florida for his broth- er's wedding, starting a back- and-forth that lasted several years. "I made seven or eight trips to the U.K., she made five or six [to visit me] before we got engaged," says May, who is as- sistant director of outdoor edu- cation at Indiana University. \— The pair lived in Scotland for / two years_before moving back to the States this summer. At the end of 1994, they got engaged; on Aug. 8, 1995, they married. Admitting it's cliche, May says absence really does make the heart grow fonder. "I think you make more of an effort to make sure it's the right person, if you put that much en- \ ergy into seeing the person," he /-- says. On the downside, the distance precludes sharing important mo- ments. "If I had gone over there after not seeing her for a few months, she may have met peo- ple I don't know. [You have] dif- ferent social circles, you don't know all the jokes." Lisa Kuppersmith Weisner _ met her husband, Kyle, on a /- blind date. Their mothers, who had met through Hadassah, thought their children would make a great pair, says Weisner, a West Bloomfield High School and Temple Israel graduate. She moved to California in 1989 and in September of 1990, she met the man who would be- come her husband. "At the time, he lived in \-) Chicago. We went out when he was in California for a 10-day vacation visiting family," she re- calls. For the next two and a half years, "we met somewhere in the country once a month ... until we got married. We never lived in the same state until we got mar- ried." A year and a day from the day \-- , /- they met, he popped the ques- tion. "You really get to know each other by communicating," Weisner says. "You have to talk on the phone all the time, so if you have nothing to say, you have to hang up. Obviously there is no pressure for sex, no \ expense as far as dating but -' [there is the] expense of phone bills. Kyle would call me six days [ a week, and I would call him on Sundays because I was in school — $300-$400 phone bills a stay together, we wanted to be N.Y., native who later became engaged. I still had three more her husband. David Weiss was month." The abundance of heart-to- years of pharmacy school. We her brother-in-law's best friend heart, in-depth talks forces a looked into all the different op- from college. "We started dating, and it was couple to really get to know one tions ... I decided not to transfer another, says Weisner. "I know because I would just lose too very tough because I was decid- ing on graduate school at the him better than I know anybody. much time." time," she says. "I did We talked an hour a have the option to day every day for two come to the Star pro- and a half years." gram at [the Univer- Laurie Remer and sity of] Michigan, but Jayson Greenberg both I really loved this lived in Michigan Jewish communal when they started dat- service program in ing. Now, he is com- Baltimore," says pleting a medical Weiss, who now residency in Houston, works at the Jewish and she is a graduate Federation of Metro- student at the Univer- politan Detroit. sity of Michigan's "It was a very pharmacy school. tough decision, but When they get married we had just met, and in December, they will I couldn't make a de- continue to live apart cision around him be- until Remer gradu- cause it was a new ates. relationship." Ulti- "It's really hard to be mately, she went to away from someone Baltimore. who you're used to be- "We weren't sure if ing with," she says. it was going to work Plus, "he completes out ... At one point he me; I feel like half of ended up saying to me is in Texas." me, 'I don't care, it's Having a solid rela- two years, I know tionship in place before you're the right per- Greenberg headed son and it's just two south, "helped a lot be- more years, we'll just cause it's definitely ex- have to get through it tra work, and you have and then we'll be to- to want it extra bad, gether.' We had been because it's that much dating two or three harder," says Remer. months when we had If she had it to do Laurie Remer, of fiance Jayson Greenberg: "I feel like half of to make that deci- over again, would me is in Texas." sion." she begin a long-dis- The Weiss' married tance relationship? "I For couples who begin long- on Sept. 1, 1996, just three wouldn't totally write it off, but it's a huge consideration. A lot distance, the separation forces months after Jordana finished graduate school. They now live of people meet when they're far them to take it slow. "You definitely take your in Southfield. apart and then when they're fi- "When we were together, be- nally together, it's a different re- time, think about what you're lationship. We know what our doing more because it's such a cause we only had a little bit of relationship is like when we're big investment," says Weisner. time together, we spent that together, so that makes a dif- "It's sad to have to put love into time as quality time, always did those terms, but if you're dating fun things, it was never just him ference." What makes it bearable, says long-distance, you have to be studying in the other room or Remer, is a visible end to the ready to not see each other for anything," says Weiss. "Because we were far apart months and months at a time, separation. Remer and Greenberg first cuddle with your phone or cry from each other, we didn't take things for granted: We took ad- met in Florida, when she was a yourself to sleep." vantage of any opportunity we high school senior and he a ju- had together," she says. "... be- nior in college. But nothing hap- cause our relationship was most- pened until years later, when ly on the phone, we learned how they were both at the Univer- to communicate with each oth- sity of Michigan, during her se- er. If we ever had problems, we nior year and his third year in had to talk [them out]." med school — "We bumped into When all is said and done, each other, started dating after couples who go the distance say that," she recalls. the biggest disadvantage is long- And things were going well Still, "life has a strange way ing for the other person. until the end of Greenberg's fi- "We really missed each other nal year of medical school, when of working out. If it's meant to it was time to match for resi- be, things fall into place. I real- a lot — that's the bottom line," says Weiss. "It was hard to dency. He landed a spot in Hous- ly believe that," Weisner says. be apart. There were a lot of Jordana Weiss met her hus- ton. "[Match day] was the worst band while visiting her sister in events that happened in our day," says Remer. "At that point, Michigan. "My sister had a lives over the past couple of we decided we were going to stay Shabbos dinner and had him years that we had to [attend together and if we were going to over," she says of the Syracuse, alone]." "We learned how to communicate with each other." And, says Weisner, the bad times are worse without some- one to ease the rough spots. "Whenever you're going through a tough time, you're alone," she says. "All my friends would go out on dates on Friday and Saturday nights. I couldn't really go with them. [I used to] be by myself a lot, and I'm sure he was too." When a couple only has week- ends together, both expect it to be great: Everything's supposed to be perfect on vaca- tion or in short spurts of time. It's the expectation of say- ing good-bye, though, that can put a damper on that brief in- terlude. "We'd spend all day Sunday knowing we'd have to leave each other, so sad, very tough," says Weiss. "David always tried to make things as normal as pos- sible, [he'd] say, 'Let's not focus on leaving, let's try to have a normal time.' It was hard, though." None of the couples were wor- ried that it wouldn't work out in the long run. "We were really good friends before we started dating," says May. "I just completely trusted her." Weiss admits "it was defi- nitely nerve-wracking when we made a commitment because people would say to us, 'How do you know you can be together?' So I did come and spend six weeks out here in the summer between my graduate school years; that was helpful in know- ing more about the relationship. It just clicked, we knew it was going to work." One benefit to distance is that it breeds independence. To May, the relationship with his wife "is so good because we let each other do our own things, [while at the same time we] try to be together as much as possi- ble." "Giving someone a bit of space can help the relationship, help your individuality, no smotherification," he says. "When you're together, you devote yourselves completely to each other; when you're a part, you're still devoted but [can pay] attention to the task at hand." "If there are any advantages," says Remer, "it does give you in- dependence. It makes you learn to be on your own and to be your own person and not be depen- dent on the other person." Remer and Greenberg are "both doing what's best for ourselves. I knew if I quit every- thing, which I think about sometimes, and came down [to Houston], I'd make him miserable and be miserable." ❑