While blushing bride Jillian was upstairs getting ready to say 'I do' to her love of 10 years, her father Paul Daugherty, 57, a sports columnist for the Cincinnati Enquirer, was writing the 25-year-old a beautiful letter in which he detailed how he used to cry over his fear that she wouldn't be accepted by her peers, a fear, he added, that has gone unfounded.
'I am outside, beneath the window, staring up,' he explained. 'We live for moments such as these, when hopes and dreams intersect at a sweet spot in time. When everything we’ve always imagined arrives and assumes a perfect clarity. Bliss is possible. I know this now, standing beneath that window.
'I have everything and nothing to tell you,' the dad continued.
Paul, who wrote An Uncomplicated Life, a memoir about raising Jillian, explained that he never worried about her achieving academically because he knew he and his wife would make that happen, but he admitted that he once feared she would struggle to find friends.
Paul recalled how he 'cried deep inside' when she was 12-years-old and told him that she didn't have any friends.
But he went on to say that he shouldn't have worried because she is a 'natural when it comes to socializing', noting that she was on the junior varsity dance team in high school and spent four years in college classes - continuously making friends along the way.
Jillian met Ryan nearly eleven years ago on a soccer field. Ryan's father coached a soccer league for youths with disabilities. It was after soccer practice that Ryan asked Jillian to a homecoming dance.
'A decade ago, when a young man walked to our door wearing a suit and bearing a corsage made of cymbidium orchids said, “I’m here to take your daughter to the homecoming, sir," every fear I ever had about your life being incomplete vanished,' Paul recalled.
'I see you now. The prep work has been done, the door swings open. My little girl, all in white, crossing the threshold of yet another conquered dream,' Paul continued. 'I stand breathless and transfixed, utterly in the moment. “You look beautiful" is the best I can do.'
'Jillian thanks me. “I’ll always be your little girl" is what she says then.'
'“Yes, you will," I manage. Time to go, I say. We have a walk to make.'
'Jillian and Ryan have lived together for nearly two years, so self-sufficiency isn’t an issue,' Paul explained on his blog. All we had to do was set them up: Rent them an umbrella and two chairs, tell them about the hotel’s courtesy shuttle to local attractions, remind them that sunscreen use wasn’t optional.'
He added: 'In most ways, they’re already like an old, married couple. In others, they’re delightfully not. Since their wedding day, Jillian and Ryan seem to have a renewed appreciation for what they mean to one another.'
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