Carrying My New Husband Across the Threshold - The New York Times


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A Quick Wedding, a Quick Goodbye

The author details the rapid progression of events leading to her marriage and the subsequent death of her husband, Harry. They were friends for 25 years before a sudden marriage at Lincoln Hospital in the Bronx, NY, on Easter Sunday 2022. Harry was ill and passed away within a month. The author emphasizes the unusual circumstances surrounding the hospital wedding, noting the rarity of such events and Harry's desire to keep their marriage private.

A Reluctant Husband's Wish

Harry, whose birth name was Wing-Ho Chow, exercised spousal privilege, allowing the author to care for him despite her teaching commitments at Purdue University. This resulted in frequent travel between Indiana and New York in the weeks before his passing.

The Rarity of Hospital Weddings

The author highlights the uncommon nature of hospital weddings, noting that even the hospital staff were surprised and wanted to release a news story about it, a request that Harry refused.

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It seemed a romantic beginning, carrying my new husband across the threshold of our apartment for the first time since getting married.

In reality, paramedics carried Harry, his frail frame strapped into an emergency chair. I trailed behind them on four flights of our walk-up, holding his oxygen tank, its plastic tubing connecting us that April afternoon.

It would be among the last times I saw my husband alive. In the space of a month, I was engaged, married and widowed to Harry, who had been my friend and roommate for nearly 25 years. Just as surreal, our wedding took place at Lincoln Hospital in the Bronx the day before, on Easter Sunday 2022.

Harry, whose birth name was Wing-Ho Chow, my reluctant husband who wanted to keep our marriage secret, had just exercised spousal privilege, releasing himself into my care despite knowing I was flying back that day to Purdue University where I was teaching and pursuing a Ph.D. The months before his death were exhausting as I traveled every few days between Indiana and New York.

Hospital weddings may be a common trope in movies and TV, but they are exceedingly rare. Only one nurse on Harry’s floor could recall witnessing one. Such is their rarity that the head nurse told me that the hospital wanted to issue a news release about our nuptials, something Harry adamantly refused.

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