Maybe we live in a simulation or maybe so many things happen, that there are bound to be coincidences...
--When I was an undergraduate, I met a young woman in astronomy 101. We spent a fair amount of time together, but not much happened romantically. She liked to hold hands on long walks, we went to the movies a time or two and kissed once. Anyways, she was a Hotel & Restaurant Management student and spent a summer in India, working at a large international hotel.
--After I graduated, I spent a year and a half living in Sun Valley. One one of the many drives between Sun Valley and Spokane, I picked-up a hitchhiker who, I discovered later, had dropped a ball point pen in my car, which was from the Von Trapp Family Lodge in Stowe Vermont.
Also, while living in Sun Valley, I developed a deep friendship with a woman who had gotten a degree in Journalism at University of Idaho while I was in Pullman. One of the many things I remembered was her telling me she dated a guy with the memorable last name of "Custer". He attended WSU and they met because she spent a Summer as a lifeguard at the public pool in Pullman. She noted that he--even though a STEM guy, could really write--which was kind of a mixed blessing since he wrote beautiful but rather mean post-break-up letters to her. The name was familiar to me: I took a Science Fiction lit course under the legendary Paul Brians and in this small-ish class, we would review each other's papers. There was a Custer in the class, IIRC he was stem and he was an amazing writer!
--After Sun Valley, I returned to Pullman to prep for grad school, via a degree in Biology. One of the first courses I took was Organic Chemistry. It was an equipment/glassware intensive lab and each student had a row of drawers of their own stuff. A label on a piece of glassware read "Custer". I became friends with the Indian-American TA and through her, met my Indian-American wife. She grew up in the Boston area, which is how we got into the vicinity of Vermont. We got into Vermont itself because we figured that since entry-level jobs paid so little, we might as well live someplace with a lower cost of living. It happened that UVM advertised in The Boston Globe. We ended up living in Vermont for 8 years.
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