Amber Tamblyn brings us the story of a leap of faith so dramatic, it's straight out of a movie.
Modern love.
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From the New York Times and WBUR Boston, this is modern love stories of love, loss and redemption.
I'm your host, Meghna Chakrabarti.
The biggest decisions in our life often come down to leaps of faith, changing careers, moving cross country, and, of course, deciding to spend the rest of your life with someone.
This week, actor and poet Amber Tamblin, known for the sisterhood of the traveling pants and 127 hours, brings us the story of a leap so dramatic it's as if it were straight out of a movie.
Here she is reading Kelly Thomas essay, ready to take a faithful leap.
As we floated in a moroccan tiled pool on the outskirts of Palm Springs, California, my boyfriend of three months told me about an old english custom in which two people are married.
If they chant I marry thee three times, clap in unison and kiss.
Finding his story charming and amusing, I laughed.
David and I had met on a film set in Los Angeles.
Like me, he was a refugee from academia.