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A British man came uninvited to his Thanksgiving dinner and now they have been married for more than 20 years

2022-11-24T20:02:05.077Z


Dina Honor and Richard Segall's love story began after he showed up uninvited at her apartment on Thanksgiving.


Editor's Note: This story was originally published in November 2021 and has been updated for Thanksgiving 2022.

(CNN) --

It was November 1997, and Dina Honor was hosting a Thanksgiving dinner for the first time.

The then 27-year-old had invited a group of New York friends who, like her, had decided to stay in town for the holidays.


It had been a difficult year for Honor: she had suffered from depression after a bad relationship.

"Little by little I had regained a sense of normality and was not looking for love," Honor told CNN Travel today.

In contrast, Honor was focused on hosting her friends for the celebration.

She had set up the dining room table in the two-bedroom apartment she shared in Brooklyn.

Her sister had traveled from Boston.

She spent the whole morning making mashed potatoes and roasting the turkey.

He had asked each guest to bring something to contribute to the meal.

Soon her friends began to arrive, bearing festive good news, cornbread, pies, and cranberry sauce.

Then Honor opened the door for a friend, only to realize that she had arrived with two mystery guests.

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It wasn't the kind of gathering where surprise escorts are welcome.

"I wasn't happy," recalls Honor.

"But then I saw it and I was like, 'Okay.'"

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Thanksgiving Romance: American Dina Honor met British man Richard Steggall when he crashed her Thanksgiving dinner in November 1997. They hit it off quickly and began a long-distance romance.

They are pictured the following Valentine's Day, when Honor visited Steggall in London.

Courtesy of Dina Honor

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The proposal of the millennium: The couple got engaged at a New Year's Eve party on December 31, 1999. This photo was taken just after Steggall proposed to her as the clock struck midnight.

Honor said yes.

Courtesy of Dina Honor

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Instant connection: "From the beginning, Dina captivated me," says Steggall.

Honor says the feeling was mutual: "He seems made up, right? The tall, dark stranger who shows up at your door on Thanksgiving."

Courtesy of Dina Honor

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New York Wedding: The couple got married in New York in April 2001 at a place called the Manhattan Penthouse, on Fifth Avenue, overlooking the New York skyline.

Courtesy of Dina Honor

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Settling down: The couple lived together in New York for ten years and had two children.

Here they are with their eldest son in 2004. Courtesy of Dina Honor

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Globetrotting Family: Later, the couple started a new chapter when they moved their young family to Cyprus in 2008. They later moved to Copenhagen.

Here they are together in Denmark in 2018. Courtesy of Dina Honor

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Family photo: The couple's story of meeting on Thanksgiving has become "part of our family tradition," Honor says.

Here they are with their two children in early 2021. Courtesy of Dina Honor

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The couple today: Thanksgiving is still an important holiday for both of them.

"It's always a date on the calendar where we start to reflect on our lives and what's happened and everything, the whole story from start to finish," says Steggall.

Courtesy of Dina Honor

"He" was Richard Steggall, a 25-year-old Briton vacationing in New York for the first time.

He had traveled to the United States with a good friend who had a brother who lived in New York.

This brother was a friend of Honor's and had been invited to her party.

"At the time I didn't know what Thanksgiving was, to be honest I had no idea," Steggall says today.

"Growing up in the UK, I was vaguely aware but had absolutely no idea of ​​the meaning of the celebration."

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Steggall and his friends had spent their vacation soaking up New York, partying at night and exploring the sights by day.

On the morning of November 27, they had gotten up late, having been out the night before.

They were looking for a place to eat.

The American in the group explained that it was a national holiday and most of the restaurants would be closed.

"But I know of a party where there might be food," he said.

"That's how he proposed it to us," recalls Steggall.

"We had no idea it was going to be a semi-formal Thanksgiving dinner, much like Christmas in the UK."

Steggall had his first inkling that coming uninvited was a mistake when he saw Honor's expression as she opened the door.

But he was also instantly captivated.

"From the beginning, Dina captivated me," he says today.

The feeling was mutual.

Honor's frustration over unexpected guests was quickly tempered by her instant attraction to Steggall.

"I found him very, very handsome," he says.

"He seems made up, right? The tall brown stranger who shows up at your door on Thanksgiving."

She led the 'colados' to the apartment.

Steggall and his British partner, feeling uncomfortable, tried to be as discreet as possible.

"The other guest and I hid in a corner so we wouldn't be noticed," Steggall says.

From his place in the corner, Steggall watched Honor move around the room.

"I thought she was beautiful. To me, coming from London, she was a New York woman," she says.

"She was strong, self-assured, a little loud, but fun...she just exuded life. And she had a crush on me from the start."

Steggall asked some of the guests about Honor, but he didn't speak to her directly—he didn't want to upset the hostess he'd already offended by arriving uninvited.

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Getting acquainted with pumpkin pie

At dessert time, Honor approached Steggall with a slice of pumpkin pie with whipped cream, a quintessential Thanksgiving dessert that's not at all common in the UK.

Steggall had never tried it before and gladly accepted.

The two started talking.

Honor, who loves literature, dropped a reference to Shakespeare's Ophelia into the conversation.

Steggall got it: he knew "Hamlet," he said.

"It was like a little light went on," says Honor.

"There aren't many guys you meet at a party, between beer and pumpkin pie, who are happy to have a conversation about 'Hamlet.'"

The two spent the rest of the night talking, quickly bonding.

"I think we had a lot in common in terms of our vision of life, and the things that were important to us as people and human beings, and the way we see the world, and the things we want out of life," he says. Steggall.

When they finished eating, the group went to a bar.

There, Honor and Steggall were so focused on each other that Honor remembers his sister, who had traveled from Boston for the meeting, being a little upset.

"We sit at the bar, on stools facing each other, and we ignore everyone else," he says.

"We spent the whole night talking and the whole of the next day."

On Friday afternoon Steggall had to fly back to London.

Honor walked him to the tube station and they said goodbye on the platform.

As the train doors closed, Honor remembers feeling a sense of certainty.

"It was really intuitive and instinctive," he says now.

Back at her apartment, Honor confided to her sister,


"That's the man I'm going to marry."

fall in love over the phone

They said that their connection was almost instantaneous.

Courtesy of Dina Honor

When she traveled to New York, Steggall had been seeing someone in London.

The first thing he did upon landing in the UK was break up.

"I didn't quite know what was going to happen," he says, "but I felt like it was the right thing to do."

The next day, Honor called him from New York.

And so began a month of daily long-distance telephone conversations, and the occasional letter sent to the other side of the Atlantic.

"We had a kind of old-fashioned courtship on the phone," says Honor.

She was working as a substitute teacher at the time, calling Steggall from the break room at school.

Steggall worked as a flower and Christmas tree seller in Chelsea, London, occasionally DJing at night.

He would talk to Honor when he came back from a long day at work or before going out to a club.

It was mid-December when Steggall proposed.

"Listen," Steggall said.

"Why don't you come to London for Christmas?"


"I don't know. It's a lot. It's Christmas. I didn't spend Thanksgiving with my family. I should spend Christmas with them," Honor remembers thinking.

He was also hesitant to put his heart on the line.

She'd had that difficult breakup earlier in the year and she'd just felt fulfilled again.

But the thought was on his mind that he should take advantage of this moment.

"I don't want to regret not doing this," he remembers thinking.

"If this is the opportunity, I don't want to lose it."

One cold December day, he went to a travel agency and came out with a plane ticket to London in his hands.

"It was a commitment, something tangible," he says.

"I think she was willing to take a chance, hoping it would work out, but also knowing that if I didn't, it wasn't going to be the end of my world."

Honor says that feeling that she would be okay no matter what came from a sense of self that she had worked to cultivate after a rough year.

She trusted the connection to Steggall, but also herself.

His friends and family were "cautiously optimistic," he says.

They supported his decision and hoped that his faith in Steggall was well founded.

A Christmas reunion

Honor flew from New York to London on Christmas Day.

Stegall was waiting for her in arrivals at Heathrow airport.

It was 9pm and she was carrying a bouquet of hers from Chelsea's flowers.

Steggall had told his friends and family that he had met someone while on vacation in New York.

But he hadn't had much time to share many details about this blossoming connection.

"Everything happened so fast between November and December... and with the work selling flowers and Christmas trees, the whole end of November and the whole month of December is full, it's like 20-hour days."

In the UK, December 26 is known as "Boxing Day" and is also a national holiday.

In the morning of

"Boxing Day," Steggall and Honor traveled to her parents' house together.

"It's a tradition in our family to have some sort of champagne and smoked salmon brunch, so the whole family was sitting around the table having a glass of champagne and Dina and I walked in," Steggall recalls.

He introduced her to his family and then excused himself momentarily.

When she returned, Honor was "the center of attention," drinking and chatting with her family.

"I left her in the room with my parents, my uncles and my sister, and they got along very well," says Steggall.

"They were all incredibly nice," says Honor.

"My parents were so happy that I had met someone, and it was clear that it was love from the start...and I think they'll tell you that they could see a complete change in me, and see how happy I was," Steggall says.

That same day, Steggall surprised Honor with a plane ticket.

The two were going to fly to the island of Majorca in

Spain with some friends from Steggall to spend New Year's Eve.

It was a great trip, Honor says, although she did have to put up with a bit of snooping from her new boyfriend's friends.

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When the holidays were over, he had to return to the United States.

But Steggall booked a spontaneous weekend in New York at the end of January 1998, while Honor flew to London for Valentine's Day.

For that vacation, the couple rented a sports car and stayed at an elegant hotel in Richmond, west of London.

"This was all out of our comfort zone at the time, but we tried to recreate this romantic weekend," says Steggall.

He bought himself a suit and a fancy pair of shoes for the first time, and remembers almost falling down the hotel stairs because the shoes weren't on right.

Moving to New York

In the spring of 1998, Steggall quit her job at the flower market and traveled to New York for three months, intending to spend the summer with Honor.

It wasn't supposed to be permanent, but looking back, he thinks his friends and family knew better.

"The farewells we had, and some of the parties that were organized, had a more definitive air than a three-month thing: it was really a farewell to a new life."

Still, Steggall arrived with just a green bag of clothes.

He moved into Honor's apartment, the same one he'd shown up at, uninvited, the previous Thanksgiving.

They spent the hot summer days together, exploring the city, strolling through Central Park and the East Village, cementing their certainty that they wanted to be together for the long haul.

Although they felt marriage might be in their future, the couple say they didn't want to get married at the time, even though it would have been a way to ensure Steggall could stay in the United States.

"I think we were both very clear that: 'Yes, we want you to say it, and we will find a way to do it, and yes, maybe later, there will be marriage.' But those two things were very separate, I think for both of us." says Honor.

So Steggall started looking for visa jobs and ended up working at the United Nations.

"When you tell people the story, they can't believe it's true: they think you're a spy working for the UN or something," Steggall quips.

It was an incredible opportunity in terms of his career.

Steggall and Honor began to settle together in New York.

A marriage proposal on New Year's Eve

The proposal of the millennium: The couple got engaged at a New Year's Eve party on December 31, 1999. This photo was taken just after Steggall proposed to her as the clock struck midnight.

Honor said yes.


Courtesy of Dina Honor

The couple's story had begun at Thanksgiving and continued into Christmas.

And on New Year's Eve 1999, the two began a new chapter together when Steggall proposed at the turn of the millennium.

The couple remembers watching the fireworks explode over Sydney Harbor that morning on CNN.

Honor was in awe of the spectacle, but Steggall had been quiet in his nerves.

"I was sitting there, very nervous and in a bad mood. And Dina said to me, 'What's the matter with you, it's New Year's Eve and it's the new millennium?'" Steggall says, laughing.

That night, they headed to a friend's party in a skyscraper overlooking the city.

By this time, Steggall's nerves were even worse.

"I was having a bit of a hard time staying calm, I had started to tell people about it," he says.

"I shared it with a couple of people, who were very excited."

More friends found out when Steggall couldn't open a bottle of champagne because his hands were shaking so badly.

He handed it over to someone else and pushed through the crowd to find Honor.

When the clock struck midnight, she asked him to marry him.

"I think I kicked him in the shin in excitement," she says.

The couple got married in April 2001 in New York, at a place called the Manhattan Penthouse, on Fifth Avenue.

His British friends and family stayed in the glamorous hotels that ring Union Square.

"We wanted to give our friends and family who came, especially from London, but also where I grew up, near Boston, a real New York experience, so we chose a place on the top floor, with windows on all sides," he says. Honor.

The guests admired the views of the Empire State while toasting to the future of the couple.

Afterward, Honor and Steggall arranged for limousines to carry the guests on their way.

Some went to Union Square bars or enjoyed drinks at their hotels.

"There are all kinds of stories about where people ended up," says Steggall.

"My father was last seen in a limo, I'm not sure if this is real, but he's become a real thing, going out the sunroof, pointing towards the city, as the limo went up Broadway. I think it's probably an urban myth, but it has become part of our family legend.

A new chapter in Europe

After an "incredible" honeymoon in Australia, Steggall and Honor continued to enjoy life in New York, later having two children.

And in 2008, his life took a new turn when the family moved to Nicosia, Cyprus, for Steggall's work at the UN.

When the opportunity to relocate arose, the couple began to feel that their New York apartment had become too small for them.

Steggall, who has always been a bit of a traveler, was looking forward to a new adventure.

However, the decision to move to Cyprus was not an easy one.

His youngest child was only six months old at the time.

Also, Honor says she's the more risk-averse of the two, and she wasn't sure at first.

But, after a long conversation, the couple decided to do it.

"We decided that the pros outweighed the cons," says Honor.

In Nicosia, the couple had to deal with a bit of culture shock at first, but eventually made good friends, embracing the Mediterranean lifestyle, content that their children grew up in beautiful scenery and sunshine.

"Creo que cambió mucho nuestra mentalidad sobre el tipo de vida que podíamos tener", dice Steggall.

Tanto es así que, en lugar de volver a Nueva York como siempre habían asumido, la familia se trasladó más tarde a Copenhague.

En 2021, Steggall y Honour siguen viviendo en Dinamarca. Sus hijos tienen 17 y 13 años, y puede que sean neoyorquinos de nacimiento, pero se han criado en toda Europa y les encanta viajar.

Steggall sigue trabajando para la ONU, mientras que Honour es autora y editora. Ha publicado el libro "there's Some Place Like Home: Lessons From a Decade Abroad" en 2018.

Tradiciones de Acción de Gracias

Hace más de 10 años que Steggall y Honour vivieron por última vez en EE.UU., pero el Día de Acción de Gracias sigue siendo una fecha importante para la pareja; al fin y al cabo, la fiesta los unió.

"Los niños conocen la historia, se ha convertido en parte de nuestra tradición familiar", dice Honour.

"Siempre es una fecha en el calendario en la que empezamos a reflexionar sobre nuestras vidas y lo que ha pasado y todo, toda la historia de principio a fin", dice Steggall.

Steggall añade que durante sus primeros años de vida en Estados Unidos, Acción de Gracias se convirtió rápidamente en su festividad estadounidense favorita.

"Era mágica porque ibas y tenías esa comida fantástica, pasabas tiempo con la familia y al día siguiente te sentabas en rompa cómoda a ver la televisión, todos juntos relajándose", recuerda.

When Steggall and Honor first moved to Cyprus, they tried to recreate American Thanksgiving traditions.

But as they have adjusted to life in Europe, they have begun to celebrate the holiday in a different way.

This year, in Copenhagen, they went out to dinner as a family and reflected on what they are thankful for.

And one thing Steggall and Honor will be forever grateful for is their chance meeting, their connection, and their years of conversations.

"We still spend hours and hours and hours talking," says Honor.

"Dina offering me that pumpkin pie was the start of that conversation, which has been going on for 24 years," Steggall says.

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Source: cnnespanol

All news articles on 2022-11-24

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