Last Thanksgiving, TODAY and NBC News correspondent Morgan Radford became engaged to David Williams, who works as a policy director at Harvard. In the months to follow, their engagement led to big plans for a destination wedding in the spring and embarking on a new chapter together.
Then the Covid-19 pandemic hit. As Radford reported on a virus that was much more dangerous than government leaders and healthcare officials initially believed, the pandemic also hit home — Radford’s baby brother and aunt contracted the illness. Just as all of this was unraveling, the virus was already impacting her future. Like so many other engaged couples, Radford and her fiancé’s wedding plans were put on hold.
“Of course, the wedding postponement pales in comparison to the real grief that others were feeling from COVID,” Radford told Know Your Value recently. “So David and I made a collective decision to use this time as an opportunity to slow down, redefine and reimagine,” she said.
When Radford sat down with Know Your Value’s Mika Brzezinski in February, just days before Covid-19 became recognized as a global pandemic, she shared what it was like to be in a long-distance relationship and to find time for one another in the midst of the couple’s very busy, yet fulfilling careers.
The long-distance romance, with Radford in New York and Williams in Boston, was the easy part. For Radford, the more challenging part was actually finding “a David,” someone who understood and supported the demands of her busy career.
“I didn’t even know a David existed,” Radford said. “The person became so important. Someone who understood, this is part of who you are… you belong to me, but you belong to the world too,” she explained. “My gift is for me to serve the world, it’s not just for me to be David’s partner. He’s the most beautiful part of my life, but I’m also a daughter and I’m a sister and I’m a journalist. The gifts God gave me are for me to serve… that’s my calling, and he was someone who understood that serving spirit.”
Today, Radford and Williams are finally living together in the same city for the first time since college. They anticipate the day when they can exchange vows and celebrate their love with their family and friends, but for now they’re simply celebrating each other, their village and the world’s collective resilience as the pandemic continues.
Here’s how the couple swapped their wedding plans for new lifestyle changes that inevitably turned any disappointment into newfound hope and a stronger connection.
Take time to be still
It’s natural to look forward to and anticipate big future milestones, but in a situation like COVID when even hugging loved ones has to wait, Radford encourages couples to take time to “be still.” This means living in the present moment and truly savoring your day-to-day experiences, such as cooking a meal at home together, opening a favorite bottle of wine or playing a board game. With a quieter social calendar, it also involves leaning in to what brought you two together to begin with and knowing that the stronger foundation you’re building right now will make for a stronger future when the pandemic ends. For now, this might mean creating new couple time, like lighting candles and watching “Homeland” together, Radford shared.









