âPeople donât believe usâespecially the gays sometimesâthat we met on IG and not a dating-centric app,â says Dr. Matthew Jordan Miller (or âDr. Mattâ) of his love story with Representative Malcolm Kenyatta, the dynamic Democrat who legislates on behalf of Pennsylvaniaâs 181st District and is currently campaigning for the US Senate. The activist-turned-politician first caught the then-PhD candidateâs eye about five years ago when an article about LGBTQ leaders to watch landed on Mattâs Instagram âExploreâ page. Matt decided to do exactly that, liking a few of Malcolmâs pictures.
âI had never dated anyone so open and active in the LGBTQ+ space or who was an activist. Plus, he was cute,â says Matt. âI liked a bunch of his photosâŠthen, sure enough, he did the same. I sent him a message telling him Iâd like to get to know him, more or less. Nothing too heavy.â
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âI started liking his pictures back and forth and ultimately he sent me a message which I didnât see for like a week,â Malcolm recalls. âMeanwhile, I finally got the courage to message him, even though I had a number of friends saying I shouldnât because he might be crazy…When I went to message him I saw he had messaged me and we started talking and weâve really never stopped.â
That said, expectations were initially low, as the two were conversing from across the country, Malcolm in his âforever homeâ of Philadelphia and Matt in Los Angeles, where he was working toward his doctorate at the University of Southern California. While Malcolm recalls immediately thinking Matt was âbeautiful,â after their first FaceTime conversation, âI was just blown away by how smart he was and how interested he was, specifically in Black culture.â
âHe felt so familiar,â Matt says of Malcolm. âWe had been FaceTiming until he fell asleep for almost five months since we were on different time zones, but texting all the time. He was very put-together. Such a Leo. A walking character of personality, a true theatre kid, and a sensitive person who rarely lets on to how much heâs got going on.â
But still, Matt initially held back when it came to meeting in person. âI had offered to come to LA to meet him and he was like âNo, Iâm not ready,ââ Malcolm shares. âI was surprised because weâd been talking for months but he wasnât ready to meet. After that, we didnât talk for a couple of weeks. I was very upset. And lo and behold, he gave me a call, and he was like, âI was just being afraid. Iâm being stupid. We need to meet up, but Iâm playing hard to get.â I said, âWell, we need to talk for a couple more months to make sure youâre not going to change your mind again.ââ
The two ultimately agreed Matt would make his first trip to Philly, with Malcolm paying for the flight over and Matt purchasing his own return, âso like, you know, if itâs not a good situation in person or whatever, then you can fly back whenever you want,â Malcolm explains.
That doubt dissolved the moment he met Matt at the airport.
âIâm waiting at baggage claim for him and he came down the escalator and I just couldnât believe it. And as soon as he walked over to me, I instantly kissed him and it just felt like he had been on a trip,â says Malcolm. âIt felt like weâve been together all this time and I was just picking him up from the airport. It didnât feel like I was meeting him in person for the first time and so I was like, âOh yeah, this is happening.ââ
The next few days solidified the relationship for Matt, as well. âHe wanted to show me off as much as he showed me his whole worldâhis community, his job, his family, his volunteering, his unheated apartmentâLOL. Everyone I met had this smirk, like, âOh, so youâre the one heâs been talking about!â It could have felt like pressure to some, but it let me know I was serious to him and I wasnât some secret,â he says. âComing from LA and having only recently came out as gay to my family a couple of years before, I was used to smoke and mirrors and mind games with folks who I dated. But [Malcolmâs] confidence coupled with vulnerability sold me.â
Still, long distance relationships are notoriously difficult to sustain. âIt turned out living across the country from each other is really difficult, and I didnât know how we were going to figure that out,â Malcolm admits. âI knew that Iâd love this man in a way Iâve never loved anybody ever. And I was terrified that we werenât gonna figure out how to be in the same place.â
Matt agrees that âfiguring out a way to be in the same place and living out our unique purposes,â was a tremendous challenge. âAcademia is notoriously unstable and can send you in the middle of nowhere. And politics is no crystal ladder, either,â he continues. âAs a visual artist and writer, I was also really unsure about the art world in Phillyâwhich is incredibly historic and vibrantâcompared to where I was.â
Three years ago, Matt made the move to join Malcolm; the two now live in the heart of North Philly with their âattention-loving and nap-heavyâ French bulldog, Cleopatra. As of this May, Dr. Matt is now also the first-ever Director of Justice x Belonging (JxB) at the University of Pennsylvaniaâs Weitzman School of Design, where he leads initiatives and teaches, as well as supporting Malcolmâs Senate campaign in his off-hours.
The two also became engagedâtwice. âTechnically we both proposed, but Malcolm went first,â Matt explains.
âI proposed in July of 2020âweâre still in the midst of the pandemic, but you know, things are starting to open up,â says Malcolm âAnd there is this beautiful Japanese garden in Fairmount Park. And my birthday is at the end of July…Matt is also a photographer and I tell him I want to go to the Japanese garden on the day they open back up and have him take some birthday pictures.
âAnd as weâre there, I had gotten another photographer to take pictures of us as [Mattâs] taking pictures of me. And weâre doing different poses and I get down on one knee and thatâs when Matt was like, âWhat are you doing? Thatâs not a pose.â and I said, âIâm proposingâ…It was a beautiful time and it ended up going viral.â
But the betrothal didnât end there, since, as Malcolm says, âMatt canât leave well enough alone and decided to rope my staff into a scheme to counter-propose and make me cry in public.â
âBack in February 2021, I surprised him with the help of a good friend who pretended we were just going on dog dates,â Matt explains. âOn our walk back, I sprung it on him and âcounter-proposedâ with a ring made of the same precious stone and designed by the same amazing Philly jeweler Henri David.â
âIt was devious and beautiful, and Iâm still incredibly happy about it. But Iâll also never forgive him,â Malcolm adds.
The two are hoping to marry within the yearâthough, as Malcolm notes, they have âvery different ideas of what [their] wedding should be.â While Matt envisions a non-traditional party thatâs âfashionable, foodie, [and] fun,â followed by a âverdant and tropicalâ honeymoon abroad, Malcolm would be more than happy with a âchill AFâ ceremony. Like, super-chill.
âI mean, literally I could get married in our living room. And then, like, you know, binge-watch Netflix and we order in some fancy food,â he says. âI would invite no one except for my pastor and then I would probably ask her to leave after she finished marrying us.â
If their ceremonial styles seem indicative of how distinctly different the coupleâs personalities are, itâs a study in contrasts they readily celebrate.
âWeâve learned that we do not have to become the same person to be in love…thatâs a myth,â says Matt, who tellingly describes himself as Malcolmâs âother 100%â in his Twitter profile. âIt is a union of two people, not a fusion into one. Love is also about allowing each other to change and evolve, especially when youâre young. Iâve learned that, despite my seriousness and studiousness, Iâm actually more eccentric than [Malcolm] is. We always look like weâre going to two different placesâIâm all glimmered out and heâs giving normcore or business casual. Rather than trying to make him dress like me, I do my thing. He does his.â
âI would say to folks, throw out the rulebook,â Malcolm adds. âSo many of us learn a lot of what we know about love from Disney movies. And that is not most peopleâs life…I think we all have this idea in our head of what our partner will be or who our kids will be or what that job is. People get frustrated as opposed to counting themselves incredibly blessed and end up missing the beauty of something that was completely unexpected.â
The couple says communication, including learning each otherâs love languages, is at the core of their compatibility. âLike, we literally talk about everything,â says Malcolm.
âYour ability to effectively communicate with one anotherâand we doâis crucial,â he continues. âYou know, I often sayâand I mean this seriously: Iâve had better fights with Matt than Iâve had dates with people. I think we fight very well…We fight well because you will fight.â
âWe never let disagreements turn into excuses to destroy each otherâs characters,â Matt adds. âWe always tell friends who want to be in a relationship: âItâs not about how you [get along]. Itâs about how you fight.â If you can learn to absorb each otherâs points of view and keep the respect, youâll never get too low.â
As Malcolm notes, itâs about seeing the big pictureâas well appreciating the nuances of partnership.
âMatt thinks about things very deeply. I think he has a way of really getting to the heart of something and understanding things on a maybe near-microscopic level,â he says. â[I love] the way he sort of engages the level of detail that he puts into everything he does. It really is beautiful to watch.
âI would just say that love is so precious; so precious. And having somebody who you can wake up every day with and want to see is a real gift,â Malcolm continues. âYou know, Matt and I got through Trump and COVID together. We got through the death of my mother, the loss of three of his grandparents. Now weâve gotten through all of that together, and heâs still the first person I want to see in the morning.â
You can read prior installments of âHow We Doâ here and here.
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