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A change of heart — literally — moved this couple to renew their wedding vows

If Dex Pelley made it through his heart transplant, he told his wife Bonita, he wanted to marry her again. One year after the surgery, the couple has many reasons to celebrate this Christmas.

1 couple celebrates love and life on anniversary of husband's successful heart transplant

A bride smiles at a groom as a room full of people look at them and clap.
'He proposed to me before the transplant and he said, "If I get through this, marry me again,"' Bonita Pelley recalls, on the day of her vow renewal ceremony. (Sarah Blackmore/CBC)

Bonita and Dex Pelley stand in Bridie Molloy's, a lively pub in downtown St. John's, wearing a wedding dress and a suit. These are the same outfits they wore 24 years ago, the first time they said, "I do."

Now they're doing it all again, but this time, with a change of heart. 

"He proposed to me before the transplant and he said, 'If I get through this, marry me again,'" Bonita Pelley told CBC News at the ceremony. "And here we are, and this is 24 years later and we are so grateful."

Surrounded by friends and family, the couple are celebrating not just a long and happy marriage but a recent heart transplant that saved Dex's life.

A genetic disease called ARVC, or arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy, runs in Dex's family.

His mother and sister both passed away due to the condition, and his brother and another sister have been diagnosed as well. 

"I guess there are a lot of people out there who don't realize they have a genetic problem," Dex said. "I was fortunate that they found it 10 years before I had any symptoms and they put a defibrillator in me.

"The first time I had the arrest, I didn't even know I had it."

Dex explains that his symptoms started small; the first time he had a cardiac arrest, he didn't know what exactly had happened until he got a call from the hospital three days later. 

"Basically, it's the gene, tells the heart to stop," Dex said.

A woman and a man hold hands on their couch, in front of a Christmas tree.
'I feel like I'm a little 10-year-old again,' Bonita says, holding Dex's hand. 'Just, you know, to have our Christmas again.' (Sarah Blackmore/CBC)

A few weeks after the vow renewal, he and Bonita sit down in their living room with CBC News to tell their full story. A fireplace crackles near them in their new home, decked out in Christmas decorations.

It's been a year since Dex got his new heart, a journey that was many years in the making. 

Now the Pelleys find reasons to celebrate every day.

A long journey

"This Christmas is like, wow, I feel like I'm a little 10-year-old again," says Bonita, as she holds Dex's hand. "Just, you know, to have our Christmas again." 

She teared up, recalling what the two have been through to get to this point. 

"At first we didn't even know if he'd even make it on the list," says Bonita, referring to the wait-list for heart transplant eligibility. "I remember fighting tooth and nail."

When Dex was accepted into the Ottawa Heart Institute, the two didn't know they were in a for a long wait, as finding a match for an organ donor isn't a simple process.

Not only does the organ need to be available, but many biological similarities need to be present between the organ donor and the person receiving the donation.

WATCH | Dex and Bonita Pelley talk about the impact an organ donor has had on their lives:

A change of heart: One couple’s new lease on life after a successful heart transplant

1 year ago
Duration 4:54
Dex Pelley told his wife, Bonita, that if he ever got a new heart, he wanted to marry her again. Now, a year after his transplant, the couple have tied the knot for the second time.

Bonita explains that, for example, a woman cannot donate a heart to a man, and the person donating needs to be of similar height and weight to the person who will be receiving the heart. 

Because of factors like these, the two waited over six months.

Eventually, doctors told them they may need to prepare for the worst.

"After waiting months … all the doctors came in and they said 'you don't have months to wait anymore, you only have weeks,'" says Bonita.

"It depleted us. It devastated us," she says, her voice wavering as she remembers that time.

"Every day you're up there and you're praying we're going to get a donor. Every time I heard the helicopter coming, I'm thinking 'that's going to be a heart,' and you know, you just keep hanging in there." 

Symbols of hope

One of the common themes the Pelleys raise during the conversation is faith.

Bonita speaks about her own beliefs getting her through the toughest moments, when it seemed like all hope was lost.

Applying this concept of faith is a little newer for Dex than it is Bonita, but both are eager to talk about a particular visitor at the heart institute that brightened their spirits.

Black and white photo of a bride and groom
This year, Bonita and Dex wore the same dress and suit that they wore on their original wedding day in 1999. (Submitted by Bonita Pelley)

"I've never been a religious person, but I can tell you at that time when that magnificent thing perched outside, and grabbed onto the parapet, and looked at me, all the pressure I had inside me, all this fear, all the everything just went," says Dex.

The visitor he describes was an eagle that landed on his window sill at the hospital in Ottawa.

"Huge, majestic eagle," Bonita says. "Dex said it looked him straight in the eyes, and for some reason it gave him hope. It was like a message."

Two days later, the Pelleys got the call that there was finally a donor match for Dex.

A man smiles and holds a large mounted photo of an eagle. He stands in front of his Christmas tree.
At the vow renewal ceremony, Bonita surprised Dex with an image of an eagle to remind him of the one that landed on his windowsill at the Ottawa Heart Institute, and gave him hope. (Sarah Blackmore/CBC)

Donor's impact

"The whole experience gave me a totally, totally different outlook on a lot of things, the transplant system," says Dex, describing his gratitude toward the person who opted to donate their heart.

 "I'm not sure who it is yet. Hopefully one of these days I'll find out."

One year after the transplant, the Pelleys are allowed to contact the family of the donor to thank them. 

In a hospital, a woman in a mask stands with her hands on the shoulder of a man in a chair, who is wearing a reindeer antler headband.
Dex received his heart transplant on Dec. 8, 2022. Now, a year later, the Pelleys' Christmas looks a little different than it did at the time. (Submitted Bonita Pelley)

"They need time to grieve their loss," says Bonita.

The Pelleys recognize that their miracle could only happen as a result of another family's tragedy.

"He gave me life in so many different ways," Dex says.

"And not only that they gave him life, but they gave my husband back, you know," Bonita adds.

A bride in a white dress and a groom in a black suit stand in front of an officiant, surrounded by flowers.
Dex says his and Bonita's vow renewal ceremony was a place for him to continue healing. (Sarah Blackmore/CBC)

Significance of vow renewal

On the day of the vow renewal ceremony, their friend, Derek Diamond, emceed the wedding and later sang an original song. 

"Even with a change of heart, there was no change of heart," Diamond sang as the couple smiled.

Bonita recalls during the worst of Dex's illness she would take it one day at a time, but now they can look toward their future for the first time in years.

"He's going to try cross-country skiing!" says Bonita, excitedly. "Oh, he has a bucket list now."

"New heart, new start," she says, then looks to Dex and smiled. "But he still got the same old wife." 

Both of them laugh.

"Looking forward to our future together," says Dex, with his arm around Bonita. "Sharing it with everyone we love."

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sarah Blackmore is a reporter with CBC at its bureau in St. John's.

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