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American Manufacturing Is About More Than Just Jobs
Bringing back American manufacturing is critical to American society in more ways than just economic ones. In order for America to succeed it needs the ability to make things, not only for the stability and good jobs it provides, but for national security as well.
Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts

Sunday, March 24, 2024

A Sign of Something Else?

From time to time my wife and I enjoy perusing an antique and consignment store in a nearby town. There are always interesting things to look at, the prices are fairly reasonable as well, and sometimes you can find something rather unique.

A lot of times there are signs or plaques that are quite intentional in making a joke. But sometimes you also happen to find a joke where one was, perhaps, not necessarily intended.

Of course, anyone who has been married for a while is all too aware that marriage is not all love and romance the likes of an untold number of movies and books about love. There are times when you even think, maybe I should just pack it in and call it a day. Is this even worth it?

But it is also the trials and tribulations and sour moments that actually serve more often than not to make a marriage stronger.

Coming upon one of the booths at the store there was a sign for sale that read, "All because two people fell in love." And right above it, a very large tree saw.

Naturally, if one has a bit of a sense of humor, right away you can see how the saw may imply something about that sign. Because while most of the time those sour moments in marriage do indeed make our marriages stronger, there are still times when the thought occurs that having a large tree saw around might come in handy.




Jim Bauer writes mostly about conservative politics, finance and investing. But of course, he also writes the occasional random thought or shares his views on everyday life. If you'd like to keep up with the latest writings wherever he may write them, you can follow him on his Facebook page.

Monday, May 19, 2008

ONE YEAR AGO, TODAY

Life comes at you fast.

Those words come from a series of chuckle-rendering television commercials selling insurance, but I'm sure that the marketing gurus behind the catchy phrase weren't the ones who first coined it. Perhaps it is merely a more conservative, modern version of the old "shit happens" idiom. Either way, the very statement those five words make is wholly profound.

Life really does come at you fast. In a flash, everything changes. And more times than not, they are changes that you weren't necessarily looking for. They are changes initiated by things that seemingly come out of nowhere and just sort of take you by surprise. They are sometimes the best things to happen to us in our lives. Grounding things.

As I write this my wife, Dawn, and I are just now entering our first year of marriage together, and while we are far from strangers to one another (we've been together for going on three years now), there is still much we are learning about who we are. As anyone familiar with this path can surely attest, being married to someone is vastly different than simply being with someone at varying times throughout the weeks and days. To be sure, no one is nearly as refined in real life as in the impression-setting moments during the dating process. Marriage and being together all the time has a way of revealing some things. My wife has determined that in real life I'm a pig, for example, and that by the evidence of the food crumbs that regularly surround my plate at the dinner table, a fork appears to have been a tool I only recently learned how to use.

Hey, I am her knight in shining armor. She even told me so once or twice. And she did marry me. She is my princess, and of course I did marry her. But eventually the armor must come off to reveal the man inside. And for the record, a princess must eventually, too, hang up her tiara. At the end of the day we are, of course, people. We all have our irks and quirks. Some of them will excite and intrigue us. Some of them will make us melt to mush. And others...well, let's just say this is a tale that has been told more than once.

The long and short of it is that it's an adventure. A journey. And for better or for worse I'm having the time of my life. Change is good. Profound change is good. We've moved from the duplex I own with my mother and bought a new house just down the street. We've had the misfortune to endure the deep emotional pain of a miscarriage, though on the bright side we had a glimmer of the special excitement and joy the prospect of a child will one day add to our lives. We've made important discoveries about each other, and we've grown ever closer, and ever more in love each day.

A year is a short time, relatively speaking. Yet, even though it's only been a short time, in an odd sort of way there is this surreal sense that it has always been this way. That we have always been this way. Whenever I hold my wife in my arms and feel her warm caress, whenever I kiss her tender lips, I feel like this is a place that I've known forever. I feel like this is a place that I never want to leave. It feels good and it feels right.

It's been one year ago, today that my wife and I were married. Life comes at you fast, and I'm ready for whatever comes our way in the next year. If it's anything like the past year, I can't wait.