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Rings of Love

It was a warm and sunny spring afternoon. The air was crisp, and traces of jasmine and my mother's perfume hung in the air. She was getting ready to leave for the church. Other family members were bustling about. A wave of excitement and commotion was rolling around our house. Yet, there sat my beautiful and regal mother. She was calm. She was clutching a simple, gold ring to her chest. She was smiling. I reflect on that day often. Even on my own wedding day I pondered back on that moment. A moment when she was about to start again and create a whole new life with a man she adored and loved. A man she never expected to walk into our world. Yet there she was, about to walk to him and promise him all her days.

There was no big event for her second marriage. After all, this was post war and we just didn't do things like we used to. Before, the whole of the Southern town we grew up in had come to my mother and father's wedding parade. The streets were lined with loving supporters and the wedding pews were filled to capacity. You see, my father was the son of the mayor. My mother was the daughter of the local clergyman. In the South, this was a big event the preacher's daughter marrying the next mayor, or even senator.

I recall most fondly the story of how they chose their wedding rings. Most ladies went down to the local jeweler and had they order something from the catalog. The bigger cities always had more of a selection. Aside from being at church every Sunday and paying her taxes, my mother never did quite like doing what was expected or traditional. So, when it came to her wedding band she had other plans in mind.

You see, my mother's father came from a long line of welders and miners. In fact, there is a long history of my family being outcasts and poor common folk. Most of the town disregarded and mistreated my family for generations. Right before the first big war was when the mine finally hit. All manner of metal and pressure rock came spewing forth. Most went to manufacture and build machinery for the army.

The generations to follow for our family were met with very different circumstances. While most families suffered and perished during the first war and Great Depression, ours actually prospered and grew. All because of the hardworking men who broke their backs and slaved away in the dark to finally find the light at the end of that long tunnel.

So, the gold that forged my mother and fathers wedding rings came from that very mine. The mine my father family later came to buy from mother's great grandfather. This set in motion for their future paths to cross, and cross they did. A beautiful baby girl came from their short union. The second great war was not so kind to us. Yet, my mother was able to find another gem amongst the rubble. The day she walked to my step-dad she gave me the cherished gold band my father had made with her, and I held it on my own wedding day. Someday soon, I will give it to my baby girl.

Julia Lockhart is a writer with a penchant for wedding bands. She prides herself in providing readers with the knowledge they need to make smart and informed purchases when it comes to buying Affordable Fancy Rings .

It was a warm and sunny spring afternoon. The air was crisp, and traces of jasmine and my mother's perfume hung in the air. She was getting ready to leave for the church. Other family members were bustling about. A wave of excitement and commotion was rolling around our house. Yet, there sat my beautiful and regal mother. She was calm. She was clutching a simple, gold ring to her chest. She was smiling. I reflect on that day often. Even on my own wedding day I pondered back on that moment. A moment when she was about to start again and create a whole new life with a man she adored and loved. A man she never expected to walk into our world. Yet there she was, about to walk to him and promise him all her days.

There was no big event for her second marriage. After all, this was post war and we just didn't do things like we used to. Before, the whole of the Southern town we grew up in had come to my mother and father's wedding parade. The streets were lined with loving supporters and the wedding pews were filled to capacity. You see, my father was the son of the mayor. My mother was the daughter of the local clergyman. In the South, this was a big event the preacher's daughter marrying the next mayor, or even senator.

I recall most fondly the story of how they chose their wedding rings. Most ladies went down to the local jeweler and had they order something from the catalog. The bigger cities always had more of a selection. Aside from being at church every Sunday and paying her taxes, my mother never did quite like doing what was expected or traditional. So, when it came to her wedding band she had other plans in mind.

You see, my mother's father came from a long line of welders and miners. In fact, there is a long history of my family being outcasts and poor common folk. Most of the town disregarded and mistreated my family for generations. Right before the first big war was when the mine finally hit. All manner of metal and pressure rock came spewing forth. Most went to manufacture and build machinery for the army.

The generations to follow for our family were met with very different circumstances. While most families suffered and perished during the first war and Great Depression, ours actually prospered and grew. All because of the hardworking men who broke their backs and slaved away in the dark to finally find the light at the end of that long tunnel.

So, the gold that forged my mother and fathers wedding rings came from that very mine. The mine my father family later came to buy from mother's great grandfather. This set in motion for their future paths to cross, and cross they did. A beautiful baby girl came from their short union. The second great war was not so kind to us. Yet, my mother was able to find another gem amongst the rubble. The day she walked to my step-dad she gave me the cherished gold band my father had made with her, and I held it on my own wedding day. Someday soon, I will give it to my baby girl.

Julia Lockhart is a writer with a penchant for wedding bands. She prides herself in providing readers with the knowledge they need to make smart and informed purchases when it comes to buying Affordable Fancy Rings .

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