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Monday Morning Memo

I have combined the questions: “What is the hardest thing you have ever done?”
and “What was your wedding like?” They are closely related.

For my wedding we eloped to Pauls Valley, OK.
He was 18 years old. I had been 16 years of age for two months.

After locating the Justice of the Peace in Pauls Valley, we were told we needed two witnesses. The JP office was upstairs over the fire station. Someone called downstairs and two firemen came up to be our witnesses.

We were married and drove home.
He went to his home and I went to mine.

The hardest thing I have ever done was to tell my parents that I was married.

I waited for Dad to come home for lunch so that I could tell my mother and my dad at the same time.

Mama, Dad and my two little sisters were at the table eating lunch.
It took awhile for me to work up the courage to tell them but finally I said, “I am married.”

I saw Mama turn to Dad and say, “Do you believe her?”
Dad said, “I think we have to. She’s as white as a sheet.”
I remember that very clearly.

I don’t remember anything after that. To this day I have no memory of what happened next.

I don’t remember if there was any further conversation.
I don’t remember if there were any questions asked.
I don’t even remember leaving the table.

My next memory was knowing that the family was scrounging around for furniture for my new home.

I don’t know who went apartment hunting.
I don’t know who moved the few pieces of furniture into the apartment.
I only remember being taken to the apartment; my new home.
It was a garage that had been converted into an apartment.

I didn’t return to school.
At that time, married students were not allowed to attend school.
He transferred to a nearby country school.

Sometimes I wish I could remember the parts I have blocked from my memory. 

But then I remind myself, “Be careful what you wish for.”

– Sue Williams

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Random Quote:

“Sofia rose from the table to give her father a kiss on the cheek. Then returning to her chair, she leaned back, squinted, and said: “Famous threesomes.”

“Ha-ha!” exclaimed the count.

Thus, as the candles were consumed by their flames and the bottle of Margaux was drunk to its lees, reference was made to the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost; Purgatory, Heaven, and Hell; the three rings of Moscow; the three Magi; the three Fates; the Three Musketeers; the gray ladies from Macbeth; the riddle of the Sphinx; the heads of Cerberus; the Pythagorean theorem; forks, spoons, and knives; reading, writing, and arithmetic; faith, hope, and love (with the greatest of these being love).

“Past, present, future.”
“Beginning, middle, end.”
“Morning, noon, and night.”
“The sun, the moon, the stars.”

And with this particular category, perhaps the game could have gone on all night long, but for the fact that the Count tipped over his own king with a bow of the head when Sofia said:

“Andrey, Emile, and Alexander.”

- Amor Towles, A Gentleman in Moscow, p.421 (the lines in bold were bolded by me – Indy Beagle)

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