No, it is not my car. (I think it actually a Chevy Pickup). I don't even know who owns it. I took the picture at a car show. But today I wanted color and it is hard to beat this for color.
Most show cars are never driven. They are trailered to the site, and pushed in place At one time they did not even have to have innerds i the engine, now they have to actually be drivable. The shelf of a show car is amazingly short. The top winner may a few years ago could have been cannibalized and be rusting into the ground.
This blog began as a spot to vent about my life with Miriam and her time with Alzheimer's disease.
She was diagnosed in '99 and her decline has been quite slow. In fact some of our best years of our long marriage have been these recent years.
Alzherimer's, at least her version is a disease of waiting. One shoe drops and it can be a very long time before the other one drops.
So life goes on.
At the beginning of this blog I told the story of our courtship and marriage, about out family and our personal journey with this disease. The part that scares the most is the anticipation as the disease slowly progresses.
So, I will touch on that subject from time to time, but the entries will tend toward comments on life. I'll leave politics and religion for others to worry about, not that I don't have strong opinions!
I have my hands full just looking after my wonderful Miriam.
We met when we were 6, began dating at 15 and have been together since. We will have our 56th anniversary this June.
We have four wonderful daughters. Smart, independent, awesome. They have given us 7 grandsons and 4 granddaughters. None of them are little any more. The oldest is 28 and married, the youngest is 14.
Until this last fall we lived in a hosue I designed and built in the '70's and it is pretty weird and wild, but very comfortable. Last summer the girls came to the conclusion that I really did need help dealing with Miriam. Now we live on a couple acres with daughter 1.
Life has been good. There is not much I would do different even if I could. We are rich beyond belief but chronically short of cash!
And, unless stated otherwise all the photographs are mine.
3 comments:
Colorful indeed!!
Oh my, I'm not sure I would want to drive that down the street. Of course no one could claim they didn't see you. :)
Most show cars are never driven. They are trailered to the site, and pushed in place
At one time they did not even have to have innerds i the engine, now they have to actually be drivable.
The shelf of a show car is amazingly short. The top winner may a few years ago could have been cannibalized and be rusting into the ground.
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