I would have sworn that Jack and Martha were newlyweds if they hadn’t been quite a bit on the older side. When they first came into the fast food restaurant where I was having dinner Monday night, they seemed like a young couple in love. I couldn’t help but smile when I saw them sit at a booth together — side by side instead of across from one another. What I didn’t know then is that they were newlyweds. They just got married Monday.
Jack fell in love with Martha more than 50 years ago, but he was too timid to approach the girl he said was the prettiest in the school. Besides, Martha always had plenty of dates, so he didn’t think she could possibly be interested in a skinny boy with little confidence and no apparent future. That was in the early ’60s at a high school near Birmingham. Neither knew that they would end up together in 2012.
Jack graduated from high school two years ahead of Martha and headed off to college. He kept a picture of Martha that he had gotten from one of her friends. Unknown to him at the time, Martha had wanted Jack to ask her out, but he had never shown any interest.

Pop culture creates overgrown kids in adult bodies who won’t grow up
AUDIO: Finding meaning, true self requires rejection of your culture
Forget your partner’s best traits; worst traits predict your future

If online attack confirms your biases too nicely, it just might be a fake
Defense mechanism led me to repress unacceptable emotions
Left-wing distortions of church just as toxic as right-wing kinds
Looking for truth in random noise? Or is there meaning for me in this?
Loving a depressed person means holding tightly on trips through hell
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