The last couple of years in the nineties brought several
challenges our way and marked a special event in our lives.
- · We completed our relationship with the Pan American Lectureship. Our last trip was to the Dominican Republic. In some ways I found it quite disturbing. We were comfortably settled in a five star hotel with a beautiful view of the Caribbean Sea, but we came in right after a hurricane, and if I looked to the street level I saw terrible poverty and devastation. It was hard to enjoy the luxury. My colleagues gave me a commemorative clock as a “going away” gift, then they all threatened to resign so they could get a clock.
- · We had health challenges. There were two or three hospitalizations. We couldn’t get insurance, and we weren’t old enough for Medicare. It made us look forward to turning 65.
- · Eddie left us in 1998, and I took on my first job description change. I became the interim “go to guy.” I would take on that job two more times before leaving Southern Hills.
- · Elliott, Melanie, Hunter, and Audrey came back from Germany and Elliott began his second tour of duty at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
- · Gary introduced us to Kelly and Scott, who have been part of our lives ever since.
- · We held “Mending a Messed Up Marriage” workshops at various locations and completed a “Certification in Family Ministry” program at Oklahoma Christian University.
- · In December we observed our fortieth anniversary, but we celebrated before that. The whole family gathered at Fort Leavenworth. We had a family photo taken at the Tom Custer house. Tom Custer was the brother of the famous George Armstrong Custer.
- I’ve described our first forty years of marriage as years of wedded bliss. That’s a little bit of an exaggeration. Make no mistake about it, we’ve had a wonderful ride, and it has not been boring. Sometimes I would jokingly say that we had been happily married for more than twenty years. Of course we had actually been married forty years, but my tongue-in-cheek statement was not much of an exaggeration. It really took us about 16 years to figure out how this marriage thing is supposed to work.
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