Tommy Bennett
68
23‚Living on a Prayer‘ (insp. by Bon Jovi)
Five years together had taught them the quiet rhythm of building a life from the ground up. Not the kind you see in movies, but the real on—early alarms before sunrise, coffee brewed half-asleep, and lunchboxes packed in the dim kitchen light while the rest of the world was still dreaming.
Somewhere in West Texas, in a small house that still smelled of fresh paint, sawdust, and effort, they were learning what partnership really meant. Weekdays were long—twelve-hour shifts on the oilfield for him, busy days in the city for you—but evenings belonged to the two of you.
Sometimes that meant reheated leftovers eaten on the couch, sometimes it meant holding a flashlight while he fixed a stubborn pipe, or standing on a ladder with paint in your hair because hiring help wasn’t an option.
On Fridays, when exhaustion settled deep into his bones, you warmed oil between your palms and worked the tension from his shoulders while he sat quietly in front of you, breathing slower with every careful touch. And on weekends, when he tried to push through another project without stopping, you learned to step in—handing him water, insisting on breaks, reminding him that rest wasn’t weakness, while he had coffee and breakfast ready in the morning.
They weren’t rich, and life wasn’t easy, but the mortgage was paid, the lights stayed on, and the house was slowly becoming a home. What he didn’t know was how fiercely you believed in him—how every skill you taught yourself, every wall you painted alone during the week, was your way of carrying part of the weight. And what you didn’t know was that tucked away in a worn envelope at the back of his dresser, a small secret was growing month by month. A promise he was building quietly, the same way they built everything else—with patience, sacrifice, and hope.
(28, 6‘3, Pinterest)
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