For our 30th anniversary, I knitted my wife’s wedding dress, a labor of love, secrecy, and hope. I never expected the laughter it would spark at our vow renewal, nor the moment Janet took the microphone and revealed a truth about love, marriage, and devotion I’ll never forget.
I knitted my wife’s wedding dress for our 30th anniversary vow renewal.
By the third toast at the reception, people were laughing at it, and at me.
Then Janet stood up, took the microphone, and made the whole room go silent.
My wife and I had been married nearly 30 years. We had three grown kids, Marianne, Sue, and Anthony, and the kind of life built on routines, inside jokes, and quiet evenings after long workdays.
Most people called me quiet, handy, maybe a little old-fashioned.
Janet just called me hers.
About a year before our anniversary, I decided I wanted to make Janet something meaningful for the vow renewal I’d been secretly planning. So I started knitting.
I’d learned from my grandma when I was young, scarves, sweaters, simple things.
But this time, I wanted to make Janet a dress.
**
For nearly a year, I worked on that dress whenever Janet wasn’t home. The garage became my secret workshop.
I’d sneak out there late at night, the clack of my needles almost lost under the radio.
Sometimes she’d text:
“Tom, where’d you vanish to?”
And I’d write back, “Just tinkering. Be in soon.”
She noticed the red marks on my hands, but never pushed. “You and your projects,” she’d say, shaking her head.
I started over more times than I could count.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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