For as long as I can remember, my dad never wore his wedding ring.
It was a quiet point of tension with my mom. He always told her he’d lost it shortly after their wedding and “never got around to replacing it.” She accepted it, but it still stung a little over the years.
When he passed away last year, we finally started cleaning out his workshop and bedroom. Tucked in the back of a small wooden box (the one where he kept spare bolts and old keys) we found his original wedding band. It was polished, completely undamaged, and wrapped carefully in a soft cloth.
Inside the box was a folded note in his handwriting. It read:
“I never wore it because I was terrified of losing or ruining it at work.
My hands spent 40+ years on engines, barbed wire, welders, and machinery. I’ve seen too many guys mangle a finger or lose a ring that got caught on something.
This ring means more to me than any tool I own. I couldn’t stand the thought of it getting crushed or disappearing down a combine harvester.
So I kept it safe. I looked at it almost every day.
I never needed it on my hand to remember the promise I made to your mom.
I carried that promise in me every single day anyway.
Tell her I’m sorry for the white lie, but I’m not sorry for protecting the thing that mattered most.”
My mom read it, smiled through tears, and immediately put the ring on a chain around her neck, where it still hangs today.
He wasn’t the type to say “I love you” a hundred times a day. He wasn’t big on flowers or grand gestures.
But for forty-seven years he woke up at 4 a.m. to keep the farm running, came home filthy and exhausted, kissed my mom on the cheek every single night, and quietly made sure that little gold band stayed perfect.
Turns out the ring wasn’t missing at all.
It was just loved too much to risk.