I hope you didn't get this from my post about my dad's ring...I am not close to my dad. At all. But I do have fond memories of my mom and dads wedding rings. My dad was a USNA grad, he and mom met and got engaged post commissioning. They married and their rings were beautiful class rings. She was not a USNA grad.
Decades later they are no longer together and I am not sure where the rings are.
While I love the idea of a link in a chain, for our family having that link isn’t authentic as my DS MIDN has no relationship with them.
For those families who can use lovingly those stones or melted pieces it is very cool.
Thank you. Stellar advice. He can create his own story.I hope you didn't get this from my post about my dad's ring...
My son, although brilliant, and who will be an incredible officer, is still a bonehead (as his dad I have the forever right to call him that). He will most likely lose his ring within a year. So we decided not to use my dad's stone and instead have him use his birthstone instead.
Have your son create his own link-in-the-chain. It needs to start somewhere.
No question my DS can be a bonehead, as well.I hope you didn't get this from my post about my dad's ring...
My son, although brilliant, and who will be an incredible officer, is still a bonehead (as his dad I have the forever right to call him that). He will most likely lose his ring within a year. So we decided not to use my dad's stone and instead have him use his birthstone instead.
Have your son create his own link-in-the-chain. It needs to start somewhere.
ALL boys are boneheads. Fact...No question my DS can be a bonehead, as well.