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#1
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There's a LESSON here you hams and radio freaks.
What happened to this baseball collector can happen to a radio collector also....and I know SEVERAL xyl's who'd just LOVE an opportunity to trash or sell off all of her hubby's "ham radio junk" just to have him pay her more attention..... ; ) ---- cut --- Ex-Wife Auctions Man's $200,000 Baseball Collection From the News Section of: http://www.voyeurweb.com/main/Main.html TUSCON, Arizona -- A woman whose husband spent $200,000 on baseball memorabilia took revenge - by divorcing him and selling it on eBay. The husband, 42, told his wife, 45, they couldn't afford kids or a house, and even took money from her bank account to add (baseball items) to his collection. The divorce judge ruled she can have the rare baseball cards and caps, and she is auctioning them online, according to news media reports. The couple had been married for 17 years. When asked about the auction, the wife said: "I'm giggling." -- Holy Strike Out, Voyeurwebbers! It sounds like this guy got caught looking at an inside fastball and never even swung at it, hehehe! Meanwhile, his wife managed to knock one out of the ball park. It wasn't just a grand slam, either, it was a 200-grand slam, hehehe! There's also an important lesson in this story, Voyeurwebbers: ***If you're hobby becomes your life ... it's definitely time to get a new hobby***. -- Igor |
#2
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Indeed -- your wife or your rig (baseball cards)
Long Pause Well I'm thinking, I'm thinking Jack Benny -- Caveat Lector (Reader Beware) Help The New Hams Someone Helped You Or did You Forget That ? "morris" wrote in message groups.com... There's a LESSON here you hams and radio freaks. What happened to this baseball collector can happen to a radio collector also....and I know SEVERAL xyl's who'd just LOVE an opportunity to trash or sell off all of her hubby's "ham radio junk" just to have him pay her more attention..... ; ) ---- cut --- Ex-Wife Auctions Man's $200,000 Baseball Collection From the News Section of: http://www.voyeurweb.com/main/Main.html TUSCON, Arizona -- A woman whose husband spent $200,000 on baseball memorabilia took revenge - by divorcing him and selling it on eBay. The husband, 42, told his wife, 45, they couldn't afford kids or a house, and even took money from her bank account to add (baseball items) to his collection. The divorce judge ruled she can have the rare baseball cards and caps, and she is auctioning them online, according to news media reports. The couple had been married for 17 years. When asked about the auction, the wife said: "I'm giggling." -- Holy Strike Out, Voyeurwebbers! It sounds like this guy got caught looking at an inside fastball and never even swung at it, hehehe! Meanwhile, his wife managed to knock one out of the ball park. It wasn't just a grand slam, either, it was a 200-grand slam, hehehe! There's also an important lesson in this story, Voyeurwebbers: ***If you're hobby becomes your life ... it's definitely time to get a new hobby***. -- Igor |
#3
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On Sat, 05 Feb 2005 21:43:00 -0500, morris wrote:
There's a LESSON here you hams and radio freaks. What happened to this baseball collector can happen to a radio collector also....and I know SEVERAL xyl's who'd just LOVE an opportunity to trash or sell off all of her hubby's "ham radio junk" just to have him pay her more attention..... ; ) ---- cut --- Ex-Wife Auctions Man's $200,000 Baseball Collection From the News Section of: http://www.voyeurweb.com/main/Main.html TUSCON, Arizona -- A woman whose husband spent $200,000 on baseball memorabilia took revenge - by divorcing him and selling it on eBay. The husband, 42, told his wife, 45, they couldn't afford kids or a house, and even took money from her bank account to add (baseball items) to his collection. The divorce judge ruled she can have the rare baseball cards and caps, and she is auctioning them online, according to news media reports. The couple had been married for 17 years. When asked about the auction, the wife said: "I'm giggling." -- Holy Strike Out, Voyeurwebbers! It sounds like this guy got caught looking at an inside fastball and never even swung at it, hehehe! Meanwhile, his wife managed to knock one out of the ball park. It wasn't just a grand slam, either, it was a 200-grand slam, hehehe! There's also an important lesson in this story, Voyeurwebbers: ***If you're hobby becomes your life ... it's definitely time to get a new hobby***. -- Igor Yeah, I'm single and that's one of the many reasons why. Marriage is for suckers IMHO. It used to mean somethng many, many years ago but womens mind set have changed to much it isn't worth it now. I've seen FAR too many marriages go down the toilet for my money. |
#4
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Tom Randy wrote:
On Sat, 05 Feb 2005 21:43:00 -0500, morris wrote: There's a LESSON here you hams and radio freaks. What happened to this baseball collector can happen to a radio collector also....and I know SEVERAL xyl's who'd just LOVE an opportunity to trash or sell off all of her hubby's "ham radio junk" just to have him pay her more attention..... ; ) ---- cut --- Ex-Wife Auctions Man's $200,000 Baseball Collection From the News Section of: http://www.voyeurweb.com/main/Main.html TUSCON, Arizona -- A woman whose husband spent $200,000 on baseball memorabilia took revenge - by divorcing him and selling it on eBay. The husband, 42, told his wife, 45, they couldn't afford kids or a house, and even took money from her bank account to add (baseball items) to his collection. The divorce judge ruled she can have the rare baseball cards and caps, and she is auctioning them online, according to news media reports. The couple had been married for 17 years. When asked about the auction, the wife said: "I'm giggling." -- Holy Strike Out, Voyeurwebbers! It sounds like this guy got caught looking at an inside fastball and never even swung at it, hehehe! Meanwhile, his wife managed to knock one out of the ball park. It wasn't just a grand slam, either, it was a 200-grand slam, hehehe! There's also an important lesson in this story, Voyeurwebbers: ***If you're hobby becomes your life ... it's definitely time to get a new hobby***. -- Igor Yeah, I'm single and that's one of the many reasons why. Marriage is for suckers IMHO. It used to mean somethng many, many years ago but womens mind set have changed to much it isn't worth it now. I've seen FAR too many marriages go down the toilet for my money. A guy walks into a bar, sits down. Tells the batrender "A round of drinks on me!" After getting hs drink, the fellow next to him asks "What's the occasion Pal?" "I'm getting married tomorrow! Now I'll be able to get laid any time I want!!" The other fellow says "Funny, but that was the reason I got divorced!" - Mike KB3EIA - |
#5
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On Sat, 5 Feb 2005 21:43:00 -0500, "morris" wrote:
There's a LESSON here you hams and radio freaks. What happened to this baseball collector can happen to a radio collector also....and I know SEVERAL xyl's who'd just LOVE an opportunity to trash or sell off all of her hubby's "ham radio junk" just to have him pay her more attention..... ; ) ---- cut --- Ex-Wife Auctions Man's $200,000 Baseball Collection From the News Section of: http://www.voyeurweb.com/main/Main.html TUSCON, Arizona -- A woman whose husband spent $200,000 on baseball memorabilia took revenge - by divorcing him and selling it on eBay. The husband, 42, told his wife, 45, they couldn't afford kids or a house, and even took money from her bank account to add (baseball items) to his collection. The divorce judge ruled she can have the rare baseball cards and caps, and she is auctioning them online, according to news media reports. The couple had been married for 17 years. When asked about the auction, the wife said: "I'm giggling." -- Holy Strike Out, Voyeurwebbers! It sounds like this guy got caught looking at an inside fastball and never even swung at it, hehehe! Meanwhile, his wife managed to knock one out of the ball park. It wasn't just a grand slam, either, it was a 200-grand slam, hehehe! There's also an important lesson in this story, Voyeurwebbers: ***If you're hobby becomes your life ... it's definitely time to get a new hobby***. -- Igor My wife never had to work for my hobby. Before we married we discussed it. I had been a ham for years before we met. I told her that I was an Amateur Radio Operator for years before we met and I would be one long after she's gone. If she couldn't accept that, she would have to move on. Likewise, I never tried to discourage or change things about my wife. Those things a person likes and dislikes, or their hobbies, etc, are part of what makes them the persons they are. I believe that if we take those things from a person, there will be a hole in their life and they will no longer be the person we met and fell in love with. Of course, it is different if that person changes hobbies, etc. on their own, but it is not good to take it from them. To include in their budget, support for each other's hobbies is not a bad thing, but to break their budget over any one hobby is not a good thing. My wife never went hungry because I bought a radio. Buck N4PGw -- 73 for now Buck N4PGW |
#6
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On Sun, 06 Feb 2005 12:52:05 -0500, Buck wrote:
aught looking at an inside fastball and never even swung at it, hehehe! Meanwhile, his wife managed to knock one out of the ball park. It wasn't just a grand slam, either, it was a 200-grand slam, hehehe! There's also an important lesson in this story, Voyeurwebbers: ***If you're hobby becomes On Sat, 5 Feb 2005 21:43:00 -0500, "morris" wrote: There's a LESSON here you hams and radio freaks. What happened to this baseball collector can happen to a radio collector also....and I know SEVERAL xyl's who'd just LOVE an opportunity to trash or sell off all of her The couple had been married for 17 years. When asked about the auction, the wife said: "I'm giggling." -- Holy Strike Out, Voyeurwebbers! It sounds like this guy got cyour life ... it's definitely time to get a new hobby***. -- Igor My wife never had to work for my hobby. Before we married we discussed it. I had been a ham for years before we met. I told her that I was an Amateur Radio Operator for years before we met and I would be one long after she's gone. If she couldn't accept that, she would have to move on. Likewise, I never tried to discourage or change things about my wife. Those things a person likes and dislikes, or their hobbies, etc, are part of what makes them the persons they are. I believe that if we take those things from a person, there will be a hole in their life and they will no longer be the person we met and fell in love with. Of course, it is different if that person changes hobbies, etc. on their own, but it is not good to take it from them. To include in their budget, support for each other's hobbies is not a bad thing, but to break their budget over any one hobby is not a good thing. My wife never went hungry because I bought a radio. Very wise words, from someone who understands human interaction. Too often one person or the other in a couple thinks they can "reform" the other person's bad habits. This only leads to misery and an eventual breakup. When you sign up to the "for better or worse" deal, that means you take the whole package, not just the parts you like. My wife had to deal with my radios, and I had to deal with her smoking (Which fortunately she gave up when she was pregnant). That's is the nature of compromise. You compromise because underneath those surface differences, there is a greater bond of affection which should transcend those surface differences. But it should be everything in moderation. If important things in life are being postponed to address a specific hobby, then it's time for a little introspection. Dave "Sandbagger" http://home.ptd.net/~n3cvj Buck N4PGw |
#7
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![]() Dave Hall wrote: On Sun, 06 Feb 2005 12:52:05 -0500, Buck wrote: aught looking at an inside fastball and never even swung at it, hehehe! Meanwhile, his wife managed to knock one out of the ball park. It wasn't just a grand slam, either, it was a 200-grand slam, hehehe! There's also an important lesson in this story, Voyeurwebbers: ***If you're hobby becomes On Sat, 5 Feb 2005 21:43:00 -0500, "morris" wrote: There's a LESSON here you hams and radio freaks. What happened to this baseball collector can happen to a radio collector also....and I know SEVERAL xyl's who'd just LOVE an opportunity to trash or sell off all of her The couple had been married for 17 years. When asked about the auction, the wife said: "I'm giggling." -- Holy Strike Out, Voyeurwebbers! It sounds like this guy got cyour life ... it's definitely time to get a new hobby***. -- Igor My wife never had to work for my hobby. Before we married we discussed it. I had been a ham for years before we met. I told her that I was an Amateur Radio Operator for years before we met and I would be one long after she's gone. If she couldn't accept that, she would have to move on. Likewise, I never tried to discourage or change things about my wife. Those things a person likes and dislikes, or their hobbies, etc, are part of what makes them the persons they are. I believe that if we take those things from a person, there will be a hole in their life and they will no longer be the person we met and fell in love with. Of course, it is different if that person changes hobbies, etc. on their own, but it is not good to take it from them. To include in their budget, support for each other's hobbies is not a bad thing, but to break their budget over any one hobby is not a good thing. My wife never went hungry because I bought a radio. Very wise words, from someone who understands human interaction. Too often one person or the other in a couple thinks they can "reform" the other person's bad habits. This only leads to misery and an eventual breakup. When you sign up to the "for better or worse" deal, that means you take the whole package, not just the parts you like. My wife had to deal with my radios, and I had to deal with her smoking (Which fortunately she gave up when she was pregnant). That's is the nature of compromise. You compromise because underneath those surface differences, there is a greater bond of affection which should transcend those surface differences. But it should be everything in moderation. If important things in life are being postponed to address a specific hobby, then it's time for a little introspection. Just remember that life is uncertain. You do your best, but still... Some men marry women, hoping they won't change. Some women marry men, hoping they will. dxAce Michigan USA |
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