For nearly six decades, Andy Carver, an Army veteran, bought his wife a bouquet of flowers every week.
He picked up fresh flowers for her every Friday. Sometimes it would be white carnations – her favorite – or it would be roses, which were his.
“I mixed it quite a bit,” he said. “She just loved it, and I just loved to see her smile. I loved to make her happy.”
It was a long tradition that ended last March, when his wife, Brigitte, died at a hospice due to complications from a stroke.
But Carver, 84, figured out a new way to continue his tradition – by buying flowers, each week, for people at his retirement community in Texas.
He picked up fresh flowers for her every Friday. Sometimes it would be white carnations – her favorite – or it would be roses, which were his.
“I mixed it quite a bit,” he said. “She just loved it, and I just loved to see her smile. I loved to make her happy.”
It was a long tradition that ended last March, when his wife, Brigitte, died at a hospice due to complications from a stroke.
But Carver, 84, figured out a new way to continue his tradition – by buying flowers, each week, for people at his retirement community in Texas.
Source : Foxnews

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