Well....actually, I am not sure if Morse code would be considered sappy unless you knew the story: years before John met me, he jokingly told a friend that the girl he married had to be able to tell him "I love you" in Morse code. As a complete coincidence, not knowing the joke, the first time I told John I loved him, I tapped it into his Ham Radio:
.. / .-.. --- ...- . / -.-- --- ..-
Here is John's sappy love note in binary code:
"I love you Cheryl "--> 0100100100100000011011000110111101110110011001010010000001111001011011110111010100100000010000110110100001100101011100100111100101101100
And here is the sappiest love note of all, in German. I laughed hard over this one because apparently he wanted to call me "honey pie" (no cringing allowed, it's Valentines day!) but Google translated it back to "honey fruit cake":
Ich liebe meinen Honigobstkuchen. Glücklicher Valentines Tag mein schöner Liebling Cheryl
(translation: I love my honey fruit cake. Happy Valentines Day my lovely favorite Cheryl)
I am so glad that I got a great laugh for Valentines Day!)
Here is a completely unromantic picture of my "Honey Fruit Cake" under a "Fahrtgasse" sign.
I just had to include these pictures. Jet lag can be brutal, nothing can put you into an after dinner coma like a 22 hour trip home.
He came out of the coma for a few seconds when he realized I was taking a picture, then immediately fell asleep again. Yes he is smiling for the camera, but sound asleep.
After a few minutes of sleeping upright, he collapsed on the floor by the table and slept for an hour or two more. I was going to get a picture of that too, but I got sidetracked, and I am sure you get the idea.
1 comment:
Aww - so sweet!! In all of the languages (course you're the only person I've known to get a love note in binary code Ü).
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