I thought it was irreplaceable.
About 4 years ago, my wedding ring had a loose stone so a major jewelry store sent it in to be fixed.
And my ring disappeared.
Somewhere between the jewelry store and the shop that fixes jewelry, my ring along with a whole box of other people’s jewelry was stolen. Gone!
For almost 40 years at that time, my husband I had an ‘every 5 years’ anniversary tradition of changing or adding something to my ring. This made my ring very unique with a lot of sentimental memories attached to it. Eight years ago we added blue sapphires to my ring after our son, David Glasser, who was a Phoenix Police Officer, was killed in the line of duty. It’s the only piece of jewelry I usually wear other than Davey’s memorial bracelet.
This ring was precious to me so I never took it off except at night and then it always went the same place. I didn’t want to lose it.
Now the jewelry store lost it. Unbelievable!
Of course I cried. So much has been lost and now I’m adding my wedding ring to that list. The jewelry store tried to do their best to replace it with something comparable and they did a good job. But my original ring was irreplaceable.

Well, on second thought, my perspective these last 8 years since Davey was killed has definitely changed. There is a new standard in my mind that I measure everything here on earth by to determine whether it’s irreplaceable. And my ring actually isn’t even on that list.
Because, at the top of the irreplaceable list is my son, Davey. In an instant, he was gone. He went to work on May 18, 2016 and never came back. And he is truly irreplaceable. He defines irreplaceable. He was such a huge personality and so special. Nothing and no one can fill the hole he left on this earth.
When I think about it, it’s people in my life who are irreplaceable. None of the ‘stuff’ in life means much when it’s stacked up against the people that mean the most to me.
Those of you who follow my blog know that last year my ring disappeared again. I couldn’t find it anywhere. I only take it off at night and I always put it in the same place…..but, one day, it wasn’t there in the morning. To say that I looked for it everywhere is an understatement. I’m glad I had already figured out what it was not irreplaceable but losing it still stung. I had three older brothers and the last one passed away around the same time that I lost my ring. More loss. It was piling up.
So I prayed. I knew God knew exactly where my ring was and I asked him to bring it back to me. Every time it bothered me, I prayed. And 4 months later, it showed up in a place where I had looked many times. Thank you, God.
I lost Davey, too, but I know where he is and God is going to give him back to me someday when I get to my forever home.
One of the things that is important to me about my relationship with God is that he has promised nothing could make him stop loving me. Nothing. Ever. I don’t have to be concerned about ever losing my relationship with him. My life is built on the Solid Rock. I might lose everything else here on earth, but not God.
Having this new standard of irreplaceable has helped me focus on the most precious things in my life – my relationship with God and with the people who have been left behind on this planet with me. It has helped me put ‘stuff’ and possessions in the right place on my list of what is important – at the bottom. It has helped me be okay with losing my original ring. It was just a thing. It is replaceable.
Because I now clearly understand what is truly irreplaceable.
Miss you, Davey.
Love you.

















