I always hated Sunday mornings So I cursed my retail job Doughnuts and coffee couldn’t make up For the sound of my alarm But that day it was different You came in with your sunglasses on Tattoos on your arm And that was what could have changed it all
You said you’d pick me up at seven That I should bring my dancing shoes along I should’ve asked what you were on We walked into the restaurant It had a ballroom inside I must have stepped on your feet At least a hundred times Your hair smelled like citrus Your breath smelled of gin Your tattoos creeped up and around As we began to spin
You showed up one Sunday evening It was just a couple months in Tears streaming down your face And I just let you in The story came out slowly Each chapter worse than the last I held you in my arms as I Tried to erase the past
I wore a white dress one Sunday morning Flowers in my hair The Wedding March played overhead There was excitement in the air You held my hand and smiled With a chorus of “I do”s Now we’ve got nothing left to prove We made it all the way through
I woke up early one Sunday morning To the baby crying next door I set my feet on the floor But you had gotten there before I found you in the rocking chair And she’s tugging on your hair And I fell in love again
He died on a Sunday morning Sitting in a hospital bed I never thought it would end Our daughter was thirty seven I didn’t know what to do So I went and got a tattoo To remind me of you So I could fall in love again Even after it all ends
I always hated Sunday mornings So I cursed my retail job Doughnuts and coffee couldn’t make up For the sound of my alarm But that day it was different You came in with your sunglasses on Tattoos on your arm But then you stopped and turned around And just like that It was gone