Therefore, we recommend parents to prepare at least 3-5 pieces of the same or different designs for easy washing. Minimalistic design with a wide range of colors to choose fromĭue to high metabolism, clothes need to be changed quite often.100% natural resin snaps at the crotch allow you to quickly undress baby from the bottom to make for fast and easy diaper changes.Expandable lap shoulder neckline to help pull the bodysuit over baby's head without snagging or stretching arms.Skin-friendly and ultra-soft materials with ZERO fluorescence or formaldehyde.Made from pure cotton that offers great durability and breathability.Life is short! Enjoy every sandwich! Thanks, Warren.The Enjoy Every Sandwich Infant One-Piece is from our new collection, a cool personalized custom onesie for newborn babies with graphics featuring enjoy every sandwich from warren zevon collection. Warren was lucky he knew how much time he had left. So on the 15th anniversary of the death of one of the great rock-n-roll anarchists, allow me to channel what I’m calling “Zevon sandwich clarity.” “Enjoy every sandwich” means: Slow down enough to live in the moment! Listen to a bird! Smell a real rose – not a metaphorical one! Hug your kids till they complain! Tell someone you love them! Show someone you love them! Find a way to bless others. And all the credentials in the world can’t begin to move the scales when weighed against having joy in your life. Financial security is a good thing – but it’s not more important than your health. Doing what you have to do to run and grow a successful business is important – but not at the expense of love. We sometimes get so wrapped up in our business that we risk losing our grip on the things that really matter: happiness, health and those who love us. The man whose life’s work was the definition of sardonic was saying, “Breaking News: You’re not going to get out of this alive!” He didn’t mean life is short go get more sales. Looking straight through the camera lens into every soul watching, Zevon said, “Enjoy every sandwich!” In an interview with David Letterman, almost a year before he died, but with both knowing Zevon’s days were numbered, Letterman asked what he had learned about life. In preparing for death, Zevon had one very important thing to say, especially, I think, to small business owners. Having penned songs like my favorite, “Werewolves of London,” and the now ironic, “Life’ll Kill Ya,” Zevon was an independent artist working without a net, passionately creating products in hopes of finding customers who would appreciate and pay for his wares. If poets were punctuation, Zevon was a great, big, bold, in-your-face exclamation point in a world with too many pedestrian periods. In 2003, the late 20th century rock star and malcontent, Warren Zevon, succumbed to lung cancer. To which I would reply, “Does anything else REALLY matter?” When I repeated the question, they would invariably respond, “They’re fine. “What?!” they always asked, incredulously. Having experienced such a state of despair myself in the past, and calling upon what I’ve learned about perspective and what really matters in life, I would begin the visit with, “How are your children?” The circumstances would be so desperate and the prognosis so dire that the person on whom the business’s buck stopped would be close to being unable to function. In a former life, I sometimes counseled small business owners who were going through difficult times in their businesses.