If you work hard and excel you will reap rewards, the best of which are memories.
(Photo is of my kids and grandkids, taken 2011)
When I was growing up, and throughout my mom’s life, I asked
her lots of questions about her and dad’s families, and about their early life
together. I mostly asked Mom because my dad died when I was 12-years-old, about
the time I became curious about my heritage. 
Mom’s typical response to my inquisitions was, “Oh honey,
that was so long ago. I don’t remember.” Occasionally, however, she would
spontaneously lay a snippet of family history out like a jewel for me to ogle,
like, “My grandmother owned the first car in the county.” Or “My Uncle Wells
built a three-story house and claimed he could not die until he owned all the
land he could see from the top floor. And he did.” 
“They were French, you know,” she would add, as if that
explained everything.
All my life I’ve clung to those rarefied and slim nuggets of
my family’s history, like water in a wasteland of inconsequential days, and I’m
not sure why. Perhaps I just want to know more about the genetic bolt of fabric
from which I was cut. Perhaps knowing that information would tell me nothing. I
do know the absence of my parents’ intimate history makes me feel like I’ve
lost a piece of my own life’s puzzle. So whether my children and their children
want to know my history, and the things I have learned in the process of making
that history, or not, here it comes, via 100
Things I Want to Tell My Children and Grandchildren.
Wow! Where to start? Well, let’s just start with the first
thing that comes to mind. 
I had tea at the
White House in 1990. The fact that this was the first thing that came to
mind is probably a story within the story, but let’s not start there. Let’s
start here. 
(photo is me in the Red Room at the White House)
When I was the executive director of Keep Texas Beautiful
(KTB) we won a national prize that was awarded at a ceremony in the East Room
of the White House. I was seated on the front row next to a small riser and
podium. When I sat down, dizzy with the sheer drama of being in the executive
mansion, I noticed on the stage two small cards. One read “President Bush,” and
the other said, “Mrs. Bush.” And I then realized for the first time that, one,
they would be there, and, two, I would actually be sitting within five feet of
them. I don’t care what your politics are, when you are in the presence of a
president, you feel incredibly honored.



