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10/19/17 12:01 PM #3390    

 

Katherine Newton (Courtland) (1968)

Carla, Thank you for the compliment. Lance was a dear close lifelong friend & ismissed a lot.  So sorry to hear about Louis Mabry. My grandfather died from a bloodclot after similar surgery. Very sad. 


10/19/17 05:16 PM #3391    

 

Judy Maxwell (1971)

I'm in shock over the post teling us of the passing of Louis Mabry...Prayers to his family


10/27/17 01:08 PM #3392    

Lawrence Tracy Lott (1976)

RIP Riley Wedgeworth (1976) - gone way too soon!

Tracy


11/10/17 02:59 PM #3393    

 

Judy Maxwell (1971)

Nothng much has been posted on her in the past couple of weeks......

SO, lets get some chatter going......What are your plans for Thanksgiving and what are you thankful for??

I will start, I am staying home for Thanksgiving and cooking. We do the whole fiest even if it's just the 2 of us there. And I am thankful for my job and the family that I have and Love,

Happy Thanksgiving everyone

 


11/11/17 01:17 PM #3394    

 

Katherine Newton (Courtland) (1968)

Happy Thanksgiving, Judy and my classmates!  I like the positive nature of your comments. I think there were many positives from growing up around Sam Houston High, one is that most students had enough adversity to make them tougher, resiliant,  and many became confident in their ability to give it their all when facing problems. I think of classmate Ron Ridgeway, who was a VietNam POW for 5 years at the tender age of only 18 years old. To survive 5 years, it took a very optimistic and unyielding confidence that he would not be defeated and may eventually prevail. Sports participation also added great opportunities to build ones tenacity, courage and resilience. My personal struggles came before my north side days. When living in the affluent Rice Univ area, my father died from cancer, leaving me as a 9year old, my mother & brothers with no insurance & destitute except for the home we lived in. I wore some hand downs from our church & Mom finally found a job as a receptionist. Then she remarried when I was 12 and we moved off Canino where I began Fonville. My stepfather had a successful tax office on E Hardy at Roxella, do I was feeling fortunate to be able to buy new clothes & no longer worry how we would make it. I noted many of my classmates & church friends lived in families who were 1paycheck away from disaster & admired how well most of them dealt with challenges of life. 

  This is a long but really good article from Wall Street Journal on resiliance. The author has a book coming out this month. It's worth a read and reflection. Love to have any comments:

The Saturday Essay
What does it take to conquer life’s adversities? Lessons from successful adults who overcame difficult childhoods
Does early hardship in life keep children from becoming successful adults? It’s an urgent question for parents and educators, who worry that children growing up in difficult circumstances will fail to reach their full potential, or worse, sink into despair and dysfunction.
Social scientists have shown that these risks are real, but they also have found a surprising pattern among those whose early lives included tough times: Many draw strength from hardship and see their struggle against it as one of the keys to their later success. A wide range of studies over the past few decades has shed light on how such people overcome life’s adversities—and how we might all cultivate resilience as well.
In 1962, the psychologist Victor Goertzel and his wife, Mildred, published a book called “Cradles of Eminence: A Provocative Study of the Childhoods of Over 400 Famous Twentieth-Century Men and Women.” They selected individuals who had had at least two biographies written about them and who had made a positive contribution to society. Their subjects ranged from Louis Armstrong, Frida Kahlo and Marie Curie to Eleanor Roosevelt, Henry Ford and John D. Rockefeller.
The Goertzels found that less than 15% of their famous men and women had been raised in supportive, untroubled homes, with another 10% in a mixed setting. Of the 400, a full 75%—some 300 individuals—had grown up in a family burdened by a severe problem: poverty, abuse, absent parents, alcoholism, serious illness or some other misfortune. “The ‘normal man,’ ” the Goertzels wrote, “is not a likely candidate for the Hall of Fame.”
If the Goertzels were to repeat their study today, they would find many more examples of women and men who rose to great heights after difficult childhoods—Oprah Winfrey, Howard Schultz, LeBron James and Sonia Sotomayor, to name just a few. Today, we often use the word “resilient” to describe such people.
But resilient people are everywhere, not just in the ranks of celebrities. They are ordinary women and men, in every walk of life, who meet the definition of resilience set forth by American Psychological Association: “adapting well in the face of adversity, trauma, tragedy, threats or significant sources of stress.”
Across nearly two decades as a clinical psychologist and an educator, I have worked with many accomplished people who grew up in difficult circumstances. One thing I have learned from them is that the way we tend to talk about resilience is too simplistic. In everyday conversation, we say that people who are resilient “bounce back” or “rebound.” The dictionary defines resilience as elasticity, that is, the ability to recover quickly and easily—to snap into shape again, like a rubber band stretched and released.
These images are fine for describing recovery from short-term problems, like the flu or a career disappointment, but they don’t capture how resilience truly works and feels. The most common childhood adversities aren’t one-time events but chronic sources of stress: bullying, neglect, physical or sexual abuse, the death of a parent or sibling, addiction or mental illness in the home, domestic violence.
Such problems are recurring threats to a child or teen’s safety and well-being. Resilient youth do not just rebound from them. What they do is much more complicated and courageous. For them, resilience is an ongoing battle, a way of approaching life, not a restorative bounce.
Physiology plays an important role. In the face of danger, our bodies respond with fight-or-flight. The brain triggers the release of stress hormones such as adrenaline and cortisol. Our heart rate increases, we become more alert and focused, and blood flows to our muscles for extra energy. When we think of the fight in fight-or-flight, we may imagine physically harming someone. But in the modern world, fighting back can take many forms.
Consider the Kauai Longitudinal Study, an ongoing project begun in 1955 by psychologists Emmy Werner and Ruth Smith, and summarized most recently in their 2001 book “Journeys From Childhood to Midlife.” The Kauai Study’s subjects are the 698 babies born on the island that year, with assessments so far at ages 1, 2, 10, 18, 32 and 40.
Of the children in the study, Drs. Werner and Smith identified 129 as being at high risk for future problems, because they faced four or more adversities at birth, ranging from poverty and family discord to alcoholism or mental illness in the home.
Two-thirds of these high-risk children went on to have difficulties of their own, such as delinquency, unplanned pregnancies and underemployment. One-third, however, fared well. At school and at work, they did as well as, or better than, their low-risk peers from more affluent, stable homes. In adulthood, they found supportive partners and built loving families that, often, differed greatly from the ones they grew up with. They became, as Drs. Werner and Smith described, “competent, confident, caring adults.” How did they do it?
They were active problem solvers who, over a period of decades, fought for better lives for themselves. Though they weren’t necessarily gifted, they used whatever strengths they had to their advantage—a particular talent, an engaging personality, a ready intelligence. They sought out friends, teachers, neighbors or relatives who cared. They made plans to better themselves and set ambitious but realistic goals for the future. In early adulthood, they seized opportunities to move forward in life, by way of higher education, the military, a new job, a supportive partner or parenthood.
When the researchers asked these resilient adults how they understood their own success in retrospect, the majority reported that their most important asset was determination.
“I am a fighter—I am determined—I will survive,” said one woman who made her way out of an abusive childhood. “I give it 100% before I give up. I will never lose hope.”
“When things have to be done, you just do it. I am not the type of person to run away—no matter how difficult the problem,” said another subject who became a bookkeeper.
And another who became aerospace engineer put it this way: “I don’t let problems take control. I just pick myself up and start all over—you can always try again.”
Other research has suggested the importance of the fighter within. In a 2010 paper in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology, Anke Ehlers of the University of Oxford reported on 81 adults who had formerly been held as political prisoners in East Germany. They had been subjected to mental and physical abuse, including beatings, threats and being kept in the dark. Decades after their release, about two-thirds of the former prisoners had, at some point, met criteria for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), while about one-third of the prisoners had not.
What made some more likely to suffer from PTSD? Dr. Ehlers found that the extent to which prisoners had fought back in their own minds made a bigger difference than the severity of the abuse they had suffered. Those who felt mentally defeated—who felt like they were “nothing” or who quit caring what became of them—were more likely to report symptoms of PTSD later. By contrast, prisoners who had resisted from within—even if they appeared to have given up on the outside, by complying with guards or signing false confessions—fared better down the line.
This sort of inner defiance is, in part, how one man—an officer in the military who came to me for a consultation—told me he survived years of bullying as a child and teen: “I refused to accept what they said about me was true.”
Of course, there is enormous variability in terms of how individuals respond to adversity. Social scientists rightly argue that resilience isn’t a single quality that someone does or doesn’t have, or a single action that a person does or doesn’t take, but rather it is a phenomenon—something we can see but may never be able to neatly explain.
A minister once shared a parable with me that neatly captures this point: Two brothers are raised in a home in which the father is a violent alcoholic. One brother grows up to be a drinker and an abuser, while the other becomes an abstinent man and a model parent. When asked how they came to be who they were, both brothers gave the same answer: “Given who my father was, how could I not?”
My aim here is not to say that resilient people are winners—or that those who are suffering have allowed themselves to be defeated—but, rather, to say that overcoming childhood adversity is a phenomenal struggle indeed. It is a heroic, powerful, perilous, often decadeslong endeavor, yet one that, over time, can lead to both ordinary and extraordinary success.
Back in 1962, the Goertzels’ finding that so many prominent people had grown up with hard times may have seemed counterintuitive but, given what we now know about stress and coping, it isn’t so surprising. Coping with stress is a lot like exercise: We become stronger with practice. University of Nebraska psychologist Richard Dienstbier explains how this works with his “toughness model,” first published in 1989 in the journal Psychological Review.
Dr. Dienstbier gathered evidence from a wide range of human and animal studies demonstrating that exposure to intermittent stressors, such as cold temperatures and aerobic exercise, made individuals physiologically “tougher.” They became less overwhelmed by subsequent difficulties, and by their own fight-or-flight arousal. This makes a difference because when a stressor seems manageable, we perceive it as a challenge, and adrenaline—which boosts energy, focus and coping—is released. When a stressor seems unmanageable, however, we perceive it as a threat and our cortisol levels rise too, suppressing our immune system and making us more vulnerable to disease.
What’s more, Dr. Dienstbier wrote, toughened individuals increasingly seek out experiences that stimulate them and provide opportunities for more mastery and success. It is a virtuous circle.
Although I would hardly consider childhood adversities to be desirable difficulties, many who grow up with hardship do say they benefit in precisely this way. The military officer who was bullied in his youth—and who, besides resisting on the inside, also toughened himself up as a teen through running and judo—described the impact that early adversity had on this life this way: “I see myself as stronger and more capable than most people around me because of the treatment I lived through. I see myself as an optimist, not because I think bad things don’t or won’t happen but because I believe I can overcome whatever comes my way. I feel independent and confident. I feel tested. I feel brave.”
Poet Dylan Thomas said, “There’s only one thing that’s worse than having an unhappy childhood, and that’s having a too-happy childhood.” I don’t know if this is true, but I do know that too many women and men feel lesser somehow because of the adversities they have grown up with, imagining they would be happier or more successful people if they had enjoyed stress-free upbringings. This isn’t necessarily the case.
In a multiyear study of more than 2,000 adults aged 18 to 101, published in 2010 in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, University at Buffalo psychologist Mark Seery and colleagues found that those who had known some adversity were both higher-functioning and more satisfied with their lives than those who had experienced extremely high levels of hardship—and compared with those who had experienced no adversity at all. They also coped better with more recent problems they encountered, leading the study’s authors to conclude, in partial agreement with Nietzsche, that “in moderation, whatever does not kill us may indeed make us stronger.”
So where does that leave those of us who would like to be more resilient? It helps to take on long-form projects that feel like challenges rather than threats. Whether taking up crew or judo, studying for an advanced degree or mastering an instrument, hard things that aren’t emotional or unexpected help us practice for those that are.
And when life inevitably becomes difficult, own the fighter within. Resist defeat in your own mind by a schoolyard bully or an alcoholic parent. Fighting back on the inside is where battling back on the outside begins.
Reach out to family, friends or professionals who care. It is a myth that resilient people don’t need help. Seeking support is what resilient people do.
Engage in active coping. Most serious adversities are neither quickly nor easily solved, but taking control where we can is empowering. Make a realistic plan to improve your situation, and work toward it day by day. Progress shores us up and calms us down.
Finally, remember the ways you have been courageous and strong. Too often we remember what has gone wrong in life rather than what we did to survive and thrive. Think back on a time when you were challenged and give yourself credit for how you made it through. You may already be more resilient than you think.
Dr. Jay is a clinical psychologist at the University of Virginia and author of “Supernormal: The Untold Story of Adversity and Resilience,” to be published on Nov. 14 by Twelve Books.


11/11/17 06:03 PM #3395    

 

Caren Reynolds (Cates) (1965)

Thank you to the men and women who fought for our freedom.  We HONOR our veterans today!!

This is a picture taken at the Veterans Day Parade in 1964 - Sam Houston High School Houstonettes. (Unfortunately, I was unable to rotate)


11/12/17 10:31 PM #3396    

Shirley Maxwell (Pace) (1970)

Happy Thanksgiving to all the classmate of SH. Have fun & be safe.

 


11/13/17 05:49 PM #3397    

Glenna Chandler (Banano) (1969)

Happy Thanksgiving from Cleveland, Texas. I love reading all of your stories. I wish I would have been more proactive in high school. I was shy and did not participate much. Now I never meet a stranger.


11/14/17 10:23 AM #3398    

Charlotte Oates (Rucker) (1962)

Class of 1962 lost another member this morning.  James (Jim) Krouse passed away about 6AM this morning. He was such a great guy and we are going to truly miss him.  Just had a good visit with him in August at our 55th class get together. Jim may you rest in peace as  you are free of your illnesses.


11/15/17 05:10 PM #3399    

 

Judy Maxwell (1971)

R.I.P. Jim Krouse.....


11/15/17 07:56 PM #3400    

 

Evelyn Holder (Parrish) (1959)

 

When I sent a birthday wish to James Gilbert Moody (Class of 1959) last week on Facebook, some replied that he had passed away in 2016.  Had not heard this until then but we never communicated much.  Just thought everyone that knew him would like to know.    

Wishing everyone a very blessed Thanksgiving. 

 

 

 


11/16/17 11:06 AM #3401    

 

Judy Maxwell (1971)

Katherine #3411 ~ Thanks for sharing the article ~ It has some good points in it. I am a firm beliver that no matter what good or bad has come along in your life that each day you are blessed to wake up then you have a choice to make ~ get up happy or get up mad. I choose to get up happy and even if someting makes me mad though out the day I try and go to bed happy as well.

Caren #3412 ~  Thanks for sharign the Veterans Day Parade Picture with us. I could not believe when I found out Houston did not have a parade this year for all the Veterans. That is not right! They of all people deserve a parade.

Glenna #3414 ~ Glad you are posting on here, keep it up!! Never know what topic may come up!!

Evelyn #3418 ~ Happy Thanksgiving!!

R,I,P, James Moody

 

 


11/29/17 02:30 PM #3402    

 

Judy Maxwell (1971)

Hope all of you had a great Thanksgiving........All the turnkey was fninshed off night before last so no more left overs.

What are you doing for Christmas? Staying home of traveling?

I will be traveling into the big city this Christmas as always to my Mom's house. All the family joins in at my Moms. The youngest is now 10 years old so no babies anymore.....until the next generation starts and the oldest of that generation turned 18 today so it will be a few years before any babies are in our family....what about yours???

 

  


11/30/17 10:59 AM #3403    

 

Debbie Vollert (Campbell) (1971)

Hi, Judy.  We were in Granby, Colorado for Thanksgiving.  We had dinner at a small restaurant in Grand Lake.  The buffet selections made me smile.  It was a cross between some very elegant items and 1960s church potluck.  My favorite item was the molded pineapple salad.  I can’t remember the last time I had that.  Sadly, we haven’t had much snow and it was a warm day in the mountains.

We’re traveling back to Montgomery this weekend to spend the month of December with our family.  We’ll spend Christmas in Waco at our oldest daughter home.  On Christmas day, we’ll be with our two daughters, their husbands and three of our four grandchildren.  Our oldest grandson is staying behind in Granby.  He’s working at a ski/snowboard rental shop and hoping for snow so he can ride his snowboard as much as possible.  The second grandson will probably spend the day wishing he could be around his girlfriend and the youngest two will be playing with their presents, feeling relieved that their Elf on the Shelf is no longer watching them.

May you all have a blessed Christmas season and see the true meaning among the trees, lights, wrapping paper, bows and family, friend and work gatherings.


11/30/17 04:36 PM #3404    

 

Martha Stanley (Maggard) (1962)

Letting the website know Robert Pilkenton of Class 1963 passed away ln Novemer 25, 2017.  They buried him today 11-30-2017.  He graduated ayear behind my class of 1962.  We went to church together.  He was a fine gentlemen, good friend, good father, husband.  He will be missed.


11/30/17 08:35 PM #3405    

 

William E. Cain (1965)

Hi Debbie (Post #3420)

      My name is Butch (William) Cain class of 1965. My wife Janice (class of 1968) and I live in Conroe. Small world I thought but a lot of us from Sam Houston live up this way. What got my attention on your post was Grandby. Our son has a place in Grandby and we go there a couple of times a year. I guess I was just suprised that someone else knew where Granby is. I love to go there to see if I can still ski. I love skiing with the grandkids but my wife now just watches from the lodge. What took you to Grandby?


12/01/17 03:04 PM #3406    

 

Debbie Vollert (Campbell) (1971)

Hi, Butch.  (Post #3422)

We started skiing in Winter Park in 1984.  It was family friendly and affordable so it quickly became our favorite resort.  In 1988, we moved from Houston to Parker, CO for Kenneth’s job.  (He is also a 1971 graduate.)  We started spending a lot of time in the Winter Park area year round.  Eventually we decided that we wanted to retire in the area and found a home in Granby around 2011.  We sold our house in Parker in 2015 and moved to Granby.  By that time, both our daughters were back in Texas and we wanted to be able to spend more time with the grandkids so we were blessed to be able to find a house in Montgomery that same year.

Both our jobs allowed us to work remotely so we were able to split our time between Montgomery and Granby without trying to figure out new jobs.  I retired in early 2016 to have more time to spend with the grandkids and volunteer.  Our Granby friends think “summer in Texas” is crazy but we tell them it’s “grandkids in Texas.”

Kenneth is a ski instructor for a disabled program in Winter Park.  We have a commitment to work in the program from January to March.  When our family comes in the winter, we split their skiing time between Winter Park and Ski Granby Ranch.  Since you’re familiar with the area, you might appreciate that I can leave the house and drop them off at Ski Granby Ranch and be back home in ten minutes.


12/01/17 03:52 PM #3407    

Marilyn Green (Lewellen) (1969)

I am honored to call Bob Pilkenton my friend.  Martha, were you at the funeral yesterday?

 

 

12/02/17 08:30 AM #3408    

 

Eugene Knox (1972)

Hi Debbie, #3423, I also, know the enjoyment, of living fairly close to a ski slope.  I'm an hour away, from Mountain Creek NJ., but an easy drive to and from.  I first skied Winter Park, '83, then out to Tahoe '84, back to CO to ski Breckenridge (two different years), Vail, Beaver Creek, Copper Mtn, and Aspen.  Bought a time share in Tahoe in 88 and skied there yearly until 97.  Hung my skis up when moving to NYC, until i found Mountain Creek Resort.  Some side trips back to Tahoe in 2015, and a couple of recent trips up to Okemo VT.  (4 or 5 hours away)   As a Houstonian, it was a real effort to get to the slopes, but we do what we can, eh?  I enjoyed reading your post!  


12/02/17 10:41 AM #3409    

 

Martha Stanley (Maggard) (1962)

Marilyn Green, yes I was at Bob Pilkentons funeral. We went to church with him and Dorothy. We both went to Sam, I graduated a year ahead of him. He was a very nice guy. The funeral was a great memorial to him.

12/03/17 07:47 PM #3410    

John Sterlin Runnels (1969)

for you all that new Jay Richards he past away nov 1st


12/04/17 12:29 PM #3411    

Carol A Pfeffer (Patterson) (1969)

Sad to hear another classmate passed away.  RIP Jay Richards.


12/05/17 11:53 PM #3412    

Harold Douglas Neill (1968)

So sorry to hear about Jay. He was always a positive, gregarious teamate. We played football together and he always gave his all.

RIP Jay and may your family always remember the good times and recall them all.


12/06/17 12:39 AM #3413    

 

Katherine Newton (Courtland) (1968)

I am sure Jay richards will be missed and thanks for the comments, Doug.

Nancy Lenz, Paula Saporito, Debbie Truelock, me (Kathy Courtland), Arleigh Kay Henley.

 

Regarding the postings on classmates in Colorado, I must say that I am impressed so many classmates became avid skiers, since I never heard of  one classmate who ever was able to travel to ski when we were in high school. In fact, our Houstonette senior trip was such a big deal because the majority of the group had never seen more than Houston's rare dusting of snow. We loved playing in the snow of Santa Fe and staying at the historical La Fonda Hotel on the square. Ms Shannon even arranged for a mixer with a fraternity from College of Santa Fe, and they escorted us for a tour of their campus, which was all very exciting for about 50 of us seniors. In this photo, I am horsing around waving a white hanky and holding a white rose in my teeth with my Houstonette friends on graduation day. I think this photo belonged to Rick Arnst. Thanks, Rick ( I enlarged and cropped some)  

 

 


12/19/17 11:24 AM #3414    

 

Glen White (1971)

Greetings everyone,

I wanted to take a few moments to introduce myself to this forum.  I discovered this by accident in September while on FaceBook and started to enter a profile; however, I was interrupted before finishing and also forgot my password.  I have since been restored.  After high school, I kept in touch with several fellow classmates and attended the 15, 20, 25 and 30 year reunions but stopped attending after that.  It seemed that the vast majority of the people that I "hung with" no longer, or never, attended the reunions.  Anyway, my interest in the old high school days was recently peaked when I was cleaning out my garage and I found a box with a year diary that I kept for the year 1970.  I thought this diary had been destroyed in a fire many years ago.  As I read read through the pages, my memory was triggered of people and events of the past.  I went back and looked at my year books and re-read the notes that fellow classmates had written in my book.  I even found a few of the old school newspapers that I had retained.  So, the timing was right when I looked this site.

However, I again discovered that many, if not most, of my high school buddies have not discovered this site or if so,have never completed and saved a profile.   None the less, there are many names on the 1971 profile list that I do recognize but I am going to assume that most would not necessarily remember me.  There are a few names listed of classmates that may remember something about me (rather than just may name) and I wanted to give them a shout of hello there and I hope life has been good to you.  I probably will leave someone out and if so, I apologize, but for now let me give a person greeting to Jim Ross, Libby Rea Brayer, Michael Thompson (use to hang out with Michael and Elroy Tesch), Rene White Trevathan (Rene and I were in homeroom together), Irma Tamez Laha (was probably better acquainted with her brother, Julian, but Irma was a member of Spring Baptist Church when I started attending), Judy Denton Holder (my sister-in-laws sister and also married a good friend since elementary days, Doyle Holder), Billy Spies, David Smith, Debbie Vollert Campbell (better acquainted with her husband, Kenneth, but after high school and marriage, we would often see the Campbells on the Northside of Houston) and Janice Lewis Richardson (not sure she will remember me, but after graduation, I would frequently run into Janice and she would keep me posted on how Jim Ross was doing in the minor leagues).

Finally, I would like to pay tribute to a few friends that are no longer with us - Judy Enos Smelley, David Bounds and Doyle Holder. 

With that, I will say God bless and Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all.


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