The Most Important Things...

The most important things are the hardest things to say. They are the things you get ashamed of, because words diminish them--words shrink things that seemed limitless when they were in your head to no more than living size when they’re brought out. But it’s more than that, isn’t it? The most important things lie too close to where your secret heart is buried, like landmarks to a treasure your enemies would love to steal away. And you may make revelations that cost you dearly only to have people look at you in a funny way, not understanding what you’ve said at all, or why you thought it was so important that you almost cried while you were saying it. That’s the worst, I think. When the secret stays locked within not for want of a teller, but for want of an understanding ear.

~Stephen King~


Texas


I'm a Texan. What else is there to say? I'm not being boastful or arrogant about the fact, it's just that... a fact. I am a Texan.

When you're from Texas, people that you meet ask you questions like, "Do you have any cows?" "Do you have horses?" "Bet you got a bunch of guns, eh?" They all want to know if you've been to Southfork. They of course watched "Dallas."

Have you ever looked at a map of the world? Look at Texas with me just for a second. That picture, with the Panhandle and the Gulf Coast, and the Red River and the Rio Grande is as much a part of Texans as anything ever will be. As soon as anyone anywhere in the world looks at it they know what it is. It's Texas!

Pick any kid off the street in Japan and draw him a picture of Texas in the dirt and he'll know what it is. What happens if I show you a picture of any other state? You might get it maybe after a second or two, but who else would? And even if you do, does it ever stir any feelings in you?

Inside every man, woman and child on this planet, there is a person who wishes just once he could be a real live Texan and get up on a horse or ride in a pickup. There is some bit of Texas in everyone. Did you ever hear anyone go, "Wow...so you're from Iowa? Cool, tell me about it?"

Do you know why? Because there's no place like Texas.

My parents went to the University of Texas, NCAA Football national champions a few years ago.
I was born in the state capital of Austin, not far from and in view of the UT tower.

Texas has a few blemishes on her because of what happened in Dallas and Waco, but what state doesn't have its share us unpleasantness? We have so much to be proud of when it comes to our beloved Lone Star State.

Texas is the Alamo. Texas is 183 men standing in a church, facing thousands of Mexican nationals, fighting for freedom, who had the chance to walk out and save themselves, but stayed instead to fight and die for the cause of freedom.

We send our kids to schools named William B. Travis and James Bowie and Crockett and do you know why? Because those men saw a line in the sand and they decided to cross it and be heroes. John Wayne paid to do the movie himself. That is the Spirit of Texas.

Texas is Sam Houston capturing Santa Ana at San Jacinto. Texas is Juneteenth and Texas Independence Day. Texas is huge forests of Piney Woods like the Davy Crockett National Forest. Texas is breathtaking mountains in the Big Bend. Texas is the unparalleled beauty of bluebonnet fields in the Hill Country and along the highways. Texas is the beautiful, warm beaches of the Gulf Coast of South Texas and Texas is the shiny skyscrapers in Houston and Dallas.

Texas is world record bass from places like Lake Fork. Texas is Mexican food like nowhere else, not even Mexico. Texas is the Fort Worth Stockyards, Bass Hall, and the Astrodome. Texas is larger-than-life legends like Willie Nelson, Buddy Holly, Waylon Jennings, Stevie Ray Vaughan (pictured left), Janis Joplin, Kris Kristofferson, Tom Landry, Darrell Royal, ZZ Top, Eric Dickerson, Earl Campbell, Nolan Ryan, Denton Cooley and Michael DeBakey, Sam Rayburn, George Bush, Lyndon B. Johnson, and George W. Bush.

Texas is great companies like Dell Computer, Texas Instruments and Compaq. Texas is NASA. Texas is huge herds of cattle and miles of crops.

Texas is skies blackened with doves, and fields full of deer. Texas is a place where cities shut down to watch the local High School Football game on Friday nights and for the Cowboys or the Texans on Monday Night Football, and Night in Old San Antonio River Parade. Texas is ocean beaches, deserts, lakes and rivers, mountains and prairies, and modern cities. If it isn't in Texas, you don't need it. No one does anything bigger or better than it's done in Texas.


By federal law, Texas is the only state in the U.S. that can fly its flag at the same height as the U.S. flag. Think about that for a second.
You fly the Stars and Stripes at 20 feet in Maryland, California, or Maine and your state flag, whatever it is, goes at 17 feet. You fly the Stars and Stripes in front of Pine Tree High in Longview at 20 feet, the Lone Star flies at the same height - 20 feet.

Do you know why?

Because we place being a Texan as high as being an American down here.
(It's really because Texas is the only state that was a republic before it became a state.)

Our capitol is the only one in the country that is taller than the capitol building in Washington, D.C. and we can divide our state into five states if we want to! We included these things as part of the deal when we came onboard.

That's the best part right there.

I may have lived in other states all over this country and I now reside in Missouri, but I'll always be a Texan. I am living proof that you can take the boy out of Texas but you can't take the Texan out of the boy.

The eyes of Texas are upon you... Long live Texas.

Until next time...

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4 comments:

Rebecca Lynn said...

Wow Lynn...so this blogspot thing has changed ya a bit.
so cocky about texas and your jeep?

Maybe my next blog will be on humility...
yeah that sounds about right.

Lynn said...

Blogspot didn't change anything... I've ALWAYS been cocky about Texas and my Jeep. hehehe

Ben and Kimberly McEvoy said...

Lynn, I dont know if you know this. I was once a Texan, moved when I was 7 to California from Houston. I used to tell people when I moved to CA that I was raised in Texas. I remember that feeling of importance when I moved to CA, that CA may have more people but no state is as big as Texas. Anyway, funny post. Incidently, I feel the same way about CA now. I will always be a Californian.

Jason said...

Proud to be a Texan too!

Jason