logo.gif (21684 bytes)

Class of 1964

Terri Gray

What are you doing these days?
I am dividing my time between Santa Fe, NM and Lake Havasu, AZ.  I enjoy the cultural scene in Santa Fe and am helping my mother & enjoying “island life” in Lake Havasu during the winter.  I like to paint, do calligraphy, and make things, to read, write, kayak, hike, bike, swim, play scrabble, attend films, concerts, & the opera, spend time with friends, and I take a week or two a year for spiritual retreat.

Tell us about your children.  
I have one son who is 35.  He is a musician (guitar, keyboard, & percussion) and songwriter currently living in Lake Tahoe, CA.  His name is Yohosame Freeborn Cameron.

Highlights of the past 40 years.
I spent the late 60’s in San Francisco being a “flower child” in the company of George Cameron, Drew Church, & Jeffrey Isenage.  I gave birth to Yohosame in 1969 and returned to Palm Springs for a while before moving to Lake Tahoe with George Beere in 1977, where I lived until moving to Santa Fe in 1992.  I raised my son, received 2 undergraduate degrees in Fine Arts & Psychology.  I married Brian Baldwin in 1981 and was widowed in 1989.  I’ve traveled to Egypt, Tibet, China, Japan, Tahiti, Mexico, Central & South America, Bali, Java, France, Spain, Portugal, England, and Holland.

Words of Wisdom to Impart?
Be Still.

Your funniest memory(s)while at PSHS.
The entire experience was a little awkward & embarrassing – all of us trying on identities and being trained for a competitive world, hormones raging, all the while being led to believe we would remember it as the happiest time of our lives.  The happiest time of my life is now.

General Unloading Done Here.  Your choice of subject(s).  
“Things” are the way they are and there is a perfection in that.  At least, the acceptance of things as they are makes satisfaction as well as change possible.  I can always think of ways the world could improve, but try to focus on improving myself.  We could all be more aware and kinder.  It would be lovely if the emphasis were more on recognizing ourselves everywhere, and less on differences and separation.  More humor is always welcome!

Return to the Class List