Mv - Memorial Villages

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sep + oct 2024

Two Ways for A Favorite Italian Dish

Getting All Your Claims From Storm

Amazing Fall Music and Theatre

Financial Advice

The Buzz

Custom:

Outdoor Living Rooms

Patio Covers

Outdoor Kitchens

Screened Porches

Additions

Fire Features

LIVE IT OUT

Your new favorite room in the house just might be outside of the house. Whether it’s a screened-in porch like our latest project or a covered patio with protection from the Houston sun, we’re ready to custom-design and build your outdoor space.

t’s been over two decades since I enjoyed the Dome foam in Lefty’s pub located behind a chain link fence. Those were the days. Beer was cheap and homeruns were scarce in the friendly confines of the Houston Astrodome. Despite Houston not always being about keeping and cherishing its heritage the Dome still stands lonely. In the case of our most iconic building, there is still an uncertainty and affection among Houstonians and its leaders that has caused a gridlock and millions of taxpayer dollars.

Upon its completion in 1965, the Astrodome was declared the “Eighth Wonder of the World.” Today, it is an albatross as the cost of maintaining it strains the budget, yet repurposing efforts have fallen short. It’s like an old Christmas sweater; we can’t quite part ways but won’t toss it away. Houstonians have as many different opinions on what to do with the Dome as they do on abortion. It has been hard to come to a consensus. Meanwhile, tax dollars continue to foot the bill for the upkeep, and new efforts are being welcomed to change the Astrodome’s dormant status.

The Astrodome Conservancy recently added a popular long-time Houston community service and advocate, Shawn Stephens, for more input and direction repurposing the Dome.

“ The silhouette of the dome is what immediately comes to the minds of people all over the world when they think of Houston. I am disappointed to see that it is being neglected. It serves as a magnet for activity, innovation, and economic vitality. As the Dome’s first iteration showed, Harris County has imagination and creativity. Let’s harness those abilities and show leadership by repurposing this iconic structure to draw people back to the Dome on a 24/7 basis.”

The Dome was created by then Astros co-owner Roy Hofheinz, who had previously been a state representative, the Harris County Judge, and a Houston Mayor. In addition to its cosmic size, the Astrodome, was the first of its kind as an indoor air conditioned arena that would house the Astros, The Houston Oilers football team, and the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. It was the site of many historical events, including “The Battle of the Sexes” with Billie Jean King whipping an older washed-out pro-Bobby Riggs. Elvis played there, Muhammad Ali fought there, and where the Game of the Century NCAA Basketball between the University of Houston and UCLA was held.

Numerous proposals have fizzled out and it’s not going to get any cheaper to maintain or redo the facility.

It’s time for Houston’s creative and willing participants to propose a plausible projection for the Astrodome’s future.

Houston Methodist Hospital

#1 HOSPITAL IN TEXAS FOR PATIENT CARE & QUALITY

Houston Methodist Hospital has been named the Best Hospital in Texas for 13 years in a row by U.S. News & World Report and recognized on the Honor Roll eight times — with 10 nationally ranked specialties. For more than 100 years, we have provided patients with the highest quality care, the most advanced technology and the best patient experience.

That’s the difference between practicing medicine and leading it.

houstonmethodist.org/bestintexas

713.790.3333

12503 Vindon Drive | Memorial Meadows

List Price

$1,895,000 | MLS# 50283691

Situated on a corner lot in coveted Memorial Meadows, this custom-built new construction is a testament to award-winning craftsmanship and luxury. Designed for entertaining and comfortable living, it boasts generous open living spaces, a private Study, Media Room, and Game Room.

Michelle Hinton | Compass | 832-795-2246

739 Azaleadell Dr | Garden Oaks Plaza

List Price

$2,049,000 | MLS# 36028929

A true masterpiece situated on almost a quarter acre completed in 2022. Open floor plan 5 Bedroom/4 Bath home fulfills every buyer's desire. The 2-car garage features 12-foot ceilings, making adding a car lift an easy option. The grand foyer showcases soaring ceilings and exquisite lighting.

Stacy Wood | Compass | 713-504-2059

2611 Newman St | Upper Kirby

List Price

$775,000 | MLS# 74255408

Tastefully updated townhome in heart of Upper Kirby with 3 large bedrooms, 3/1 large baths and huge closets. Located on a horseshoe street with no thru traffic, West Court has a true neighborhood feel and is close to high-end shops and restaurants. Open floorplan with lots of natural light. Oak hardwood floor and tile throughout - no carpet!

David M Young | Compass | 713-320-6453

Arts + EVENTS

Menil: Ronny Quevedo

MUSEUMS

Asia Society Texas Center

Artists on Site Series 5 Ongoing through Sep 22

Museum Of Fine Arts, Houston

Yayoi Kusama “Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity Ongoing

Jacolby Satterwhite; A Metta Prayer Ongoing through Oct 13

Raqib Shaw: Ballads of East and West Ongoing through Sep 2

Thomas Demand: The Stutter of History Ongoing Through Sep 15

Meiji Modern Ongoing through Sep 15

Contemporary Arts Museum Houston

Olivia Erlanger: If Today Were Tomorrow Ongoing through Oct 27

Amoako Boafo: Soul of Black Folks

Holocaust Museum Houston

Facing Survival l David Kassan Ongoing through Jan 5, 2025

Menil

Foyer installation: On Kawara Ongoing through Sep 15

Longing Grief and Spirituality: Art Since 1980

Ongoing through Fall 2024

Portraits of Women from the Collection Ongoing through Nov 10

Wall Drawing Series: Ronny Quevedo Opens Sep 13 through Aug ‘25

Fragments of Memory

Opens Sep 20 thru Jan 26 ‘25

Houston Museum Of Natural Science

Permanent Matter and Motion

Everyday Faberge

The World Around Us

Special Exhibitions

Death By Natural Causes

Sharks! The Meg, The Monsters, The Myths Ongoing

MUSIC & DANCE

For updates go to www.houstonintown. com

Menil: Fragments of Memory

Hunters Creek Village at First Congregational Church 10840 Beinhorn Road MEMORIAL VILLAGES FARMERS MARKET

Every Saturday, Rain or Shine

9am - 1pm

THEATER

ALLEY Theatre

Noises Off

Sep 27 through Oct 27

The Janeiad

Oct 11 through Nov 3

Broadway Across America

Hobby Center

Peter Pan

Oct 1 - 6

Theatre Under The Stars

Dear Evan Hsnsen

Sep 10 -22

Little Shop Of Horrors

Oct 22 through Nov 3

SPORTS

Baseball

Houston Astros

Minute Maid Park

Sep 1 Kansas City

6-8 Arizona

10-12 Oakland

19-22 L A Angels

6816 Hartland Ave | Spring Branch

List Price

$929,000 | MLS# 45523407

Hartland Place - Gated community of 4 contemporary homes with 2 floor plans on 3,400+ SF lots, each with first floor living, 3+ bedrooms, 3+ bathrooms, ~3,700-4,100 SF of living space, rooftop terraces, large garages, dual closets and elevator capable. Available Nov 2024.

David M Young | Compass | 713-320-6453

115 Paul Revere Drive | Bunker Hill Woods

This 5-bedroom custom residence, designed by award-winning firm, The Bell Design Group, in collaboration with boutique architect Weidner Hasou, features soaring ceilings and walls of windows. Tucked in an idyllic location on a sprawling 25,000+ SqFt lot at the end of a private wooded street, the surrounding area is characterized by its tranquil ambiance. Michelle Hinton | Compass | 832-795-2246

990 Bentwater Dr | Montgomery, TX

List Price $785,000 | MLS # 77657245| MLS#

A stunning residential gem nestled in the exclusive gated community of Bentwater Yacht & Country Club. As you step into the home, you're greeted by an oversized living room that radiates warmth and comfort, making it the perfect space for entertaining or simply relaxing with the family.

Beverly Smith | Coldwell Banker Realty | 713-569-2113

Theatre Under the Stars

Intown’s Classical Music Editor and Critic, the Hon. Philip Berquist, Honorary Consul for the Republic of Croatia for Texas

Anew arts season in Houston is upon us so it is time to discuss what our three major institutions will be offering in the first part of the 2024-2025 season. I am writing this from beautiful Petoskey, Michigan, near the tip of the lower peninsula. It is 8:45am and the temperature is 55F. Sorry, I just had to mention that!

For this article, I drew lots to determine the order of presentation and the results were Houston Symphony, Houston Grand Opera and the Houston Ballet. I know, that was the order last year but lots will be lots.

Let’s begin.

Houston Symphony Orchestra

The 2024-2025 season begins in October. It will feature the “Czech Rhapsody” by Martinů and Dvořák’s “From the New World” Symphony, Symphony 9. HSO Music Director Juraj Valčuha conducts.

October 4, 5 at 7:30pm and Sunday the 6th at 2:00pm.

The Czech theme continues the next weekend with three interesting works. The “Military Sinfonietta” by Kapráová, Dvořák’s Violin Concerto and, in my opinion, one of the highlights of the entire season, Janáček’s masterpiece, “Sinfonietta.” James Ehnes is the violin soloist, and Valčuha conducts.

NOTE - two performances only, Saturday, October 12 at 7:30pm and Sunday, the 13th, 2024, at 2:00pm with the Violin Concerto. On Thursday, October 10 at 7:30pm, Grammy-winning pianist Daniil Trafinov will perform Dvořák’s Piano Concerto. Trafinov is a major talent. Enough said.

November brings an entire month of concerts beginning with Wagner’s Tannhaűser Overture, selections from Humperdinck’s Hansel and Gretel and Richard Strauss’s, Don Quixote. Soloists are Joan DerHovsepian, viola, HSO’s newly appointed principal viola and

HSO’s principal cellist, Brinton Averil Smith. Conducting is the wonderful, Sir Donald Runnicles.

Performances are November 1 and 2 at 7:30pm, and Sunday the 3rd, 2024, at 2:00pm.

There will be a unique one-time performance of the Beethoven 9th Symphony on Thursday, November 14, 2024, at 7:30pm conducted by the esteemed Michael Tillson-Thomas along with the Houston Symphony Chorus.

In late November, there will be two performances of pieces by Bach, Mozart and Brahms. Featured will be the Violin Concerto No 1 by JS Bach, performed by Yoonsun Song, Mozart’s Serenade No.12, and Brahms’ Serenade No. 1. Ms Song will be leading members of the Houston Symphony for these chamber

concerts. Two performances only, November 23 at 7:30pm and Sunday the 24th, 2024, at 2:00pm.

November closes out with a remarkable program, the Schubert “Unfinished” Symphony 8, Alban Berg’s “Three Pieces for Orchestra,” and Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 5, the “Emperor” with favorite Yefim Bronfman, pianist. Valčuha conducts. November 29, 30 at 7:30 pm and Sunday, December 1, 2024, at 2:00pm.

“A Viennese Waltz Christmas” concert of multiple pieces will be featured twice, December 7 at 7:30pm and Sunday, the 8th, 2024, at 2:00pm.

Music Director Valčuha conducts.

On Monday, December 9, at 7:30pm there will be a single performance by legendary cellist, Yo Yo Ma, who will perform Dvořák’s Cello Concerto. Also featured will be Johann Strauss’ “Die Fledermaus Overture.” I personally have great memories of Ma performing the Dvořák with the HSO many, many years ago in the ‘70’s as a true wunderkind. After intermission he would quietly take a chair in the back of the cello section to perform the symphony that followed. Juraj Valčuha will conduct this very special evening.

Closing out the calendar will be three performances of Handel’s “Messiah” conducted by Jonathan Cohen and

Pianist Daniil Trifonov
The Little Mermaid

featuring the Houston Symphony Orchestra Chorus.

December 20 and 21 at 7:30pm, and Sunday the 22nd at 2:00pm.

All performances at Jones Hall.

Houston Grand Opera

HGO’s 2024-2025 season begins with its fall repertoire with the immensely popular Il travatore by Verdi. This work premiered in 1853 and takes place in the 15th century in Spain. It is a story that brings out the best characteristics of opera, love, suspense, hatred, revenge and murder. After its premier Verdi stated, “People say that it is too sad, that there are too many deaths in it. But death is all that there is in life…”

“Il travatore” is part of what has been called the “popular trio” of Verdi. As mentioned above it was first performed in 1853, the same year as “La Traviata” and two years earlier was “Rigoletto.”

Friday, October 18, 2024 at 7:00pm, Sunday the 20th at 2:00pm, Saturday the 26th at 7:30pm, Tuesday the 29th at 7:30pm and Sunday, November 3 at 2:00pm.

Patrick Summers conducts.

The second opera of the fall rep is Cinderella (La Cenerentola) by Rossini. I doubt that there is much need to explain this famous story about the overworked young woman with cruel family members . It premiered in 1817 in Rome. Lighthearted and fun.

Lorenzo Passerini conducts.

Friday, October 25 at 7:30pm, Sunday the 27th at 2:00pm, Friday, November 1 at 7:30pm, Thursday the 7th at 7:30pm and two performances on Saturday the 9th, at 2:00pm and 7:30pm.

All performances at the Wortham Theater Center, Brown Auditorium

Houston Ballet

There are two sets of ballets this fall. The first is The Little Mermaid. This is the Houston premiere of John Neumeier’s realization of Hans Christian Andersen’s fairytale of the Danish legendary Little Mermaid. Music by Lera Aurabach.

Grand Opening Night - November 6, 7:00pm, the 7th, 12th and 14th

at 7:30pm with a matinee on the 14th at 1:39pm and the i8th and 15th at 2:00pm.

Then comes a triple bill of Velocity choreographed by Stanton Welch with music by Michael Torke, Come In by Aszure Burton to music of Vladimir Martynov, and an unnamed World Premier by Silas Farley with music by Kyle Werner.

September 19, 21, 27 and 28 at

7:30pm, and the 22nd and 29th at 2:00pm.

Of course, let’s not forget the perennial The Nutcracker by Tchaikovsky with multiple performances running from November 29 to December 29, 2024.

All performances at the Wortham Theater Center.

That’s it for now. Let me hear from you at classicalmusicberquist@gmail.com.

WE’RE

HOUSTON’S BEST KEPT SECRET.

Rebuilding after the Storm

Life can throw us challenges at any moment. We, here in Texas, have learned that lesson all too well in recent months. From the siding on your home to the roof over your head, Houstonians are scrambling to find the financial means to make themselves whole again. Homeowner’s insurance should provide peace of mind, but unfortunately, that is not always the case. We have recently heard from many in the community wrestling with their insurance companies. It can be exhausting, and having experience on your side is essential.

Many insurance companies will try and underpay your claim. Most people do not realize that denying, underpaying, or delaying your claim is a tactic insurance companies use often, leaving home and business owners frustrated and desperate for someone who will fight for them.

Remember, insurance companies are businesses, and like any business, they try to limit how much they pay out on insurance claims. Although major insurance companies are multi-billion-dollar companies, they sometimes make ev-

ery attempt to hold on to that money as much as possible. However, residents and business owners have the right to question and fight back against the insurance company. Hiring an experienced attorney might be the best move.

When to Get an Attorney Involved: Insurance Company Offers Lowball Settlement

Some insurance companies will offer a lower settlement than what your claim is worth. If you believe you are entitled to more than what is being offered, you

do not have to accept the settlement. It will be important to analyze the reasons why they are making this offer. In some cases, denial of certain portions of the claim could be valid if the policy does not cover that specific damage. If the company intentionally denies portions of your claim, this is a perfect opportunity to get an attorney on your side. At Galindo Law, we send our estimator to your property to dive deeper into your home or business. We do not leave any stone unturned to help get every penny you deserve from your insurance company. Oftentimes, our estimator uncovers more damage than what the insurance adjuster noted. These findings can have a big financial impact on your claim.

Delaying decisions or denying claims

Insurance companies have an obligation to perform their investigations and make decisions on the outcome of your claim in a timely manner. Living without a sturdy roof overhead is emo-

Upon receiving her MBA from the University of Florida, Tara began her career in banking and later entrenched herself in the diverse world of logistics and supply chain. With a wide array of marketing and sales roles, she transitioned to pursue where her passion in real estate was true. Tara has had various leadership and management roles, focusing on building relationships, bridges, and alliances. She loves helping people, problem-solving, and finding solutions. Tara’s background and skill set have served her many clients well, and she has flourished in the home market. Let her skills help navigate your real estate needs. In her free time, Tara loves playing and captaining tennis competitively in adult leagues across the U.S. She loves listening to classical music, as she played classical piano for 17 years.

tionally, mentally, and financially taxing. Delaying your claim, whether by poor communication or lengthy investigations, works in favor of the insurance company. As time passes and the need for financial help increases, some companies will rely on this desperation and offer a lower settlement than what is deserved. They could be preying on insecurity. However, insurance companies cannot legally put their profits over contractual legal obligations to their clients.

Unreasonable Requests to Validate Your Claim

There are also instances when insurance companies request so much information from the policyholder that it is impossible to fulfill their requests. While it is not uncommon for an insurance company to ask for certain amounts of documentation and records, their requests cannot be unreasonable or impossible to carry out.

There are options if the insurance company is not holding up its end of

the deal. First, remember not to let your emotions overtake you. When negotiating with the company, anything you say can be used against you down the line. It is best to contact an experienced attorney who can take a hard look at the policy and has utilized years of experience to take on larger insurance companies. Taking on an insurance company can be an uphill battle. An experienced attorney can help you navigate the dicey waters that undoubtedly lie ahead. We have 20 years of experience assisting homeowners to rebuild after a storm

devastates their area. We understand what it feels like when a storm ruins a portion of your property. While homeowners always wish and hope the insurance claims process is easy, that’s not the outcome for many Houstonians who are left to pick up the pieces on their own unfairly. We can ensure you are better prepared and equipped to handle these big insurance companies. We can better prepare and equip you to handle these big insurance companies.

Cristobal M. Galindo was born in Torrejon de Ardoz, Spain and raised in Houston, Texas. He is the founder of Cristobal Galindo, PC, with a corporate office in Houston. The firm has expanded to other practice locations in Nederland, TX, Maui and New Orleans. They have an A + rating with the Better Business Bureau.

Carbonara: Typical Flack

Food writers often apologize for discussing pasta carbonara. It’s not that they malign carbonara and throw it out to the dogs, it’s that the relentless chatter about the “right” way to make carbonara and the endless noise about the origins of carbonara represent tired old tales. Their audiences tend to be familiar with such gastronomic tidbits as the word carbonara translates to “coal burner,” and the recipe’s black pepper symbolizes coal dust.

Well and good. Carbonara deserves respect.

The late chef Antonio Carluccio who is known as the godfather of Italian gastronomy demonstrated how to make spaghetti carbonara on video. His carbonara ingredients - fried guanciale (cured pork cheek,) raw eggs, Pecorino Romano, parmesan and ground black pepper - are carved in stone. It’s a sin to add cream. “Cream is absolutely forbidden.” The godfather fervently guards tradition. “This is the real carbonara. The only one.”

Luciano Monosilio was nicknamed the King of Carbonara for the spaghetti carbonara he dishes out at Luciano Cucina Italiana in Rome. Monosilio demonstrates on video how to remove the skin from the guanciale before cutting it into

small cubes, and how to whisk the egg yokes. Here again, the chef’s self assurance sends a message. His way is the right way. You don’t mess with tradition.

Yet, other culinary notables make carbonara with pancetta, not guanciale, and some add cream. They too vigorously defend their practices.

The first time I ate carbonara was in Rome in 1986. I can’t remember if it had guanciale or pancetta, but I do remember a stupid woman throwing a fit because her steamed white asparagus didn’t arrive fast enough. Since that introduction, I’ve eaten carbonara many times. Several weeks ago here in Houston I went into overdrive. I ate Spaghetti Alla Carbonara made with guanciale at

Giacomo’s, and precisely six nights later I ate Spaghetti Carbonara made with pancetta at Magdalena’s. It’s not my usual practice to eat like a field hand but on both nights I let loose with pasta, bread and wine, all the while hearing Daddy’s admonition against shoveling it in when I was a kid in south Louisiana, “that’s gonna put a butt on you like an expensive mule.”

Though worth a few extra pounds, the two carbonara meals didn’t taste the same. This wasn’t surprising. Guanciale and pancetta come from different parts of the pig. Guanciale from the pig’s cheek added heftier pork flavor and chewier texture to Giacomo’s carbonara.

Giacomo’s Carbonara with guanciale
Magdalena’s Carbonara
“It’s not my typical practice to eat like a field hand, but...”

Houston Chronicle’s Alison Cook who called Giacomo’s carbonara “traditional” in a review put it this way, “the pork jowl adds an earthy robustness you can’t get using regular old bacon or pancetta.” Beyond earthy robustness, Giacomo’s sauce had an indescribable silkiness presumably from the guanciale’s pan drippings. Pancetta from the pork belly on the other hand seemed milder. It retreated to give Magdalena’s carbonara exquisite balance of ingredients. The word precision comes to mind.

Casamonti’s prosciutto from Cinta Senese pigs farmed by ancient Etruscans

For years I imagined I was the only person who owned Sophia Loren’s cookbook “Sophia Loren’s Recipes and Memories,” until, that is, the ineffable Julia Reed wrote she was the only person who owned Sophia Loren’s cookbook. The Italian actress’s little-known cookbook combines favorite recipes with stories and photographs from her life and career. Loren suffered hunger in Pozzuoli, a small city near Naples,

during World War II. Worst than hunger were the fighter planes and nearly daily explosions that rattled her grandmother’s kitchen. Loren clung to Nonna Luisa’s skirt and they made the sign of the cross. There is a picture of Loren age nine wearing her first Communion dress, although the bomb that fell near the church “interrupted” the sacrament. The backdrop to this is worth noting. Allied Forces liberated Italy from Germany. They first bombed Sicily, then scrambled up the boot to crush German strongholds. Sick of Mussolini and of being in bed with Germany, and lacking economic and military resources, Italy changed sides. Not long after the Allies liberated Rome, Italians arrested and shot Il Duce and his mistress near the Swiss border, then hauled their bodies to Milan where crowds spat and peed on them before stringing them from rafters.

While Loren was making her Oscar winning movie “Two Women” (1960)

in a mountainous region in central Italy, charcoal workers shared with her the carbonara they cooked over an open fire. She included their recipe in her book. Its ingredients are pancetta, raw egg yolks, cream, butter, parsley and ground black pepper. Loren doesn’t buy the theory that carbonara was invented in 1944 after the Allies captured Rome and American soldiers handed over their bacon and egg rations to local cooks. It’s more likely GIs supplied ingredients for a dish that already existed, and had strong ties to Central Italy, such as the Lazio region where scruffy charcoal workers fed Loren while she made a movie about two Italian women being gang raped during WWII. Italy’s romance with pork actually dates to the ancient Etruscans who were raising pigs before Rome was founded. Which brings up a memory of the day Donnie and I were wine tasting in the Chianti between Siena and Florence and ate salami made from acorn-fattened Cinta Senese pigs, an ancient breed native to Tuscany that had been farmed by the Etruscans.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying the two Houston restaurants publish loud manifestos or preen self-satisfied on video that their way is the right way or the only way. They don’t. At least as far as I can see. In fact, Magdalena’s says practically nothing about its carbonara except to list “pancetta and pecorino” as ingredients on the menu. Giacomo’s goes a tiny step further. It informs customers its carbonara is “aggressively porky & peppery, NO cream involved.” Additionally, Giacomo’s says in a social media post its carbonara is the “authentic Roman version.” Use of the word authentic hints at fidelity to a canon, but that hardly equates to killing infidels to preserve tradition. Predictably, two Italian food heavyweights, Giacomo’s Lynette Hawkins who’s past triumph was La Mora Restaurant and Magdalena’s Nicolas Nikic formerly of Da Marco and Dolce Vita handle carbonara differently.

Back to Investing Basics

You can get so much information that you get caught up in unnecessary drama and lose sight of investing basics. It is precisely those basics, however, that can help you stay focused and avoid common investing missteps, no matter what the economy or markets are doing.

1 | Understand yourself as an investor and create a strategy. Your goals, risk tolerance, age, circumstances, and more influence every financial decision you’ll make. By going through a reasoned thought process to create a rational investing strategy, you’re better able to determine the appropriate mix of investments for you. Without that, you can get caught up in confusing information and stray from your objectives.

2 | Diversify your investments to help manage risk.

You can’t depend on one investment—or even one kind of investment—to see you through the good and bad times, as much as you might believe in it. Spreading your money among different types of investments appropriate for you helps protect your portfolio during market volatility.

3 | Keep emotions out of your investing decisions.

Can you stay strong when the market skyrockets to new highs or the bottom falls out? In times of stress, it’s easy to make a hasty mistake when we fear we’re missing

out on an opportunity or losing money. Instead, remain calm, strong and focused on the investment strategies you’ve thoughtfully established—tweaking them, if necessary—and stay on course, particularly during times of extreme market volatility.

4| Seek professional guidance. Even sophisticated investors need reassurance to get through uncertainty and anxiety. A trusted, knowledgeable wealth advisor can help you find your way by cutting through the clutter of confusing information and coaching you through the “interesting times” toward your goals.

Need a wealth advisor you can trust?

Contact John DeBerry at John.DeBerry@Frostbank.com for financial support.

John DeBerry is a registered representative of Frost Brokerage Services, Inc. Investment and insurance products are not FDIC insured, are not bank guaranteed, and may lose value. Brokerage services offered through Frost Brokerage Services, Inc., Member FINRA/SIPC, and investment advisory services offered through Frost Investment Services, LLC, a registered investment adviser. Both companies are subsidiaries of Frost Bank. Additionally, insurance products are offered through Frost Insurance. Deposit and loan products are offered through Frost Bank, Member FDIC.

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5 BEDS | 5.5 BATHS 6455 SQFT

115 PAUL REVERE DRIVE luxe MEMORIAL LIVING

This to be built 5-bedroom custom residence is designed by award-winning firm, The Bell Design Group, in collaboration with boutique architect Weidner Hasou. Tucked in an idyllic location on a sprawling 25,000+ SqFt lot at the end of a private wooded street, it offers a peaceful retreat from the bustle of city life, yet is in a prime Memorial location close to popular restaurants and shopping.

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