Issue link: https://tmcpulse.uberflip.com/i/980339
t m c » p u l s e | m a y 2 0 1 8 12 License to... Adaptive Driving Access has one of the largest selections of lifts and mobility equipment in Texas. ADA offers only the highest quality products available in our industry. We have what you need to help get you on your way, because your mobility is our mission. • Wheelchair Accessible Vehicles • New & Certified Pre-owned Inventory • Adaptive Mobility Products • Scooter Lifts • 24/7 Emergency Assistance • Maintenance & Repair Service Call (281) 408-2457 for details! PASADENA | HOUSTON | CORPUS CHRISTI | MCALLEN | COLLEGE STATION ADAPTIVEDRIVING.COM " I went back to work within a week of having a baby. I had a bunch of stuff going on. My mother was worried that I was going to be a terrible mother. She said, 'You can't have it all at one time. It doesn't mean you can't have it all. You just have to pace yourself.' My mother gave me that great advice when I was 32, but I gave it to my daughter in college the other day because she was trying to do too much. I told her, 'You can't do it all at one time. You can't take too many classes, run Division I, expect to be great at everything, sleep and eat. You're going to run out of time.' " — STEPHANIE COULTER, M.D. Director of the Center for Women's Heart and Vascular Health at Texas Heart Institute Coulter with her mother, Kay Coulter. " I was in a very major car accident. I broke my head, had brain hemorrhages and was in a coma for a long time. I had to go through rehabilitation. I was going to school, but getting paid to play basketball. That was my plan for life, but after the accident and the coma, it was difficult. A couple of weeks in a coma can really screw up your basketball career. I was 80 percent disabled, essentially. I had been for a year in a wheelchair. I had to relearn how to use certain parts of my body. At that point, there was this notion that I could be eligible for a disability pension from the country [Italy]. It's not that we were swimming in gold and could take a risk. It was a bit of a difficult decision when my mother said, 'No, don't accept it. You'll be all right. You need to do something with your life. Don't get into this mindset that people need to provide for you. You're not going to be the person you want to be.' Especially for a mother in the situation we were in, I think it was difficult advice to give, but I'm really glad I turned the pension down . I wouldn't be here. " — MAURO FERRARI, PH.D. President and CEO of Houston Methodist Research Institute Ferrari with his mother, Flavia Ferrari, who is holding a Medaglia Mauriziana, an honor her husband received from the Italian government. MOTHER KNOWS BEST