One-on-One with Del Reanne Lucas [Albuquerque Journal, N.M.]
| By Jessica Dyer, Albuquerque Journal, N.M. | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
POSITION: President of
WHAT YOU DIDN'T KNOW: For her many skills -- whether it's design, dance or lobbying for public-school funding -- Lucas says people would be surprised to learn that she loves to cook and bake. In fact, she counts batter as her guiltiest pleasure.
"I don't think people see me very much as a homebody," she says.
When it comes to tough questions, "What's your favorite color?" isn't usually high on the list.
But what if you love them all?
That's what it's like for Del
"Green is nurturing to me. It's like plant growth, (being) alive and healthy if you look at it in an organic sense," she says. "But I love all color."
Don't let the subdued hues in her outfit fool you: Lucas loves color and she knows how to use it. Prior to her current role as president of
Lucas, something of a fitness fanatic herself, specialized in gyms, designing more than 375 health clubs around the world. But she also did offices, hotels, retail stores, banks and more.
The
"I think it's because it wasn't generic. I used a lot of color, a lot of artwork, everything matched -- all the woods, all the desks, all the chairs," she says. "It wasn't your typical neutral (office)."
She realized she was meant for interior design and dropped her plans to become a biochemical engineer.
That's right, she was a budding engineer at the time.
Lucas says girls of her generation often were encouraged to consider careers in engineering, though she never really needed much prodding. Lucas -- who skipped eighth grade and graduated high school at 16 -- thrived in her math and science classes.
The daughter of two veterinarians, she knew she wouldn't follow in their footsteps -- "I didn't want to do that life-and-death stuff," she says. "I'm too much of a softie" -- but engineering, she thought, suited her well.
In hindsight, though, there were early signs that design was her destiny.
When she was just 4 or 5, her father built her a child-sized closet so she could hang and divide her clothes by color. Even back then, she wouldn't tolerate a clashing outfit.
"I'm just wired that way," she says. "When I was little and you'd put slippers on me and they didn't match my nightgown, it wasn't going to happen."
Like her mother, Lucas has a creative bent. She was a singer and dancer growing up, and the girl at
"It's always been about design and color for me," she says. Lucas made a living off those skills for 25 years. She worked projects around the U.S. and into
But it really wasn't until a shocking breast cancer diagnosis in 2006 that she decided she had to take a step back. She gave up designing to spend more time with her family and to fight the disease, and she did so successfully.
"When you experience a life-and-death event, you realize how precious life is and most of the things we work so hard on every day are not the things that matter most," she says. "Our family relationships and our relationship with God provide the real blessings and meaning in life."
The following year, she was in remission.
But cancer wasn't quite done with Lucas or her family yet. It claimed Ken's life just a few years later, leaving Lucas to raise the couple's two young children and oversee a few family businesses.
"It's been a lot," Lucas says. "I will not deny that."
She credits her faith, community support and her inherently positive demeanor for getting her through the hardest stretches and says she's emerged with a sense of what really matters in life.
Though she serves as president of
She also has remarried, adding two stepsons to her brood.
"I love life," she says.
Q: Do you miss designing?
A: I do miss designing. I loved seeing our finished products, and I loved meeting with customers and developing it. It was a great thing for me. I don't miss deadlines. It was very stressful at that level. ... I worked way too much.
Q: Where does your name come from?
A: My mom is the most artistic person you'll ever meet, and she totally made it up. It doesn't mean anything. ... I've never met another one. ... It's been a great trademark.
Q: What is the best compliment you've ever received?
A: That I have never met a stranger.
Q: What prompted you to get involved with PEAPS?
A: I became involved after having worked in my local PTA for several years. It became very obvious how underfunded our public schools are and how detrimental it is to our rising generations. I have been associated with (superintendent)
Q: What's on your bucket list?
A: I've got two things: I want to own a country farm in
Q: How would you describe yourself in three words?
A: Fun, enthusiastic and loving.
___
(c)2013 the Albuquerque Journal (Albuquerque, N.M.)
Visit the Albuquerque Journal (Albuquerque, N.M.) at www.abqjournal.com
Distributed by MCT Information Services
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