Jenna Bush Hager is a multi-talented lady who excels in a variety of fields. Even though she had a successful career as an author, TV personality, and journalist, all she ever wanted was a big family. Her supplications were granted, and she now raises her three children in accordance with the principles that she absorbed from her illustrious parents.
When her grandfather, George H.W. Bush, was elected President of the United States, Jenna Bush Hager and her twin sister, Barbara, were in the first grade. This made Jenna Bush Hager the First Granddaughter at the time. A few years later, when their father George W. Bush became President, their mother Laura Bush occupied the same seat in the Oval Office as the First Lady. At the time, the sisters were nineteen years old.
Jenna revealed in her book “Everything Beautiful in Its Time: Seasons of Love and Loss,” which is scheduled for release in 2020, how her family’s low-key existence underwent a complete about-face once her father was inaugurated as president.
The former First Daughter of the United States has stated that her upbringing had a feeling of normality as long as their grandfather was the president, but that all of that changed when their father took office in 2001. Since then, her childhood has been erased, and things have altered.
Jenna acknowledged that neither she nor her twin had ever reached that point of readiness. According to her, “we simply recognized the scrutiny that may come with living as teens at that period,” and she says that they were prepared for it. She went on to say that
“We weren’t really ready for what happened. I mean, it’s very evident that Barbara and I have both messed up in public, and for that I am so grateful that my parents have given us the freedom to do so.”
In a letter of encouragement that she addressed to the Obama sisters, the co-anchor of the “Today” program noted that she could connect to how they felt since she was the same age as them when their father became president of the United States of America.
She went on to say that the majority of children’s ideal way to spend their childhood is to have as much freedom as they possibly can, but the fact that they are always under observation makes this goal more difficult to achieve since it requires them to forego some advantages...CONTINUE READING