Giving back while living mom’s dreams
- Share via
Jeff Benson
When the Daily Pilot first published a story on Heather McKay and her
sisters in 1993, Heather was a 9-year-old running in the Race for the
Cure with her 42-year-old mother, Diane. Diane McKay was first
diagnosed with breast cancer in 1989.
“I’m racing for my mommy’s life,” Heather said 11 years ago, when
she was an Anderson Elementary School fourth-grader. “I help her and
try to make her feel good. I love my mommy. I hope she gets better.”
McKay had just come home from the hospital several months before,
and her two other daughters showed her the same loving attention that
Heather did. Older sister Kristy, then 11, stayed home from school
the next day to bake her mom a cake. And little Kimberly, only 7,
curled up next to her like a cat.
Heather doesn’t remember the story and she vaguely remembers the
race, but she definitely recalls the giving spirit her mom instilled
in her and her sisters. Diane McKay died of breast cancer in 2001.
The McKay girls, now women of 22, 20 and 18, were obviously shaken
by the sudden loss of their mother, but they never lost hope. They’ve
since put in countless hours at Human Options’ Second Step Program
for battered women in Irvine, at Costa Mesa-based shelter Share Our
Selves and at Orangewood Children’s Home, and they contributed many
more hours when McKay was still alive.
McKay hoped to spark a love for volunteerism in her daughters and
looked forward to seeing each of them presented as debutantes -- the
culmination of a six-year National Charity League program that allows
mothers and daughters to complete volunteer service through numerous
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach charities.
One of her wishes was granted in 2000, when Kristy was presented
at the Debutante Ball, sponsored by the National Charity League. “We
joined in seventh grade,” Heather said, referring to the Charity
League program. “Each year, there’s a requirement of community
service hours to complete -- I think around 20. We had meetings every
month with different speakers that come in. Sometimes they were
etiquette or self-defense people. We worked at a thrift shop and
helped out around the community.”
McKay’s husband and the girls’ father, Ken McKay, stepped in to
make sure the girls stayed in the National Charity League after their
mother’s death, so they could finish their remaining years in the
program while they attended Corona del Mar High School.
“A lot of people would just move on and continue with their
lives,” Ken McKay said. “I didn’t provide near the effort their mom
put in. I just encouraged them to do it if they wanted to and made
sure the league got paid.”
The three daughters fulfilled their mother’s dreams last month
when Kimberly, the youngest daughter, was presented at the National
Charity League’s Debutante Ball -- in a wedding dress, no less.
Wedding dresses and formal attire are league traditions.
“Our mom’s so encouraging and got us started in the program,”
Kimberly said. “She wanted us to finish what we started and whatnot.”
Now they’re three separate women with three separate career paths.
The family witnessed Kristy’s graduation from the University of
Arizona’s business program on Friday. Heather studies communications
at UC Santa Barbara, and Kimberly is on the swim team at
Loyola-Marymount University.
“I’m extremely proud,” Ken McKay said. “Everybody’s managed to
move on and do well. You have to live the best life you can, under
any circumstances. That’s the goal for everybody, and that’s what
we’re trying to do.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.