In her 1994 memoir, Barbara described her and her husband George H.W. Bush as "the two luckiest people in the world. "When all the dust is settled and all the crowds are gone, the things that matter are faith, family and friends," she wrote. "We have been inordinately blessed, and we know that."
In a recent interview, Barbara said, "George Bush has given me the world. He is the best — thoughtful and loving. I am still old and still in love with the man I married 72 years ago."
In an interview with C-SPAN, Barbara said that she and George pray aloud each night and sometimes "fight over whose turn it is." She also went on to say that she didn't fear death for herself or "my precious George." "I know there is a great God, and I'm not worried."
In her biography on her husband's presidential library, Bush is quoted as saying, "If human beings are perceived as potentials rather than problems, as possessing strengths instead of weaknesses, as unlimited rather that dull and unresponsive, then they thrive and grow to their capabilities."