Probably gotten 8-10 notices over the years, made 5 or 6 trips to the courthouse, ended up on 3 juries.
First was a DWI way back in the 0.10 limit days, guy turned left on red with a marked police CSPD cruiser sitting right beside him. Blood test came back 0.10, on the booking video he did appear drunk, which I thought was weird because 0.10 isn't that bad (unless you're driving). Defense argued that the prosecution had offered no evidence the blood draw was done in a sanitary place (it was done in the ER at St. Joe). Guilty, it was his 1st offense, couple years probation best I can remember.
Most interesting was an intoxication manslaughter where the defendant had pled guilty, so we were just there for sentencing. Defendant had spent all day with a group at ChiliFest (only "a few" beers of course), came back to B/CS, then two of the group left again, defendant behind the wheel. Lost control at high speed, hit a tree, his friend in the passenger seat was ejected & killed (not wearing a seatbelt).
Blew the doors off the breathalyzer, like 0.25 or something way high like that. Find out he was currently on probation for DWI and had one other vehicle-related prior (not DWI). Incredibly, there were a couple of jurors wanting to give him no prison time, only probation edit: the minimum possible, 2 years ("he's so young", "it was an accident"). Finally got to 3 years, with a deadly weapon enhancement (his truck), meaning he had to serve at least 2 full years in TDCJ before parole.
Most recently, and most boring, was a failure to identify charge. Guy got pulled over and gave a driver license to the cop that was obviously not his (whoever was in the photo was hispanic like the defendant, but that's where the similarity ended). Further investigation revealed he's an undocumented Mexican national. Defense attorney points out the prosecution never proved the defendant's true identity, so how could they have proved he isn't the man on the license? Guilty, few months in jail, plus now he's a criminal alien, so he'd be deported after that (although I'm sure he's back by now).
All of the court staff from the judges on down to clerks & coordinators were very professional, capable, and expressed sincere gratitude to the jurors any time I've been there.