Monday, May 23, 2011

Runaway Horse

I think I almost died yesterday. Not in that melodramatic car-cut-me-off-on-the-freeway almost died kind of way, but in the if-events-had gone just one other way, I could have been either really badly injured, or worse.
I started riding horses again about a year ago after my parents bought one. I grew up riding, got pretty decent when I was about 12, then abandoned it for other hobbies. My parents, on the other hand, have always been obsessed with them, and now have their horses on their own property. They just saddle up, and ride through the sagebrush right from their own front door. Since the weather has improved and ski season is over, I've been trekking out to their house to ride. I ride my mom's horse, Jackie, and my mom rides my dad's horse, Blackwell. My mom has had Jackie for about a year and a half now I've been acquainted with her many quirks. She's a typical mare; full of back leg bucks and unannounced spooks. My mom is an excellent rider and has taught me how to navigate the many moods of her grey, 8 year old bitchy bitch. I've had a few tests on her back, but never been really scared; or been close to falling off. My dad's horse is the same age as Jackie, but their size difference is the equivalent of driving a Hummer versus a Mini Cooper. I don't know much about my dad's horse, but like my mom, my dad is an excellent rider, with loads of experience in the saddle.

Yesterday was the perfect day for a little ride. It was in the 60's, partly cloudy, and that infamous Reno wind hadn't cropped up yet. My mom and I headed out. We rode in a line on a single track through the hills; Blackwell in front, and Jackie on his rear, occasionally nipping him on the butt for some sisterly payback. We came down one hill, trotted side by side along a dirt road, and crossed the single lane highway to a grassy meadow tucked down under the trees. As we arced our way down to the lush terrain, Jackie picked up her step. We were heading in the direction of home ... and she knew it. The walk wasn't fast enough for her, so she picked up her pace into a slow trot. When I tried to slow her back down to a walk, she stuck her giant dinosaur head into the air and shook it from side to side as if to say, "No, no, no!" At that point, my mom offered we swap horses. Blackwell was in a mellow mood and Jackie was getting her bitch on, so figuring my mom could better handle her the rest of the way home, I said sure. I got onto Blackwell feeling as though I had just taken the elevator up to the second floor. It was like getting out of a low-rider and climbing into a Dodge Ram. With my mom now on Jackie, they took the lead into the meadow, which had a long distance of tall grass and flat earth laid out in front of us. We were flanked by a gradual hill of tall sagebrush on either side. My mom asked me if I'd like to trot Blackwell and, taking on my newly adopted attitude of "why not?", said sure. We started to trot and I immediately felt ... off. His trot was so much bigger and off-balancing to me ... compared to Jackie. My reins felt loose, my rhythm was not right, and I couldn't slow him down enough to stay right behind Jackie, which my mom had told me to do. I said I needed to stop and recollect myself. My mom said we'd try it again, but if he gets going too fast, to turn him to the right, straight into the sagebrush, which will slow him down and ultimately force him to stop. With those instructions, we decided to try again. My mom and Jackie took off, and immediately, Blackwell wanted to bolt. I had recently been taught to take a horse into a circle if they are getting too amped up and just want to jam. So, I thought I'd give that a try. I took him into a little, small circle ... felt confident about our slow pace, and headed him toward Jackie. But when he saw his sister, all bets were off. His immense body literally lurched from almost a stand still to a full-on gallop. His back flattened underneath me and I felt his mouth clench down on the bit like a pit bull with a chew toy. I tried what few tools I have to slow him down with the reins and my body positioning, but the unwanted gallop put a pit in my stomach and each stride felt like a loop-dy-loop on a roller coaster. I pulled my right rein out to try to send us into the sagebrush, but he wasn't interested. My tiny pull to the right only forced his head to go right and his body to continue straight. I finally got his massive body to take a right, 90 degree turn into the sagebrush. He thundered uphill, slashing through the tall brush like the TRex in Jurassic Park ... crashing through the giant rain forest. Blackwell's speed only increased, his hind end thrusting us quickly towards a barbed wire fence. It was at this point that he started bucking ... compressing and extending his spine ... rounding and arching the two ends of his body. I bounced hard to the left ... his head whipping high and hitting my forehead. I thought that would be it ... I saw the deep ground and thought, "this is gonna hurt" ... but somehow my balance stuck, and my weight shifted to the right again. I was still in the saddle. In the next seconds, either I finally did something right to grind Blackwell to a rough halt, or he was done .... bored now, having ridded himself of 8 year old angst. We were both breathing hard, standing sideways on the hill, less than 10 feet away from the fence. My mom and Jackie appeared instantly at our side. I thought about crying, but decided to be tough. I was shaking, my legs violently trembling as I stood up in the stirrups to dismount. We traded horses and I settled into Jackie's low back, feeling light and scattered. The moment gone ... the surreal glitch that had taken me from conscious, everyday life, to instant terror and the present moment of thought that this was how I was going to die. The quiet continuance of life fell upon me like a hushed turning page. "Oh", I thought, "I'm still here, my body is here, my heart is beating and I get to keep going ... seeing, breathing, moving, living." We slowly walked home. As we un-tacked the horses, I hugged my mom; held her tight ... kissed Jackie and Blackwell on their noses. "Thank you", I said, "Thank you for keeping me safe."

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Happy Live-In Girlfriend/Dog Owner Day?

I hate Mother's Day. This is a new thing for me. Yes, it was a week and half ago, but I was just asked today how Mother's Day was, so it came swirling back into my head. My whole life I never thought one way or the other about Mother's Day. I always buy my mom a card, and if we lived close to each other, we'd joke around about going out to brunch because we both hate brunch. A menu featuring both breakfast sausage with waffles and a patty melt is just wrong. And don't even say the words "Brunch Buffet". Just the thought of oxygenated hollandaise sauce makes me throw up a little in my mouth. So, whatever, that was Mother's Day.
But it hit me this year. A girl at my new job wished me Happy Mother's Day when I was leaving on Friday (pretty much everyone there is a mom) ... I knee-jerked a blurt: "I'm not a mom!" Because just saying a simple "thank you" and leaving it at that wasn't right. If I did, I felt like I was deceitfully attempting to "pass" as a parent ... like I was posing as a member of an elusive club I didn't belong to. And then there's the people who know me and say Happy Mother's Day ... and I do the usual not-a-mom thing and they say, "Well, you're a mom to Pearl!" (Pearl is my 9 year old cattle dog.) And just so all of you real mothers know: I would never, ever liken dog ownership to being the mother of an actual homosapien who catapulted out of my kookoo after 9 months of parasitically sucking the ever-giving life out of me. It's like when a cat owner tries to draw similar parallels with a dog owner -- don't go there ... it's just not the same. Cat's don't need you, they do their business in a box, and you could come home after a 4 day camping trip and the cat wouldn't have even known you were gone. Trust me, I've done it.
But despite various attempts to allow me to sneak under the Mother's Day fence, the truth is, I'll never have a Mother's Day. And, I realized, I'll never get a Mother's Day card. Not even the 99 cent ones in Spanish that I buy for my step-sister at WalMart. As I was picking out a card for my mom this year, I saw all of the cards that were "From Husband", "For the Expecting", or "For The New Mom". Why don't you just kill me now, because what I was really looking for was: "For The 40-Something Selfish Slogging Late-Bloomer With Scrambled Eggs", or "From The Boyfriend Who Refuses To Procreate, But Loves You Anyway" ... or maybe "From Your Utterly Pissed Off Mother Who Will Never Be a Grandmother"! They don't make those.
So, to celebrate this day, my boyfriend and I made dinner for our mothers (the fathers could eat, too!) and the cards and toasts went around the table, all of us concurring as to how wonderful they are ... and they are. And it was nice and not about me. I wanted to feel hurt and left out and jealous and poor me ... but this day was about them, and they earned it.

Monday, May 16, 2011

I GOT A JOB!

F to the yeah! It's been a while. Here's why: I suited up for three interviews and spent over 2 weeks of training for a job ... not a just a job ... but a GOOD job. Okay, I had to go to a neighboring state to find it, but there are no jobs in Nevada! So, I'm commuting about 45 minutes each way and working from 7am-4pm Tuesday through Saturday ... but it's a JOB!!!!! For those of you who have luckily skirted the whole "recession" nuisance and still have your schedules, paychecks, 401Ks and health insurance, you probably wouldn't understand, but landing a good job right now is HUGE! So, I've completely thrown myself into this new whirlwind which has kept me on my toes, challenged, and grateful.
The great news, too, is that I've had less time to obsess about my ovaries and their diminishing use. Oh, I'm still a mess now and then, more often then than now ... but at least my zygote yearning has taken its place back in line and isn't hogging the center stage of my brain.
But it seems demented how much working means to me. How useless and diminished I feel when I'm not getting up every morning and joining the world in their march. I even busted open my purse calendar and started writing to do lists again. I am so much more organized when I'm working and thrive off that busy-ness and the notion of earning ... whether its fun or buying something or just chilling. It's been hammered into me that it all needs to be earned and if it hasn't been, it can't be enjoyed. God, I can pay my bills now and catch up with my responsibilities. It will feel so good to contribute to the household and treat my boyfriend and family again. All those things that you want to do for others, but simply don't have the money to. Buying a card, sending flowers, taking someone out to coffee or lunch ... treating the fam to a pizza ... all that life to participate in and you simply feel like the leechy, loser uncle when you can't. It's like you see yourself being force to be someone you're not ... just because you don't have the resources (ie: green stuff). No, happiness does not come from money ... I firmly believe that, BUT we live in reality, in this society, in this culture. And this culture requires money to eat, stay sheltered, and dress for our jobs that give us the money to pay for the shelter and food ... insert circle of infinity ... but I admit I'm very happy to be a cog in the wheel again!
Well, I spend about 9 hours on a computer everyday at my new job, but I miss writing so much, so add to "to do" list: keep blogging!