Thursday, March 22, 2007

Back in the saddle... almost.

Have you ever loved something so much that it becomes a part of you? I'm not talking about a person at all, I'm talking about an activity, a place, something that just transforms your life? It gets in your blood, becomes the very air that you breathe, without your even realizing it, and you take for granted the fact that it will be there everyday.

But then things change--you move, you lose touch with old friends, and one day you wake up to realize that there is a giant hole in your soul and you have no way to fill it. Every day you wake up, you go through the motions of your life, and it's not that there's anything wrong with your life per se, but you still feel like, underneath it all, nothing is right. You try to ignore the hole, maybe you try to fill it with something else, but nothing quite fits.

After a time, you start to forget that things were better before, and you accept that this may be your life from here on out. However, if you're lucky, something happens to snap you out of your self-imposed lethargy, and you find that missing piece that helps to complete your life.

For the last four years, I have had a horse-shaped hole in my soul. They say that every little girl goes through a phase where she wants a pony, but I never grew out of that phase. I was a horse-crazy kid for as far back as I can remember. I was lucky enough to attend a college where I could study equine science, which only cemented my lifelong love affair with all things equine. However, after graduating, I moved up here to Portland, and had neither the time nor the money to become seriously involved with horses or riding, so I just eventually accepted the fact that this was my life now, and horses were a luxury for the college years, when I had lots of free time (and parents footing the bill), but not destined for my future.


Two weekends ago, through the wonder that is CraigsList, I got a job at a local private boarding stable. I'm doing the morning feeding and turnout on Sundays. It's about 5-6 hours a week, and it's nothing I'll be doing for glory or money, but it's so nice just to be back in a barn again, talking to horse people, breathing in the horsey smells... I'm getting all smooshy just thinking about it now. There's no riding involved (yet), but that's okay. That horse-shaped hole finally found the piece that fits.

1 comment:

Lori Skoog said...

Never give up on that dream! It's hard to define the pleasure one gets through relationships with horses.