The past year has been among the most difficult times Deli
and I have ever had together. I won’t say the most difficult, because at least
we have a fully-formed trust relationship at this point. Though in some
respects having that closer relationship with her has made the past year more difficult, because for every bad
situation we have gotten into, I felt crushed by guilt and anxiety for not
having made the better choice. Deli deserves the best of everything, and
sometimes it’s not within my power to give that. Deli, like most of our
domesticated animals, is at the whim of the people around her. I make choices,
and if they don’t work out, she’s the one that suffers most.
Last week I moved her again. That makes six moves in one
year. Horses are beings that thrive on routine. Deli does well with routine
more than most, since she tends towards having an anxious personality all things equal.
It does irritate me that I know that people wouldn’t ask why
I “put myself through” the stress if Deli was a human family member. I have to ignore this issue, because my relationship
with Deli is far deeper and more important to me than my relationships with many
others. I prefer not to
anthropomorphize her because she’s actually much more real to me, and more
deserving of my love, as just a horse.
But she’s also not just a horse. I’ve
worked with and ridden lots of horses. They are all individuals, with distinct
personalities. I don’t tend to “click” easily with horse personalities in
general (of all domesticated animals, my personality seems to mesh with a
greater number of cats). Even though I’d say I enjoy horses as a species, it’s the
individual bond that interests me and keeps me coming back for more.
It’s the click of
everything being in the right place at the right time.
Many people do not
get this concept. I can only tell these people you don’t understand.
I get that “click” with Deli. The connection I have with
her, even though it’s not constant, is occasionally the strongest connection I
have to any other individual living being.
Attempting to put the feeling into words is difficult.
It happens sometimes when I have been schooling dressage and
everything fits together. My body is in the perfect place in conjunction with
her body, and suddenly we are one being. I can feel every fiber of her muscle,
tendon, and bone, and I can feel every part of my own body, joined in symphony.
You could describe it as an out of body sensation, but the reality is that it
feels like, through the connection with her, I become more real, more than I
could ever be by myself.
It’s like when you look into the starry Milky Way in the
middle of the wilderness and feel the vastness of the universe. But instead of
feeling small, you feel like you are part of it all. It’s a kind of joy that I
almost never feel – with so much of my life being dedicated to fighting the
things I hate, and the things I hate always surrounding me.
And then there are those times where I’m not even riding
her. Quiet moments when I feel Deli focus on me with an intensity that seems
unique to her. With her intellect being so alien to me, that connection frees
me from the burden of my own thoughts. It unburdens me from my humanity, which
I so often despise.
Again – click.
I remember the first time I galloped with her. She had been
under saddle for about six months and we had been
going out back in the farm roads to ride around the fields to get her used to life outside the arena. It was a cool
spring day, and she was happy and willing to trot out, ears pricked, body firm
with calm energy. A long stretch of farm road invited us to canter, and even
though her canter cue was still somewhat unrefined, I only had to think it and
she stretched forward. The dull thud of her feet on the ground quickened at the
same pace as my heartbeat.
I felt the click,
our bodies becoming one being, knitting together in a flash of pure feeling.
When I thought faster our combined
beings responded at the same time. Three beats became four. The ground blurred.
Everything but us blurred. Nothing
else mattered.
My first ride on Deli - ever. |
But at the same time I was hyper aware of how she-and-I fit. Mind and body; raw unrestricted
feeling.
Click.
And even though it’s not every day I feel that kind of
connection. When we are stressed or anxious that feeling draws further away.
But with Deli, I can always feel the gravitational pull in the background,
tugging us back to pure feeling. Pure existence. Pure connection. I’m not even
sure you can call it joy. It’s greater than that. It’s being right. It’s being
unburdened. It’s being more powerful than I could imagine being on my own.
And that’s why I would never give up on her, no matter how
hard things are. She is the reason for what I am today. She’s my best friend.
She’s the person I trust above all others, and she gives me a reason to try and
learn to love and trust myself.
Click.
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