You know when you have a really great ride.
First, though, you like when Violet gets too excited and catches a baby chicken with one meaty paw breaking it in half practically, and you have to shoo her off angrily and the chicken looks flat but she's trying to get up. And then you curse that you spend 10 dollars on that baby chick and also you want your chick to be able to walk and be part of her group like she was one second ago. It's day 2 now and she is still alive, and trying out her wooden leg, one leg is definitely mangled but like Vando on the Lakers, she's valiantly trying to get up and play.
So because it's nice out or for some reason because my heart is lighter, or it was just the perfect day, I don't know, my back has been really hurting badly like I lift hundred pounds horse containers or something every few hours (oh wait I do) but today I decided okay, I'm going to to check on the creek. I've been doing practice rides, which are my daily neighborhood hour rides every morning, and my horses and I are good at the regular routine, we need to have a creek adventure.
It was Mags and Meriwether day, so I saddled them both up and we headed out. The secret path right outside our door has been having a peacock on it in random places like a car bomb. You never know when it might pop out of the bushes and hopefully not with his feathers all shot up like a balloon arch. Nothing a horse likes better than a fancy chicken who JUMPS OUT and then SPLAYS a million feathers like a sudden umbrella opening. Today I saw the peacock lolling under a tree and I made sure the horses saw the peacock, and then I talked to the peacock about NOT moving until we had passed him which he apparently said ok. He stood up, bowed as we passed and then danger averted.
I rode Mags first because she's my solid one although you can never say for sure, but Meriwether is only 5 so he can be a little skippy at first with happiness. So I rode out Mags and made sure to trot canter the flat parts to get the excess energy out. Meri was cantering merrily along with us until he SLAMMED on the brakes (a trick he learned from Fast and Furious movies) and we couldn't stop in time so I ran out of rope and lost the rope, which he was saying YESSSS and then he looked around for which grass he was gonna trot over to. While I fumed and got off my fat mare and had to try and get in front of him on the side most aiming at a busy street so he didn't decide to run that way. He found a nice bush and I grabbed him, fought down the urge to beat the shit out of him, petted him instead, got back on my horse, and off we went over the mountain, through the tunnel and into the wilderness.
Right through the tunnel someone decided to put a mattress and that is always helpful to horses who don't know what a huge white rectangle is and aren't sure if it can leap up to smother them. We got past that and then it seems like there were several old lady groups on horses, I saw so many riders, which is weird. The women -I'm always looking for a fun person- and mostly they just look like they've been beaten up by wire brushes like RIGHT before their ride. They look like when you go in a diner in a truck stop? The regulars? Or there's the quiet rich ladies, who have on the tight zip ups with their faces all zipped up and the obedient dog following along. Then there's me, today I wore pants but usually I ride in pajamas. Dementia care has stolen my ability to dress at all, and it was never a top priority.
Anyway the most important part is I am out with my horses, on trails I know pretty well, and we're heading to water and I feel good inside. I have been feeling good for almost 2.5 days, this release of burden I don't know why it's happening but I am starting to feel like a regular person. So much tension from trying to take good care of so many people for so many years, and I'm starting to pop that mom bubble, and see if I can keep the good parts and lay down some of the worry from all those years. We care so much, moms, don't we. It's a full time job.
I try and breathe instead of panic, breathe and remember everything is fine. I am alive. Water is ahead.
We get to the water and it's always different, we slosh on in, and it's not too deep, not sinky, there's other horses so we go around to the other side of the river where there's no one and then I see a hole in the bushes where the river is coming from, and it looks like it can fit my horses. I think today I can go through those branches and keep going up the creek to see how far I can get. Before, the water was too deep there.
So Mags and I tractor through there and it's so deep and splashy that my pants and boots are soaked, which makes me laugh, and she keeps going, and Meri is keeping up and I'm thinking ok next time I have to try and ride Meri through here, we haven't done deep water yet with me on his back. The three of us slosh very far up the creek, and it's perfect footing, open space, leafy, manageable current, horses are happy and interested, and listening.
This is really all I like to do. I like to sit on them and feel my hips hurting, and let them eat some river plants and listen to the water and feel sorry that Kurt fired himself from our friendship for a second, but then it passes and I am just still with the horses, deep in water, where there is nothing to worry about. Stop adding worry. Or as Linda says, and I want to make into a t shirt, Stop Thinking About It.
The water washes us all three down, it gives Meriwether some experience, it gives Mags some relaxation, and it gives me courage. Or wait I used courage to go into the unknown area, so it gives me satisfaction.
I video on the way back since I think I can capture it without dropping my phone now that I've done it once, but this also takes courage. One hand on Mags, one hand on meri, phone and crop. I'm not sure how I do it, but I do focus hard. And the water is so nice. It is flowing from who knows where, Denver I guess, I hope Evie comes sailing down. In the water there is no dementia, there is my mom whole, and my kids little, and every dog I've ever had, and all the dead people are alive and gathering every blanket they can find to make a fort out of the couch. Everything seems happening in the creek but only the good things.
Navigating home is a little hard after the water for about 20 minutes. The horses get exiting creek fever and you have to calmly guide and distract them until they settle down. Their energy zings from the same thing I get from it, from all the good. You just wanna make sure a 1200 pound horse under you isn't zinging. Walking only please.
Then they settle and I switch to Meri to go up the big mountain home because it's his turn and otherwise he likes to stop a bunch and hope I drop the rope. (He's a smart goat) I ride him up the mountain and he is tiny but mighty and on the way down I tell him he will be my grandkid horse someday so he has to be reliable and mannerly, and he has only half of that down, half of the time.
I get back and we do pass one fat snake but only I see him, this is the second snake in 3 days. I've only ever seen four total snakes after riding here for 14 years, and one of them was dead.
I unload myself from the guys, untack, rinse them off, give them some of the sweet hay for the reward, check on my little mutilated chicken but she's still rallying, a bit sideways but that's better than no ways.
There's also a bunny loose under the hot tub, he tunneled out of the hutch. If I catch him I'm going to name him Alcatraz. If he's going to take a journey that is also okay. I'm happy keeping just two bunnies or maybe no bunnies. Eventually. My making a home for little kids, it's okay if I have to do some other stuff. Other than what I used to. Like the fair we did every year. Now this year, first time in many years, maybe no fair. Unfair. Ha.
It's okay to be without. Just because things are different doesn't mean there aren't going to be things that matter and make me feel good. It just was really weird to be suddenly free. Especially since I wasn't trapped at all. I only ever felt free.
I just love the kids so much. We sucked every minute out of every minute.
Now I get to see what else there is to suck okayokay come on no I want to keep feeling happy. Thank god there's no extra troubles. B lived. His son went to have a life somewhere else. The sun came out again after cloudy April. There is water. There is today. As this Irish guy on instagram keeps telling me softly on his walks in green green Ireland, Keep your head up. You're doin great.
