Category Archives: horses, dogs & more

the ham of god

I took this picture at the Putney School Harvest Festival two weeks ago.  I want to sleep like this.

I fell asleep last night laughing out loud listening to Anne Lamott’s Plan B:  Further thoughts on Faith.  Laughing into sleep is a great way to wake up.  When she talked about receiving a providential gift ham on her birthday at a grocery store, I lost it.  She wondered if it was “the ham of god.”

I am finding more ways to soften before sleep, and to soften into waking.  I find that it makes for a more fluid, creative day.  Abraham calls it “getting into the vortex.”  I have been listening to Abraham for about two years now, driving everywhere.  It is the best way that I have found to release resistance.

Resistance is on my mind as I am reading The War of Art. More about that tomorrow.

Abraham says find something to make you happy.  Last year, Emily Jones, the head of the Putney School encouraged students to look at something beautiful and let it make you happy. I have a long list, that includes horses’s noses, cat’s fur, my  daughters’ and Pam’s faces.

What makes you happy today?

 

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shelter

I heard this version of Gimme Shelter by Playing for Change on the radio the other day and it has me thinking about shelter.

In writing my book, Horse Dancing, many of the artists I interview speak of the horse as shelter – a place of refuge and comfort.

Up here in the Adirondacks, away from home, I am aware that shelter is all my absent four-footed companions, and the familiar colors and shapes of my home. I shelter differently in each of my roles:  mother, artist, writer, rider, wife.

Shelter is improvisational too – we shape it as we travel, as we move from place to place, continually constructing little yurts, hollows, quiet corners in which to shelter.

Buddhists take refuge in the Buddha, the  dharma (the teachings), and the sanga (the community of practitioners.)

Where do you take shelter?  What is shelter for you?

little one

I saw this baby at the Putney School Harvest Festival last weekend.  He was part of a “display” of cows that the school has to introduce visitors their farm program. He and his slightly older black and white buddy were objects of adoration for the 2-6 year old group.

Even though my daughter went there for three years, and even though we loved the farm as an essential part of the school, this little guy gave me pause.  There was something so unspeakably tender and vulnerable about him.

My daughter told me that the male babies do not become a part of the school’s program.  They are meat.  All the babies are weaned very early, and spend a lot of time trying to suckle anything in the barn: pipes, fencing, each other. In most ways the school is as good as it gets for farm animals. Many students love them.  They have names, not numbers, and are teachers and friends for generations of kids.  Last year at graduation, our friends Ali and Sam gave their son Max a Putney cow as a graduation gift.  To care for, to work with – the beginning of his farmer life, perhaps.

This is hardly a new struggle for me.  I don’t eat meat.  I buy my eggs where I can see the hens in the yard. I live in an area where I can see the realities of life for a veal calf. And I grew up loving my visits to my Aunt Pearl’s farm in South Dakota above all else.

And then there is the face of this little one, reminding us to feel, to step into our hearts, even for a moment.

Charlie

Yesterday I was there when Charlie died.  I had stopped by to meet Pamela, the founder of Blue Star Equiculture, and then suddenly there was an emergency.  Charlie was down.  We walked into the barn and he lay on his side, thrashing, huge raw swellings over his eyes where he had crashed into the stall walls. I knew that he was dying.

Charlie had been a New York City carriage horse for fifteen years.  A good boy, always steady, even though blind in one eye.  Except for 9/11, when he refused to pull, could not settle, and was returned to his stall just as the planes hit.  Charlie knew, like the elephants that fled to the mountains before the tsunami in Phukhet.

We piled blankets around him, and stroked his ears, and tried to keep him quiet while waiting for the vet.  Two hours later, it was finished.

Here is what I remember:  Charlie, quiet after being tranquilized by the vet, with six children and adults lined up behind him, sitting with him, singing softly, stroking, loving.  Other members of the Blue Star community standing and holding the space, loving Charlie. The quiet, the reverence.

When he went, I could feel an icy chill, as if the air around  us was silvery with cold – a clear, shimmering cold that felt like his spirit enveloping us all.

Thank you Charlie.  Thank you.